Retrofitting Active Control into Passive Vibration Isolation Systems

1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Margolis

Active vibration control uses sensing and power actuators to attenuate vibrational energy due to external disturbances. Many of these systems are retrofitted into already existing passive ones. As a result allowable relative motions are prescribed, and this influences the performance of the active system. This paper exposes these limitations and shows realistic expectations for two excellent control strategies.

2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (MEDSI-6) ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Collette ◽  
S. Janssens ◽  
K. Artoos ◽  
C. Hauviller

This paper provides a review of active control strategies used to isolate high-precisionmachines (e.g. telescopes, particle colliders, interferometers, lithography machines or atomic force microscopes) from external disturbances. The objective of this review is to provide tools to develop the best strategy for a given application. Firstly, the main strategies are presented and compared, using single degree of freedom models. Secondly, the case of huge structures constituted of a large number of elements, like particle colliders or segmented telescopes, is considered.


2019 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
pp. 03024
Author(s):  
Nelly Rogacheva

Operation of structures and equipment in dynamic conditions led to the problems of vibration isolation and vibration suppression. For vibration isolation and vibration suppression passive, active systems and their combinations are used. Passive vibration isolation usually consists in the fact that the protected object relies on extremely dimensional springs and vibration isolators. Vibration isolation systems containing only passive elastic and damping elements are called passive. Active vibration isolation and vibration damping systems use external energy sources. These are pneumatic, hydropneumatic and hydromechanical devices. Recently, electro-elastic and magneto-elastic systems [1], [2] began to be used for vibration isolation and active vibration suppression. As a rule, the analysis of the work of such systems consists in the development of an experimental layout and a schematic diagram. In this paper, a mathematically based model is used to solve the problem in question. The calculations are performed and the results are presented in the form of graphs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 4526
Author(s):  
Lihua Wu ◽  
Yu Huang ◽  
Dequan Li

Tilt vibrations inevitably have negative effects on some precise engineering even after applying horizontal and vertical vibration isolations. It is difficult to adopt a traditional passive vibration isolation (PVI) scheme to realize tilt vibration isolation. In this paper, we present and develop a tilt active vibration isolation (AVI) device using a vertical pendulum (VP) tiltmeter and a piezoelectric transducer (PZT). The potential resolution of the VP is dependent on the mechanical thermal noise in the frequency bandwidth of about 0.0265 nrad, which need not be considered because it is far below the ground tilt of the laboratory. The tilt sensitivity of the device in an open-loop mode, investigated experimentally using a voltage controller, is found to be (1.63±0.11)×105 V/rad. To compensate for the hysteresis nonlinearity of the PZT, we experimentally established the multi-loop mathematical model of hysteresis, and designed a parallel controller consisting of both a hysteresis inverse model predictor and a digital proportional–integral–differential (PID) adjuster. Finally, the response of the device working in close-loop mode to the tilt vibration was tested experimentally, and the tilt AVI device showed a good vibration isolation performance, which can remarkably reduce the tilt vibration, for example, from 6.0131 μrad to below 0.0103 μrad.


Sensors ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 583
Author(s):  
Wenbin Gong ◽  
An Li ◽  
Chunfu Huang ◽  
Hao Che ◽  
Chengxu Feng ◽  
...  

An atomic interference gravimeter (AIG) is of great value in underwater aided navigation, but one of the constraints on its accuracy is vibration noise. For this reason, technology must be developed for its vibration isolation. Up to now, three methods have mainly been employed to suppress the vibration noise of an AIG, including passive vibration isolation, active vibration isolation and vibration compensation. This paper presents a study on how vibration noise affects the measurement of an AIG, a review of the research findings regarding the reduction of its vibration, and the prospective development of vibration isolation technology for an AIG. Along with the development of small and movable AIGs, vibration isolation technology will be better adapted to the challenging environment and be strongly resistant to disturbance in the future.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Xia

Vibration control strategies strive to reduce the effect of harmful vibrations such as machining chatter. In general, these strategies are classified as passive or active. While passive vibration control techniques are generally less complex, there is a limit to their effectiveness. Active vibration control strategies, which work by providing an additional energy supply to vibration systems, on the other hand, require more complex algorithms but can be very effective. In this work, a novel artificial neural network-based active vibration control system has been developed. The developed system can detect the sinusoidal vibration component with the highest power and suppress it in one control cycle, and in subsequent cycles, sinusoidal signals with the next highest power will be suppressed. With artificial neural networks trained to cover enough frequency and amplitude ranges, most of the original vibration can be suppressed. The efficiency of the proposed methodology has been verified experimentally in the vibration control of a cantilever beam. Artificial neural networks can be trained automatically for updated time delays in the system when necessary. Experimental results show that the developed active vibration control system is real time, adaptable, robust, effective and easy to be implemented. Finally, an experimental setup of chatter suppression for a lathe has been successfully implemented, and the successful techniques used in the previous artificial neural network-based active vibration control system have been utilized for active chatter suppression in turning.


Author(s):  
Harry A. Pierson ◽  
Kumer V. Singh

The economical production of high-value, low-volume, machined components is an important subtopic of advanced manufacturing. Bar feeders, a well-established technology for adding a high degree of automation to CNC turning centers by feeding 12′ lengths of stock through the machine spindle, have limitations in this realm. They rely on supporting the entire length of the stock in a continuous fluid bearing in order to suppress potential vibrations. Although this results in excellent vibration suppression, long tooling changeovers make them impractical for small batch sizes. Additionally, the expense of the tooling can render them cost-prohibitive. Thus a bar feeder technology is desired that provides comparable vibration suppression for a wide variety of stock sizes without the need for size-specific tooling changes. In this, a movable point support having tunable viscoelastic properties is studied for controlling the vibration of varying lengths of bar stock in a given speed range. The transverse vibration of mounted bar stock is modeled as a Bernoulli-Euler beam. The effects of the support position, viscoelastic model, and their associated parameters on the resonant frequencies, damping ratios, and vibration response of the bar stock are studied. Such a study will be instrumental in developing passive/active vibration control strategies for future bar feeders.


2007 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 533-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongling Sun ◽  
Kun Zhang ◽  
Haibo Chen ◽  
Peiqiang Zhang

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