1 sine vibration vibrationdata unit 2. 2 vibrationdata sine amplitude metrics

31
1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Vibrationdata Unit 2

Upload: clarissa-claudia-moor

Post on 16-Dec-2015

229 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

1

Sine Vibration

VibrationdataVibrationdataUnit 2

Page 2: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

2

VibrationdataVibrationdataSine Amplitude Metrics

Page 3: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

3

Question

Does sinusoidal vibration ever occur in rocket vehicles?

VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 4: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

4

Space Shuttle, 4-segment booster 15 Hz

Ares-I, 5-segment booster 12 Hz

VibrationdataVibrationdataSolid Rocket Booster, Thrust Oscillation

Page 5: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

5

Main Engine Cutoff (MECO)Transient at ~120 Hz

MECO could be a high force input to spacecraft

VibrationdataVibrationdataDelta II

Page 6: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

6

The Pegasus launch vehicle oscillates

as a free-free beam during the 5-

second drop, prior to stage 1 ignition.

The fundamental bending frequency is

9 to 10 Hz, depending on the

payload’s mass & stiffness properties.

VibrationdataVibrationdataPegasus XL Drop Transient

Page 7: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

7

-2.5

-2.0

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0

y=1.55*exp(-0.64*(x-0.195))Flight Data

damp = 1.0%fn = 9.9 Hz

TIME (SEC)

AC

CE

L (

G)

PEGASUS REX2 S3-5 PAYLOAD INTERFACE Z-AXIS5 TO 15 Hz BP FILTERED

VibrationdataVibrationdataPegasus XL Drop Transient Data

Page 8: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

8

Pogo

Pogo is the popular name for a dynamic phenomenon that sometimes occurs during the launch and ascent of space vehicles powered by liquid propellant rocket engines.

The phenomenon is due to a coupling between the first longitudinal resonance of the vehicle and the fuel flow to the rocket engines.

VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 9: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

9

Gemini Program Titan II Pogo

Astronaut Michael Collins wrote:

The first stage of the Titan II vibrated longitudinally, so that someone riding on it would be bounced up and down as if on a pogo stick. The vibration was at a relatively high frequency, about 11 cycles per second, with an amplitude of plus or minus 5 Gs in the worst case.

VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 10: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

10

Flight Anomaly VibrationdataVibrationdata

The flight accelerometer data was measured on a launch vehicle which shall remain anonymous.  This was due to an oscillating thrust vector control (TVC) system during the burn-out of a solid rocket motor.  This created a “tail wags dog” effect.  The resulting vibration occurred throughout much of the vehicle. The oscillation frequency was 12.5 Hz with a harmonic at 37.5 Hz.

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

87.0 87.5 88.0 88.5 89.0 89.5 90.0 90.5 91.0 91.5 92.0 92.5

TIME (SEC)

AC

CE

L (

G)

LAUNCH VEHICLECONTROL SYSTEM OSCILLATION AT STAGE 1 BURN-OUT

Page 11: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

11

Flight Accelerometer Data

-10

-5

5

10

0

44.35 44.36 44.37 44.38

DOMINANT FREQUENCY = 1600 Hz

TIME (SEC)

AC

CE

L (

G)

MTTV6 RV X-AXIS GAS GENERATOR OSCILLATION1000 Hz to 2000 Hz

VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 12: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

12

Sine Function Example VibrationdataVibrationdata

-1.0

-0.5

0

0.5

1.0

0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

TIME (SEC)

AC

CE

L (

G)

Page 13: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

13

Sine Function Bathtub Histogram VibrationdataVibrationdata

-1.5 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 1.50

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000 Histogram

Co

un

ts

Amplitude

Page 14: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

14

Sine Formulas

The acceleration a(t) is obtained by taking the derivative of the velocity.

Sine Displacement Function

The displacement x(t) is

where

X is the displacement ω is the frequency (radians/time)

The velocity v(t) is obtained by taking the derivative.

VibrationdataVibrationdata

x(t) = X sin (t)

v(t) = X cos (t)

a(t) = -2 X sin (t)

Page 15: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

15

Peak Sine Values VibrationdataVibrationdata

Peak Values Referenced to Peak Displacement

Parameter Value

displacement X

velocity X

acceleration 2 X

Peak Values Referenced to Peak Acceleration

Parameter Value

acceleration A

velocity A/

displacement A/2

Page 16: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

16

Acceleration Displacement Relationship VibrationdataVibrationdata

Shaker table test specifications typically have a lower frequency limit of 10 to 20 Hz to control displacement.

Freq (Hz)Displacement

(inches zero-to-peak)

0.1 9778

1 97.8

10 0.978

20 0.244

50 0.03911

100 9.78E-03

1000 9.78E-05

Displacement for 10 G sine Excitation

Page 17: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

17

Sine Calculation Example

peaktozeroinch039.0peak

X

G2sec/in386G5.2

])Hz25(2[1

peakX

peakX1

peakX

2

2

What is the displacement corresponding to a 2.5 G, 25 Hz oscillation?

VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 18: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

18

Sine Amplitude VibrationdataVibrationdata

Sine vibration has the following relationships.

These equations do not apply to random vibration, however.

RMSX2peakX

peakXX2RMS

1

Page 19: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

19

SDOF System Subjected to Base Excitation VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 20: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

20

Free Body Diagram VibrationdataVibrationdata

Summation of forces in the vertical direction

Let z = x - y. The variable z is thus the relative displacement.

Substituting the relative displacement yields

)x(yk)xy(cxm

kzzc)yzm(

ymkzzczm

y(k/m)zz(c/m)z

xmF

Page 21: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

21

Equation of Motion VibrationdataVibrationdata

By convention,

nωξ 2c/m

2nωk/m

yz2nωznω2ξz

Substituting the convention terms into equation,

is the natural frequency (rad/sec)

is the damping ratio

This is a second-order, linear, non-homogenous, ordinary differential equation with constant coefficients.

Page 22: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

22

Equation of Motion (cont) VibrationdataVibrationdata

yz2nωznω2ξz

Solve for the relative displacement z using Laplace transforms.

Then, the absolute acceleration is

yzx

y could be a sine base acceleration or an arbitrary function

Page 23: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

23

yz2nωznω2ξz

A convolution integral can be used for the case where the base input is arbitrary.

d)-t(sin)-t(nexp)(Y1

=)tz(t

0 dd

2nd 1

A unit impulse response function h(t) may be defined for this homogeneous case as

where

tsin)texp(1

=h(t) dnd

Equation of Motion (cont) VibrationdataVibrationdata

Page 24: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

24

Equation of Motion (cont) VibrationdataVibrationdata

The convolution integral is numerically inefficient to solve in its equivalent digital-series form.

Instead, use…

Smallwood, ramp invariant, digital recursive filtering relationship!

Page 25: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

25

Equation of Motion (cont) VibrationdataVibrationdata

2idnd

n

1idd

dn

idnd

2in

1idni

yTsinTexpT

1T2exp

yTsinT

1TcosTexp2

yTsinTexpT

11

xt2exp

xtcostexp2x

Page 26: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

26

Sine Vibration Exercise 1VibrationdataVibrationdata

Use Matlab script: vibrationdata.m

Miscellaneous Functions > Generate Signal > Begin Miscellaneous Analysis >

Select Signal > sine

Amplitude = 1

Duration = 5 sec

Frequency = 10 Hz

Phase = 0 deg

Sample Rate = 8000 Hz

Save Signal to Matlab Workspace > Output Array Name > sine_data > Save

sine_data will be used in next exercise. So keep vibrationdata opened.

Page 27: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

27

Sine Vibration Exercise 2 VibrationdataVibrationdata

Use Matlab script: vibrationdata.m

Must have sine_data available in Matlab workspace from previous exercise.

Select Analysis > Statistics > Begin Signal Analysis >

Input Array Name > sine_data > Calculate

Check Results.

RMS^2 = mean^2 + std dev^2

Kurtosis = 1.5 for pure sine vibration

Crest Factor = peak/ (std dev)

Histogram is a bathtub curve.

Experiment with different number of histogram bars.

.

Page 28: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

28

Sine Vibration Exercise 3 VibrationdataVibrationdata

Use Matlab script: vibrationdata.m

Must have sine data available in Matlab workspace from previous exercise.

Apply sine as 1 G, 10 Hz base acceleration to SDOF system with (fn=10 Hz, Q=10). Calculate response.

Use Smallwood algorithm (although exact solution could be obtained via Laplace transforms).

Vibrationdata > Time History > Acceleration > Select Analysis > SDOF Response to Base Input

This example is resonant excitation because base excitation and natural frequencies are the same!

Page 29: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

29

Sine Vibration Exercise 4 VibrationdataVibrationdata

File channel.txt is an acceleration time history that was measured during a test of an aluminum channel beam. The beam was excited by an impulse hammer to measure the damping.

The damping was less than 1% so the signal has only a slight decay.

Use script: sinefind.m to find the two dominant natural frequencies.

Enter time limits: 9.5 to 9.6 seconds

Enter: 10000 trials, 2 frequencies

Select strategy: 2 for automatically estimate frequencies from FFT & zero-crossings

Results should be 583 & 691 Hz (rounded-off)

The difference is about 110 Hz. This is a beat frequency effect. It represents the low-frequency amplitude modulation in the measured time history.

Page 30: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

30

Sine Vibration Exercise 5 VibrationdataVibrationdata

Astronaut Michael Collins wrote:

The first stage of the Titan II vibrated longitudinally, so that someone riding on it would be bounced up and down as if on a pogo stick. The vibration was at a relatively high frequency, about 11 cycles per second, with an amplitude of plus or minus 5 Gs in the worst case.

What was the corresponding displacement?

Perform hand calculation.

Then check via:

Matlab script > vibrationdata > Miscellaneous Functions > Amplitude Conversion Utilities > Steady-state Sine Amplitude

Page 31: 1 Sine Vibration Vibrationdata Unit 2. 2 Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

31

Sine Vibration Exercise 6 VibrationdataVibrationdata

A certain shaker table has a displacement limit of 2 inch peak-to-peak.

What is the maximum acceleration at 10 Hz?

Perform hand-calculation.

Then check with script:

vibrationdata > Miscellaneous Functions > Amplitude Conversion Utilities >

Steady-state Sine Amplitude