Study of the inertial effect and the nonlinearities of the CRONE suspension based on the hydropneumatic technology

2010 ◽  
Vol 63 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy Abi Zeid Daou ◽  
Clovis Francis ◽  
Xavier Moreau
Author(s):  
Audrey Rizzo ◽  
Xavier Moreau ◽  
Alain Oustaloup ◽  
Vincent Hernette

In a vibration isolation context, fractional derivative can be used to design suspensions which allow to obtain similar performances in spite of parameters uncertainties. This paper presents the synthesis and the achievement of a new Hydractive CRONE suspension system. After the study of the different constraint in suspension in the first paper, the ideal transfer function of the hydractive CRONE suspension is created and simulated in different case. Then a method to determine the technological parameters is proposed. A parallel arrangement of dissipative and capacitive components and a gamma arrangement are compared. They lead to the same unusual performances: the stability degree robustness and the rapidity robustness.


Author(s):  
Xavier Moreau ◽  
Olivier Altet ◽  
Alain Oustaloup

The CRONE suspension, French acronym of “suspension a` Comportement Robuste d’Ordre Non Entier”, results from a traditional suspension system whose spring and damper are replaced by a mechanical and hydropneumatic system defined by a fractional (so-called non-integer) order force-displacement transfer function. Modelling, frequency-domain robust control design methodology and internal stability analysis are presented in this paper.


Author(s):  
Audrey Rizzo ◽  
Xavier Moreau ◽  
Alain Oustaloup ◽  
Vincent Hernette

This paper presents, in 2 parts, a new CRONE suspension approach. The first part defines the problematics in suspension and gives the different conditions to overcome it. Then in the second paper a new CRONE suspension system is synthesized based on the conclusion of this paper. So, here, is presented how the variations of mass act on the classical suspension and how tools can be set up to simulate the influence of this variation without to choose the technological structure. Then a criterion on the level of wheel holding is established.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (24) ◽  
pp. 1950282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Qiang Fan ◽  
M. Miyatake ◽  
S. Kawada ◽  
Bin Wei ◽  
S. Yoshimoto

In order to investigate the gas inertial effect on bearing capacity of acoustic levitation on condition of complex exciting shapes, a new kind of numerical model including inertial effect in cylindrical coordinates was proposed. The inertial terms in Navier–Stokes equations are packaged to derive modified Reynolds equations. The amplitudes of standing waves were tested by distance probe in experiment and film thickness equation were reconstructed by sum of the sinusoidal functions. The theoretical and experimental results implied that the inertial effect is strongly related to the exciting modal shapes. It is concluded that the proposal of modified Reynolds equation can provide more optimized numerical solutions to solve the problems about the deviation between theoretical and experimental data.


1992 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 971-973 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kawski ◽  
P. Bojarski ◽  
A. Kubicki

Abstract The influence of the moment of inertia on the rotational fluorescence depolarization is discussed. Based on experimental results obtained for five luminescent compounds: 2,5-diphenyloxazole (PPO), 2,2'-p-phenylene-bis(5-phenyloxazole) (POPOP), p-bis[2-(5-α-naphthyloxazolyl)]-benzene (α-NOPON), 4-dimethylamino-ω-methylsulphonyl-trans-styrene (3a) in n-parafines at low viscosity (from 0.22 x 10-3 Pa • s to 0.993 x 10-3 Pa • s) and diphenylenestilbene (DPS) in different solvents, a semi-empirical equation is proposed, yielding moments of inertia that are only two to five times higher than those estimated from the molecular geometry


1998 ◽  
Vol 31 (18) ◽  
pp. 521-526
Author(s):  
X. Moreau ◽  
A. Oustaloup ◽  
M. Nouillant
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 90 (11) ◽  
pp. 1131-1178 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Alba ◽  
Luca Lusanna

We conclude the study of the post-minkowskian (PM) linearization of ADM tetrad gravity in the York canonical basis for asymptotically minkowskian space–times in the family of nonharmonic 3-orthogonal gauges parametrized by the York time 3K(τ, s) (the inertial gauge variable, not existing in Newton gravity, describing the general relativistic remnant of the freedom in clock synchronization in the definition of the shape of the instantaneous 3-spaces as 3-submanifolds of space–time). As matter we consider only N scalar point particles with a Grassmann regularization of the self-energies and with an ultraviolet cutoff making possible the PM linearization and the evaluation of the PM solution for the gravitational field. We study in detail all the properties of these PM space–times emphasizing their dependence on the gauge variable 3K(1) = (1/Δ)3K(1) (the nonlocal York time): Riemann and Weyl tensors, 3-spaces, time-like and null geodesics, red-shift, and luminosity distance. Then we study the post-newtonian (PN) expansion of the PM equations of motion of the particles. We find that in the two-body case at the 0.5PN order there is a damping (or antidamping) term depending only on 3K(1). This opens the possibility of explaining dark matter in Einstein theory as a relativistic inertial effect: the determination of 3K(1) from the masses and rotation curves of galaxies would give information on how to find a PM extension of the existing PN celestial frame used as an observational convention in the 4-dimensional description of stars and galaxies. Dark matter would describe the difference between the inertial and gravitational masses seen in the non-euclidean 3-spaces, without a violation of their equality in the 4-dimensional space–time as required by the equivalence principle.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document