A low-power wireless sensing device for remote inspection of bolted joints

Author(s):  
D L Mascarenas ◽  
G Park ◽  
K M Farinholt ◽  
M D Todd ◽  
C R Farrar

A new bolted-joint monitoring system is presented. This system consists of structural joint members equipped with piezoelectric (PZT) sensing elements and a wireless impedance device for data acquisition and communication. PZT enhanced washers are used to continuously monitor the condition of the joint by monitoring its dynamic characteristics. The mechanical impedance matching between the PZT enhanced devices and the joint connections is used as a key feature to monitor the preload changes and to prevent further failure. The dynamic response is readily measured using the electromechanical coupling property of the PZT patch, in which its electrical impedance is directly coupled with the mechanical impedance of the structure. A new miniaturized and portable impedance measuring device is implemented for the practical implementation of the proposed method. The proposed system can be used for the remote and rapid inspection of bolt tension and connection damage. Both theoretical modelling and experimental verification are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed concept.

Author(s):  
Ran Gabay ◽  
Izhak Bucher

This work is concerned with a method to generate pure traveling vibration waves in finite structures. Using progressing deformations, i.e. waves, is not common when dealing with forced vibration since structures are naturally vibrating in their, naturally occurring, normal modes. Indeed, natural vibration modes can be referred to standing waves. Since a structure does not lend itself to a traveling wave vibration, the generation of traveling waves in a structure becomes a challenging task. The boundary conditions or external forces must be carefully tuned in an iterative process that necessitates measurement and identification of the traveling and standing wave components. In this work, a method to generate and measure traveling waves is presented for one and two-dimensional structures. Both analytical and experimental results are provided here. A traveling wave is a disturbance that propagates away from its source carrying energy along its path. In finite structures, a wave hitting a boundary experiences an impedance change that gives rise to a partial reflection, thus distorting its original form. For a pure traveling wave to occur, the boundary of the structure must be set to match the impedance of the structure, and thus to absorb the disturbance while preventing any reflected wave from the boundaries. Impedance matching can be accomplished by passive or active means. Active impedance matching is obtained by generating a vibrating wave at one end (a source) and 'pumps' it on the other, active absorbing end, often addressed as a sink. Indeed, active impedance matching sometimes referred as the "active sink" method. Special methods must be used to extract the description of the vibrating wave characteristics from the measured vibration efficiently, and possibly in real-time (for control purposes). A parametric method is employed in this work to describe and analyze the wave vibration from measurements. In reality, the theoretical knowledge of how to excite a vibrating traveling wave is not sufficiently accurate to produce traveling waves. Minute manufacturing imperfections, small structural and actuator asymmetry may cause large deviations from pure traveling waves state. It is shown that a tuning process that relies on the measurements but combined with a physical model, should serve as the basis of the practical implementation. Several experiments on a string-like structure are described stressing the physical implications as well as the refined experimental procedure. The actuation techniques, wave identification methods and the tuning procedure of a vibrating traveling wave are described in some detail for the experimental work.


Author(s):  
Willem Petersen ◽  
Armaghan Salehian ◽  
John McPhee

Three models of a golf ball and a golf clubhead are created to investigate the efficiency of the collision with respect to the theory of mechanical impedance matching, normally derived from oversimplified models. While the results obtained from a lumped-parameter model do validate the mechanical impedance matching theory, the results obtained from a finite element model used to investigate this phenomenon with more fidelity by varying the clubface flexibility disagree. Therefore, a distributed-parameter model is developed. In this model, the clubface is modelled using the Euler-Bernoulli beam equation with clamped-clamped boundary conditions, and the golf ball is modelled using a 3-piece rod with piecewise constant material properties representing the multiple layers of a real golf ball. The number of modes considered in the calculations is varied to determine the influence of the complexity of the model. The results obtained from this model are compared against those from the previous approaches and from the mechanical impedance matching theory.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ignacio Valiente-Blanco ◽  
Cristian Cristache ◽  
Juan Sanchez-Garcia-Casarrubios ◽  
Fernando Rodriguez-Celis ◽  
Jose-Luis Perez-Diaz

As part of the Fp7 Clean Sky Project, a linear magnetic gear prototype, called Z-transmitter, for aerospace application was designed, built, and tested. It demonstrates a maximum force capacity of 4700 N at 25°C and 4500 N at 90°C. Force ratio between slow and fast stages remains constant and equal to the design value: 7.0. The behavior of the real Z-transmitter as a mechanical impedance matching device when any stiffness is attached to the fast stage including the limit cases of a blocked fast stage or a free to move fast stage is experimentally explored. Although the real Z-transmitter deviates from the ideal, frictionless and massless, device, it still provides an impedance matching effect large enough to potentially become an extremely useful technology for vibration control when combined with other elements such as dampers, springs, or active elements.


Physiology ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick Sachs

Mechanosensitive ion channels (MSCs) exist in all cells, but mechanosensitivity is a phenotype not a genotype. Specialized mechanoreceptors such as the hair cells of the cochlea require elaborate mechanical impedance matching to couple the channels to the external stress. In contrast, MSCs in nonspecialized cells appear activated by stress in the bilayer local to the channel—within about three lipids. Local mechanical stress can be produced by far-field tension, amphipaths, phase separations, the cytoskeleton, the extracellular matrix, and the adhesion energy between the membrane and a patch pipette. Understanding MSC function requires under standing the stimulus.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 29
Author(s):  
Kenji Uchino

<p>Piezoelectric actuator developments require interdisciplinary knowledge on materials physics, electrical designing and mechanical engineering. Because of the limited knowledge of newly-involved researchers, they occasionally publish misleading information, some sort of misconceptions, reflected in the delay of innovative developments of the next generation. This paper is Part II of a series of my tutorial course, and reviews the popular 10 among the researchers’ misconceptions primarily related with the misunderstanding of ‘voltage and electric field’, ‘ionic displacement and strain’, ‘thin film fabrication’, ‘energy transmission coefficient’, ‘thin film device designing’, ‘piezoelectric vibration damping’, ‘mechanical impedance matching’, ‘piezoelectric energy harvesting”, ‘resonance &amp; anti-resonance’, ‘best-selling devices’, and provides rectifications, aiming at their future progress.</p>


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