vehicle configuration
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

88
(FIVE YEARS 12)

H-INDEX

10
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4B) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yifu Lan ◽  

Recently, there has been an increasing emphasis on the Indirect bridge health monitoring method employing passing vehicles, which is regarded as one of the most effective approaches in bridge damage screening. However,few researches have been conducted on the drive-by bridge inspection method using vehicle displacement profile as damage indicator. This paper proposes a new drive-by inspection method based on vertical vehicle displacementprofile with parameter optimization. A generalized Vehicle-Bridge Interaction (VBI) system is built in MATLAB, where the bridge is modelled as a simply supported beam with 10 elements, and the passing vehicle is represented as a simplified quarter car. To improve the result sensitivity to bridge damage, the parameter optimization of vehicle configuration is processed employing the Monte Carlo methods. Results show that the proposed method can successfully detect and localize bridge damage by using vertical vehicle displacement profile as damage indicator only, and its performance may depend on the vehicle configuration. The proposed approach provides merits in simplicity and efficiency, which can be applied widely to the bridge damage detection problems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stenila Simon ◽  
Samuel Atchison ◽  
Bernd Chudoba

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Boyd ◽  
Ramana V. Grandhi ◽  
Jose A. Camberos ◽  
David Sandler ◽  
Robert A. Canfield

Author(s):  
Davide Ferretto ◽  
Roberta Fusaro ◽  
Nicole Viola

Several well-established best practices and reliable tools have been developed along the years to support aircraft conceptual and preliminary design. In this context, one of the most widely used tool is the Matching Chart (MC), a graphical representation of the different performance requirements (curves representing the thrust-to-weight ratio (T/W) requirement as function of the wing loading (W/S)) for each mission phase. The exploitation of this tool allows the identification of a feasible design space as well as the definition of a reference vehicle configuration in terms of maximum thrust, maximum take-off weight, and wing surface since the very beginning of the design process. Although the tool was originally developed for conventional aircraft, several extensions and updates of the mathematical models have been proposed over the years to widen its application to innovative configurations. Following this trend, this paper presents a further evolution of the MC model to support the conceptual design of high-speed transportation systems, encompassing supersonic and hypersonic flight vehicles. At this purpose, this paper reports and discusses the updates of the methodology laying behind the generation of the MC for high-speed transportation. Eventually, the results of the validation of the updated methodology and tool are reported, using as case study, the STRATOFLY MR3 vehicle configuration, a Mach 8 antipodal civil transportation system, currently under development within the H2020 STRATOFLY project.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chao Ren ◽  
Hua Zhou ◽  
Haibo Wu ◽  
Qian Chen ◽  
Tushar Jadhav

Author(s):  
Jie Yuan ◽  
Zhenlong Wu ◽  
Shumin Fei ◽  
YangQuan Chen

Abstract As driverless vehicles becoming more and more popular due to the development of artificial intelligence, human beings will gradually get free from the vehicle driving. However, unexpected oscillations may happen due to the unfamiliarity of the vehicle configuration when humans want to drive themselves, even the vehicle itself is stable. These driver-induced-oscillations are similar with the pilot-induced-oscillations (PIO) which is generally related with actuator rate limit in the aircraft systems. Thus, this study attempts to review the PIO issue briefly and provide a guidance to solve the potential human-in-the-loop unmanned driving challenge associated with rate limit effect.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document