electrodynamic shaker
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Author(s):  
Mohid Muneeb Khattak ◽  
Christopher Sugino ◽  
Alper Erturk

We investigate piezoelectric energy harvesting on a locally resonant metamaterial beam for concurrent power generation and bandgap formation. The mechanical resonators (small beam attachments on the main beam structure) have piezoelectric elements which are connected to electrical loads to quantify their electrical output in the locally resonant bandgap neighborhood. Electromechanical model simulations are followed by detailed experiments on a beam setup with nine resonators. The main beam is excited by an electrodynamic shaker from its base over the frequency range of0–150 Hz and the motion at the tip is measured using a laser Doppler vibrometer to extract its transmissibility frequency response. The formation of a locally resonant bandgap is confirmed and a resistor sweep is performed for the energy harvesters to capture the optimal power conditions. Individual power outputs of the harvester resonators are compared in terms of their percentage contribution to the total power output. Numerical and experimental analysis shows that, inside the locally resonant bandgap, most of the vibrational energy (and hence harvested energy) is localized near the excited base of the beam, and the majority of the total harvested power is extracted by the first few resonators.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107754632110466
Author(s):  
Peng Wang ◽  
Hua Deng ◽  
Yue Liu ◽  
Yi-ming Wang ◽  
Yi Zhang ◽  
...  

The velocity required in IEC 61373 for long-life random vibration testing of Category-3 rolling stock equipment in the vertical direction is 2.7821 m/s, but the maximum velocity of existing electrodynamic shakers falls in the range of 2–2.5 m/s. In this study, an electrodynamic shaker with a velocity satisfying the requirements for vibration testing of Category-3 rolling stock equipment was developed. First, mechanical and equivalent circuit models of an electrodynamic shaker were developed. On this basis, reducing the impedance of the armature coil was identified as the best option for increasing the velocity of the shaker. However, owing to the impact of the back electromotive force of the armature coil, a decrease in the input impedance of the armature coil at low frequencies leads to an increase in its input impedance at high frequencies. To reduce the input impedance at high frequencies, a shading coil was incorporated into the circuit. The shading coil-incorporated new design was modeled using equivalent circuits and simulated numerically. The results showed that the improvement measures—incorporating a shading coil, increasing the cross-sectional area, and reducing the number of turns of the armature coil—effectively reduced the input impedance of the armature coil, thereby increasing the armature coil current and the velocity of the shaker. Finally, a shaker with a maximum velocity of 3.2 m/s was fabricated based on the new design and was validated to satisfy the high-velocity requirement for the long-life vibration test of Category-3 equipment in the vertical direction as specified in IEC 61373.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vinod Kumar Bandu ◽  
Venkata Narayana Yenugula ◽  
B. Shirish

Author(s):  
Ratiba F. Ghachi ◽  
Wael I. Alnahhal ◽  
Osama Abdeljaber ◽  
Jamil Renno ◽  
A. B. M. Tahidul Haque ◽  
...  

Metamaterials (MMs) are composites that are artificially engineered to have unconventional mechanical properties that stem from their microstructural geometry rather than from their chemical composition. Several studies have shown the effectiveness of viscoelastic MMs in vibration attenuation due to their inherent vibration dissipation properties and the Bragg scattering effect. This study presents a multiobjective optimization based on genetic algorithms (GA) that aims to find a viscoelastic MM crystal with the highest vibration attenuation in a chosen low-frequency range. A multiobjective optimization allows considering the attenuation due to the MM inertia versus the Bragg scattering effect resulting from the periodicity of the MM. The investigated parameters that influence wave transmission in a one-dimensional (1D) MM crystal included the lattice constant, the number of cells and the layers’ thickness. Experimental testing and finite element analysis were used to support the optimization procedure. An electrodynamic shaker was used to measure the vibration transmission of the three control specimens and the optimal specimen in the frequency range 1–1200[Formula: see text]Hz. The test results demonstrated that the optimized specimen provides better vibration attenuation than the control specimens by both having a band-gap starting at a lower frequency and having less transmission at its passband.


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Goktug C. Ozmen ◽  
Mohsen Safaei ◽  
Lan Lan ◽  
Omer T. Inan

Abstract In this study, we propose a new mounting method to improve accelerometer sensing performance in the 50 Hz–10 kHz frequency band for knee sound measurement. The proposed method includes a thin double-sided adhesive tape for mounting and a 3D-printed custom-designed backing prototype. In our mechanical setup with an electrodynamic shaker, the measurements showed a 13 dB increase in the accelerometer's sensing performance in the 1–10 kHz frequency band when it is mounted with the craft tape under 2 N backing force applied through low-friction tape. As a proof-of-concept study, knee sounds of healthy subjects (n = 10) were recorded. When the backing force was applied, we observed statistically significant (p < 0.01) incremental changes in spectral centroid, spectral roll-off frequencies, and high-frequency (1–10 kHz) root-mean-square (RMS) acceleration, while low-frequency (50 Hz–1 kHz) RMS acceleration remained unchanged. The mean spectral centroid and spectral roll-off frequencies increased from 0.8 kHz and 4.15 kHz to 1.35 kHz and 5.9 kHz, respectively. The mean high-frequency acceleration increased from 0.45 mgRMS to 0.9 mgRMS with backing. We showed that the backing force improves the sensing performance of the accelerometer when mounted with the craft tape and the proposed backing prototype. This new method has the potential to be implemented in today's wearable systems to improve the sensing performance of accelerometers in knee sound measurements.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 168781402096385
Author(s):  
Shuguang Zuo ◽  
Zhaoyang Feng ◽  
Jian Pan ◽  
Xudong Wu

For the problem of relatively severe lateral vibration found in the vertical electrodynamic shaker experiment, an electromechanical coupling dynamic model of the electrodynamic shaker considering low-frequency lateral vibration is proposed. The reason and mechanism of the lateral vibration is explained and analyzed through this model. To establish this model, an electromagnetic force model of overall conditions is firstly built by fitting force samples with neural network method. The force samples are obtained by orthogonal test of finite element simulation, in which five factors of the moving coil including current, vertical position, flipping eccentricity angle, radial translational eccentric direction and distance are considered. Secondly, a 7-dof dynamic model of the electrodynamic shaker is developed with the consideration of the lateral vibration of the moving system. To obtain the transfer function accurately, the stiffness and damping parameters are identified. Finally, an electromechanical dynamic model is established by coupling the force model and the 7-dof dynamic model, and it is verified by experiments. The coupling model proposed can be further used for the control and optimization of the electrodynamic shaker.


Author(s):  
Giovanni Iarriccio ◽  
Antonio Zippo ◽  
Francesco Pellicano ◽  
Marco Barbieri

In this paper, the results of an experimental campaign focused on the vibrations of shells are presented. More specifically, the goal is to investigate the effect of thermal gradients across the shell thickness on the nonlinear dynamics. The shell is made of polymeric material and an aluminum mass is clamped on one end of the shell; the other shell end is clamped to an electrodynamic shaker, which provides a base harmonic excitation. Tests are performed in a controlled environment where a thermal gradient on the shell thickness is generated by means of a climatic chamber and an internal cartridge heater. Different temperature gradients and base excitation levels have been considered. The nonlinear dynamic scenario is analyzed through amplitude–frequency diagrams, bifurcation diagrams, waterfall diagrams, time histories, Fourier spectra, phase portraits, and Poincaré maps. Results show a strong effect of the temperature on the dynamic response of the shell: subharmonic, quasi-periodic, and chaotic vibrations take place as well as large amplitude vibrations, high sound levels are detected.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 617
Author(s):  
Christophe Gautrelet ◽  
Leila Khalij ◽  
Marcela Rodrigues Machado

Experimental vibration-fatigue tests were conducted with sine resonance track‐and‐dwell (SRTD) tool by using an electrodynamic shaker on specimens made of 304L stainless steel. Due to cyclic fatigue resulting in stiffness loss, it can be found that the resonant frequency decreases when the specimen experiences substantial crack growth, especially for out-of-plane bending mode. The specimens were equipped by a crack propagation gauge (CPG) to monitor the crack growth. However, the presence of crack was detected late by these gauges. The deviation of the resonance frequency was therefore analysed from the time response measurements, and the results were confronted to the CPG measurements to conclude on the validity of the detection threshold provided by the literature.


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