Unit 2 Vibrationdata Sine Vibration.

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Presentation transcript:

Unit 2 Vibrationdata Sine Vibration

Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Metrics

Question Vibrationdata Does sinusoidal vibration ever occur in rocket vehicles?

Solid Rocket Booster, Thrust Oscillation Vibrationdata Solid Rocket Booster, Thrust Oscillation Space Shuttle, 4-segment booster 15 Hz Ares-I, 5-segment booster 12 Hz

Vibrationdata Delta II Main Engine Cutoff (MECO) Transient at ~120 Hz MECO could be a high force input to spacecraft

Pegasus XL Drop Transient Vibrationdata Pegasus XL Drop Transient 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.

Pegasus XL Drop Transient Data Vibrationdata Pegasus XL Drop Transient Data

Pogo Vibrationdata 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.

Gemini Program Titan II Pogo Vibrationdata 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.

Vibrationdata Flight Anomaly 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.

Flight Accelerometer Data Vibrationdata

Vibrationdata Sine Function Example

Sine Function Bathtub Histogram Vibrationdata Sine Function Bathtub Histogram

Vibrationdata Sine Formulas v(t) =  X cos (t) a(t) = -2 X sin (t) Sine Displacement Function The displacement x(t) is x(t) = X sin (t) where X is the displacement ω is the frequency (radians/time) The velocity v(t) is obtained by taking the derivative. v(t) =  X cos (t) The acceleration a(t) is obtained by taking the derivative of the velocity. a(t) = -2 X sin (t)

Vibrationdata Peak Sine Values 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

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

Sine Calculation Example Vibrationdata Sine Calculation Example What is the displacement corresponding to a 2.5 G, 25 Hz oscillation?

Vibrationdata Sine Amplitude Sine vibration has the following relationships. These equations do not apply to random vibration, however.

SDOF System Subjected to Base Excitation Vibrationdata

Vibrationdata Free Body Diagram Summation of forces in the vertical direction Let z = x - y. The variable z is thus the relative displacement. Substituting the relative displacement yields

Vibrationdata Equation of Motion  is the natural frequency (rad/sec) By convention, is the natural frequency (rad/sec)  is the damping ratio Substituting the convention terms into equation, This is a second-order, linear, non-homogenous, ordinary differential equation with constant coefficients.

Equation of Motion (cont) Vibrationdata Solve for the relative displacement z using Laplace transforms. Then, the absolute acceleration is could be a sine base acceleration or an arbitrary function

Equation of Motion (cont) Vibrationdata A unit impulse response function h(t) may be defined for this homogeneous case as A convolution integral can be used for the case where the base input is arbitrary. where

Equation of Motion (cont) Vibrationdata The convolution integral is numerically inefficient to solve in its equivalent digital-series form. Instead, use… Smallwood, ramp invariant, digital recursive filtering relationship!

Equation of Motion (cont) Vibrationdata

Sine Vibration Exercise 1 Vibrationdata 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.

Sine Vibration Exercise 2 Vibrationdata 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. .

Sine Vibration Exercise 3 Vibrationdata 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!

Sine Vibration Exercise 4 Vibrationdata 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.

Sine Vibration Exercise 5 Vibrationdata 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

Sine Vibration Exercise 6 Vibrationdata 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