force amplitude
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2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1171
Author(s):  
Rui Lu ◽  
Guang Pan ◽  
Kun Tan ◽  
Shaoping Yin

In this study, an attempt has been made to investigate the supercavitation and hydrodynamic characteristics of high-speed vehicles. A homogeneous equilibrium flow model and a Schnerr–Sauer model based on the Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes method are used. Grid-independent inspection and comparison with experimental data in the literature have been carried out to verify the accuracy of numerical methods. The effect of the navigation speed and angle of attack on the cavitation morphology and dynamic characteristics has been investigated. It has been demonstrated that the angle of attack has a remarkable influence on the wet surface and hydrodynamic force, whereas navigation speed has little effect on the position force of the vehicle under the circumstance of no wet surface. The hydrodynamic force changes periodically with the swing of the vehicle, but its maximum is greater than that for the direct navigation state at the same attack angle. Moreover, the damping effect obviously affects the hydrodynamic force amplitude and movement trend.


Author(s):  
Ting Chen ◽  
Xiangyu Cao ◽  
Dezhi Niu

With the development of chaos theory, Duffing oscillator has been extensively studied in many fields, especially in electronic signal processing. As a nonlinear oscillator, Duffing oscillator is more complicated in terms of equations or circuit analysis. In order to facilitate the analysis of its characteristics, the study analyzes the circuit from the perspective of vibrational science and energetics. The classic Holmes-Duffing model is first modified to make it more popular and concise, and then the model feasibility is confirmed by a series of rigorous derivations. According to experiments, the influence of driving force amplitude, frequency, and initial value on the system is finally explained by the basic theories of physics. Through this work, people can understand the mechanisms and characteristics of Duffing oscillator more intuitively and comprehensively. It provides a new idea for the study of Duffing oscillators and more.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107754632110260
Author(s):  
Zhaoxue Deng ◽  
Xu Li ◽  
Tianqin Liu ◽  
Shuen Zhao

Considering the negative vertical dynamics effect of switched reluctance motor on an in-wheel motor driving system, this article presents a modeling and suppression method for unbalanced radial force of the in-wheel motor driving system. To tease out the coupling relationship within the in-wheel motor driving system, this investigation, respectively, explores the principle of unbalanced radial force and the coupling relationship between rotor eccentricity and road excitation based on the suspension response model with unbalanced radial force under road excitation. The switched reluctance motor nonlinear analytical model was fitted by the Fourier series, and its radial electromagnetic force was modeled and analyzed by the Maxwell stress tensor method. To mitigate the influence of radial electromagnetic force fluctuation and unbalanced radial force amplitude value under eccentricity condition on the in-wheel motor driving system, the elitist non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm was adopted to improve radial electromagnetic force fluctuation and unbalanced radial force amplitude value of the switched reluctance motor. The simulation results show that the proposed optimization method can suppress the radial electromagnetic force fluctuation and unbalanced radial force amplitude value, and the negative effect of vertical dynamics of the in-wheel motor driving system is conspicuously mitigated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Weber ◽  
Florian Obholzer ◽  
Peter Huber

<p>The TMD system of the footbridge "Inwilerstrasse" near Zug in Switzerland was model-based designed for the first vertical bending mode, the expected human excitation, assuming the inherent damping of 0.3 % and ensuring the acceleration limit CL1 (0.50 m/s<sup>2</sup>) of HIVOSS. After the installation of the locked TMDs, first, the TMD frequency was optimized based on the identified bridge eigenfrequency by adjusting the TMD mass.</p><p>Then, the bridge with locked and activated TMDs was excited by five synchronized persons. These tests were re-computed adopting the experimentally identified eigenfrequency and damping ratio of the first bending mode and the optimized TMD mass. The re-computation demonstrates that the excitation force amplitude of one bouncing person must be set to approximately 600 N in order to obtain the measured acceleration of 0.117 m/s<sup>2</sup> of the bridge with activated TMDs. The value of 600 N seems reasonable as this corresponds to approximately 80 % of the average body weight (76 kg) of one person. The very low acceleration of 0.117 m/s<sup>2</sup> of the bridge with activated TMD demonstrates the effectiveness of TMDs.</p>


Author(s):  
Wenqi Zhang ◽  
Shuai Yang ◽  
Dazhuan Wu ◽  
Zhongtian Xu

Water hammer is a principal cause of pipeline and equipment failure in pumping systems. The numerical method and experiments are used to investigate the dynamic interaction between the valve-closure water hammer wave and pump, to study the pressure variation and fluid-induced force on the pump components. The impeller-volute interaction and impeller position are taken into consideration. Results show that the valve-closure water hammer wave generates a substantial fluid-induced force on the pump and leads to a pressure surge in the pipeline. Meanwhile, the impeller-volute interaction also causes pressure and force variation in the pipeline and pump. The force amplitude caused by this factor in the axial direction is similar to that caused by the water hammer wave but is much smaller in the radial direction. The different interaction position of the water hammer wave on the blades can weaken the force, by 13.11% and 13.18% for the impeller and volute when the blades are under the most optimal position, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 75-87
Author(s):  
Yong Wang ◽  
Xiaolin Wang ◽  
Zilong Zhang ◽  
Yu Li ◽  
Houlin Liu ◽  
...  

A self-excited pulsed air-water jet (SEPAWJ) offers many advantages over other jets and has a large number of practical and industrial applications. In order to take better advantage of the SEPAWJ, response surface methodology (RSM) models were established with the experimental impact force characteristics as the dependent variable and three key nozzle parameters as the independent variable. Single and coupling factor effects of these three parameters (oscillation chamber length, oscillation chamber height, and diameter of the downstream nozzle) on performance of nozzle are analysed, and the structural parameters of optimum performance are calculated using RSM models. The external flow field, impact force and cleaning performance of SEPAWJ before and after optimization are analysed and compared experimentally. It is found that the significance levels of established average impact force and impact force amplitude RSM models are lower than 0.05, and their error ratios between calculation and experiment under the optimum construction are both less than 5 %, which confirms their considerable reliability. Meanwhile, the final large water mass of optimized SEPAWJ is formed much earlier, and is more intensive and more concentrated. Compared with the original SEPAWJ nozzle, the impact force and impact force amplitude of optimized SEPAWJ nozzle are increased by 52.00 % and 38.26 %, respectively. In addition, the cleaned area ratio of nozzle before and after optimization is 76 % and 100 % at 50 seconds, respectively, with an increase of 22.4 %.


2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 162-165
Author(s):  
V. I. Ponomarenko ◽  
D. D. Kulminskiy ◽  
A. V. Andreev ◽  
M. D. Prokhorov

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehrdad Kashefi ◽  
Mohammad Reza Daliri

Abstract Background Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs) translate the activity of the nervous system to a control signal which is interpretable for an external device. Using continuous motor BCIs, the user will be able to control a robotic arm or a disabled limb continuously. In addition to decoding the target position, accurate decoding of force amplitude is essential for designing BCI systems capable of performing fine movements like grasping. In this study, we proposed a stack Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural network which was able to accurately predict the force amplitude applied by three freely moving rats using their Local Field Potential (LFP) signal. Results The performance of the network was compared with the Partial Least Square (PLS) method. The average coefficient of correlation (r) for three rats were 0.67 in PLS and 0.73 in LSTM based network and the coefficient of determination ($$R^{2}$$ R 2 ) were 0.45 and 0.54 for PLS and LSTM based network, respectively. The network was able to accurately decode the force values without explicitly using time lags in the input features. Additionally, the proposed method was able to predict zero-force values very accurately due to benefiting from an output nonlinearity. Conclusion The proposed stack LSTM structure was able to predict applied force from the LFP signal accurately. In addition to higher accuracy, these results were achieved without explicitly using time lags in input features which can lead to more accurate and faster BCI systems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 1720-1729
Author(s):  
Jun Iyama

Abstract This paper discusses a possibility of detecting structural damage caused by an earthquake, by measuring the time history of the strain of beams and columns before and/or after the earthquake. An index called “local stiffness” is defined as the ratio of section force amplitude to representative displacement amplitude, and this ratio can be physically interpreted as stiffness. By calculating section force amplitude at a section or node from the measured strain amplitude under a microtremor or small aftershocks and comparing it with the results of a static pushover analysis, it becomes possible to detect any structural damage, such as fractures. This methodology was applied and the microstrain data of a steel moment frame were measured in a large-scale shaking table test; beam-end fractures were observed after some excitation tests. After the beam-end fracture formed, the measured local stiffness dropped significantly below the analysis value, indicating the possibility of employing this value to detect fractures using the analysis value as a threshold value.


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