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Mechanical Vibrations

Chapter 1:
Fundamental of Vibration
Dr. Azma Putra
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
Department of Structure and Materials
Semester I/2014-2015

What you will get from this course


Nothing
Something

Lots of thing

Lecture Note, Mechanical Vibrations, Semester I/2014-2015

Introduction
Most engineering structures vibrate:
machines, cars, aircraft, etc
Materials becoming lighter, more flexible, engines becoming faster
need to model, design, analyze, understand, treat

Vibration is usually (relatively) small, oscillatory motion about


a static equilibrium position

Lecture Note, Mechanical Vibrations, Semester I/2014-2015

Effect of vibration: Structural failure


Fatigue

*Courtesy of Mobius ILearn interactive

Machine
failure

Lecture Note, Mechanical Vibrations, Semester I/2014-2015

Effect of vibration: Structural failure


Fatigue in pipeline

Case study:
PETRONAS Malaysia LNG, Bintulu, Sarawak
Cracked pipe, one module had to be shut down
Loss RM25 million/day
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Effect of vibration: Noise

Piling

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Railway

Effect of vibration: Instabilities

Flutter

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Effect of vibration: Health

White finger: Hand-arm vibration syndrome

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What causes vibration?


Imperfection in machine or structure
Design
Manufacturing defect
Installation
Assembly
Operations
Maintenance

Lecture Note, Mechanical Vibrations, Semester I/2014-2015

How to quantify the vibration?


1. Measurement and/or Simulation

2. Analysis: frequency, amplitude and phase

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Where to apply the knowledge?


1. Vibration isolation

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2. Aircraft Ground vibration test

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3. Structural vibration

Noise, Vibration and Harshness (NVH)

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Comfort - Customer demand


Which one requires more treatment to control vibration?

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4. Maintenance/Vibration monitoring
Rotating machinery

Plant piping system: oil and gas

Most industrial problems !!


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5. Building design
Millenium Bridge London (2000)

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VIBRATION: CAN IT BE FRIEND?


Most vibrations are undesirable, but there are many instances
where vibrations are useful:
Tooth cleaning
Massage chair
Music instrument
Heartbeat
Vibration energy harvesting

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Terminologies and Definitions


Ingredients in vibration:
Mass - store of kinetic energy
Stiffness - store of potential (strain) energy
Damping - dissipate energy
Force - provide energy

Can you identify mass, stiffness and damping


from a piece sheet of a panel?

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Most contents of this course assume that the force


and the resulting motion are time harmonic
i.e. a periodic motion that repeats at regular interval.

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Three important results from vibration measurement:


1. Amplitude

- HOW MUCH

2. Frequency

- HOW FAST

3. Phase

- HOW IT IS VIBRATING

*Courtesy of Mobius ILearn interactive

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What is amplitude?
Amplitude is the level of vibration from the equilibrium position.
It can be displacement, velocity or acceleration.
maximum amplitude:

ymax A
instantaneous amplitude:

y (t to ) B

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Amplitude: Time signal Desciptor


x(t)

Amplitude

Peak

RMS

Average
Time

Peak-Peak

RMS

1
T

x 2 (t )dt

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Average

1
| x(t ) | dt
T
0

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What is frequency?
Frequency is the number of cycles repeated per second.
The unit is Heartz (Hz)

1
f
T

T is the period,
i.e. the time required to
complete one cycle

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Low frequency vs. High frequency


Which light has the highest flashing frequency?

A
B

C
Which wave has the highest frequency?

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What is phase?

Blue curve leads the green curve by /2 radians

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Example of a sinusoidal signal


General expression of a sinusoidal signal:

x(t ) A sin(t )

x(t ) 0.2sin(150t 3.14)


Amplitude (peak value)

= 0.2 m

Frequency

= 150 rad/s or 23.9 Hz

Peak-peak

= 0.4 m

Phase

= 3.14 rad or 180o

Period

= 0.04 s

Average

= 0.1 m

RMS

= 0.14 m

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Complex Exponential Notation


frequency

Write time harmonic quantity as


where

e jt cos t j sin t

However in real world we see

x(t ) Xe jt
amplitude
(usually complex)

Re x(t)

x(t ) X cos(t )
magnitude
(absolute, real)

phase

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x(t ) Xe jt
For short,
we just write

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HOW?
Suppose

X a jb

Show that:
(1).

| X | = max. magnitude

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X a2 b2

(2).

X X e j

(3).

x(t ) X cos(t )

b
tan = phase
a
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Problem examples
a.

A time harmonic motion at 1 kHz has a peak acceleration of 100g


(1 g = 9.8 ms-2). What is the peak displacement?
(Ans. 0.0248 mm)

b.

A time harmonic force f(t) = (4 + j3)ejt produces a response


x(t) = (2 - j)ejt.
Calculate the magnitude and the phase of the force.
Calculate the magnitude and the phase of the displacement.
Find the velocity per unit force magnitude, assuming = 5.

(Ans. 5 N, 0.644 rad, 2.24 m, -0.464, 0.447 N/m, 2.24 m/s/N)

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X X e j = |X|cos () + j|X|sin ()

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Summary of Complex Exponential Notation

x(t ) Xe

jt

Implicitly carries phase information

Makes life easy but introduce complex numbers


Used widely in frequency response methods

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Vibration units: Definitions


Displacement:

The distance travel by the mass, how far up and down


it is moving
Velocity:
Rate change of displacement. For example, how far it can
cover in one second
Acceleration:
Rate change of velocity. How quickly the mass
is speeding up or slowing down

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Converting vibration units


Displacement:

x(t ) Xe jt
Velocity:

dx(t )
v (t )
x jXe jt
dt
Acceleration:

dv (t ) d 2 x(t )
2
jt

Xe
a(t )

dt
dt 2
Velocity leads displacement by 90o
Velocity lags acceleration by 90o
*Note phase difference between them
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v (t ) jXe jt

Lag

Lead

x(t ) Xe jt

a(t ) ( j j )2 Xe jt

Note on the imaginary sign


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Displacement
Velocity
Acceleration

270
270ooo
90ooo
90
90

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180ooo
180
180

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displacement
probe

If the sensor measures maximum


displacement at point A,
at which location is the maximum
acceleration?

Maximum
displacement
A

The maximum velocity?

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Free vibration - no external forces act on the system

Forced vibration - forces act on the system


Damped/undamped system - damping does/doesnt exist

What is the phase difference between the two systems?

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FREE VIBRATION
System vibrates at its natural frequency
x (t )

x(t ) A sin(n t )
Natural frequency
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FORCED VIBRATION
System vibrates at its forcing frequency
x (t )
F (t )

x(t ) A sin(f t )
Forcing frequency
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We deal with only linear system.


same frequency as input
magnitude change

output proportional
to input
superposition holds

all components linear linear vibration (idealisation)


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Modeling
Degree of Freedom (DOF): number of independent coordinates
to describe the motion.
Coordinates may be:
displacement of some points

rotation
other (modal amplitudes, waves, etc)

Number depends on:


how complex the system is
modeling simplifications + assumptions
(how we choose to model it)

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Example:
Modelling vibration
of a motor cycle

suspension design
(1 DOF)

Effect of motorcycle
vibration to rider
comfort (4 DOF)

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Bounce +wheel hop


(3 DOF)

Simplification (2 DOF)

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Could you try to model this system?

Missile carrier: isolating the vibration from the ground

Mass of missile

Isolator

Mass of truck
Suspension

road input

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Stiffness and Flexibility


Stiffness arises from any structural component that deforms (elastically)
under action of forces.

F kx

: deformation (m)

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: spring constant (N/m)

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Examples

vibration mounting

Engineering structures
?
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Spring in series

Carry same force !!


Extension = sum of individual extension

F k1y ,

F k2 ( x y )

F
k2 x F
k1

1
x
1
1

keq F k1 k2
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Spring in parallel

Have same extension !!

Total force = sum of forces in each spring

F1 k1x

F2 k2 x

keq

F F1 F2
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F
k1 k2
x

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The equivalent stiffness can be found by considering:


force-deformation relation
potential energy-deformation relation (Chapter 2)

F
k
x

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Cantilever beam
For cantilever with length L and a tip load F giving displacement x

3EI
F 3 x
L

EI

: bending stiffness

x
Note that this is the
stiffness only at the tip of
the cantilever

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3EI
L3
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Series or Parallel?

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Shaft
Torque T produces rotation

GJ
T

G
J

: Shear modulus
: Polar moment of area of
shaft cross section

GJ
k
L

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Helical spring

d
2R

Gd 4
64nR 3

: Shear modulus of spring material

: Diameter of wire
: Diameter of turn

: Number of turn

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STIFFNESS TABLE

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STIFFNESS TABLE
(cont.)

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Linearisation
x r sin
If small displacement, i.e. is small:

3
sin
...
3!
x r

Thus

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x1 ?

x2 ?
x3 ?
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x1 b
x2 a
x3 c
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POTENTIAL ENERGY
= work done from unstreched position

Fdx

Linear spring equivalent stiffness

V 21 keq x 2

k1
keq 2 k 2
R

(kx ) dx 21 kx 2
Torsional spring equivalent stiffness

V 21 keq 2

keq k1 k2 R 2
More discussion in Chapter 2
**note: we should relate x and

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References
B. R. Mace, ISVR Lecture Notes, Univ. of Southampton
D. J. Inman, Engineering Vibrations, 3rd Ed., Pearson
S. Rao, Mechanical Vibrations, 5th Ed., Pearson
Animations courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University, USA

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