Modal Mass
Modal Mass
By Tom Irvine
Email: tomirvine@aol.com
October 6, 2010
_______________________________________________________________________
Introduction
The effective modal mass provides a method for judging the “significance” of a vibration
mode.
Modes with relatively high effective masses can be readily excited by base excitation.
On the other hand, modes with low effective masses cannot be readily excited in this
manner.
Consider a modal transient or frequency response function analysis via the finite element
method. Also consider that the system is a multi-degree-of-freedom system. For brevity,
only a limited number of modes should be included in the analysis.
How many modes should be included in the analysis? Perhaps the number should be
enough so that the total effective modal mass of the model is at least 90% of the actual
mass.
Definitions
The equation definitions in this section are taken from Reference 1.
Consider a discrete dynamic system governed by the following equation
M x K x F (1)
where
1
A solution to the homogeneous form of equation (1) can be found in terms of eigenvalues
and eigenvectors. The eigenvectors represent vibration modes.
Let be the eigenvector matrix.
m̂ T M (2)
Let r be the influence vector which represents the displacements of the masses resulting
from static application of a unit ground displacement.
L T M r (3)
Li
i (4)
m̂ i i
Li 2
m eff , i (5)
m̂ i i
Example
Consider the two-degree-of-freedom system shown in Figure 1, with the parameters
shown in Table 1.
2
x2
m2
k3
x1
k2 m1
y
k1
Figure 1.
Table 1. Parameters
Variable Value
m1 2.0 kg
m2 1.0 kg
k1 1000 N/m
k2 2000 N/m
k3 3000 N/m
2 0
M kg (7)
0 1
3
The stiffness matrix is
4000 3000
K N/m (8)
3000 5000
The eigenvalues and eigenvectors can be found using the method in Reference 2.
f 1 4.78 Hz (12)
f 2 12.4 Hz (15)
0.6280 0.3251
(16)
0.4597 0.8881
The eigenvectors were previously normalized so that the generalized mass is the identity
matrix.
m̂ T M (17)
4
0.6280 0.4597 2 0 0.6280 0.3251
m̂ (18)
0.3251 0.8881 0 1 0.4597 0.8881
1 0
m̂ (20)
0 1
Again, r is the influence vector which represents the displacements of the masses
resulting from static application of a unit ground displacement. For this example, each
mass simply has the same static displacement as the ground displacement.
1
r (21)
1
L T M r (22)
0.6280 0.4597 2
L 1 (24)
0.3251 0.8881
1.7157
L kg (25)
0.2379
5
The modal participation factor i for mode i is
Li
i (26)
m̂ i i
1.7157
(27)
0.2379
The coefficient vector L and the modal participation vector are identical in this
example because the generalized mass matrix is the identity matrix.
Li 2
m eff , i (28)
m̂ i i
For mode 1,
m eff , 1
1.7157 kg2 (29)
1 kg
For mode 2,
m eff , 2
0.2379 kg2 (31)
1 kg
Note that
6
m eff , 1 m eff , 2 3 kg (34)
Thus, the sum of the effective masses equals the total system mass.
Also, note that the first mode has a much higher effective mass than the second mode.
Thus, the first mode can be readily excited by base excitation. On the other hand, the
second mode is negligible in this sense.
From another viewpoint, the center of gravity of the first mode experiences a significant
translation when the first mode is excited.
On the other hand, the center of gravity of the second mode remains nearly stationary
when the second mode is excited.
Each degree-of-freedom in the previous example was a translation in the X-axis. This
characteristic simplified the effective modal mass calculation.
In general, a system will have at least one translation degree-of-freedom in each of three
orthogonal axes. Likewise, it will have at least one rotational degree-of-freedom about
each of three orthogonal axes. The effective modal mass calculation for a general system
is shown by the example in Appendix A. The example is from a real-world problem.
Aside
References
7
APPENDIX A
Equation of Motion
m, J
kz1
kz2
kx1 0
kx2
ky2
ky1
kz3
kz4
The mass and inertia are represented at a point with the circle symbol. Each isolator is
modeled by three orthogonal DOF springs. The springs are mounted at each corner. The
springs are shown with an offset from the corners for clarity. The triangles indicate fixed
constraints. “0” indicates the origin.
8
y
a1 a2
C. G.
b 0
c1
c2
All dimensions are positive as long as the C.G. is “inside the box.” At least one
dimension will be negative otherwise.
9
The mass and stiffness matrices are shown in upper triangular form due to symmetry.
m 0 0 0 0 0
m 0 0 0 0
m 0 0 0
M
Jx 0 0
Jy 0
J z
(A-1)
4k x 0 0 0 2k x c1 c2 4k x b
4k y 0 2k y c1 c2 0 2k y a1 a 2
4k z 4k z b 2k z a1 a 2 0
K = 4k z b 2 2k y c12 c22 2k z a1 a 2 b k y a1 a 2 c1 c2
4k x c2 2 2k z a12 a 22 2k x c1 c2 b
4k x b 2k y a1 a 2
2 2 2
(A-2)
10
The equation of motion is
x x 0
y y 0
z z 0
M K
0
0
0
(A-3)
The variables α, β, and θ represent rotations about the X, Y, and Z axes, respectively.
Example
A mass is mounted to a surface with four isolators. The system has the following properties.
M = 4.28 lbm
Jx = 44.9 lbm in^2
Jy = 39.9 lbm in^2
Jz = 18.8 lbm in^2
kx = 80 lbf/in
ky = 80 lbf/in
kz = 80 lbf/in
a1 = 6.18 in
a2 = -2.68 in
b = 3.85 in
c1 = 3. in
c2 = 3. in
11
Let r be the influence matrix which represents the displacements of the masses resulting from
static application of unit ground displacements and rotations. The influence matrix for this
example is the identity matrix provided that the C.G is the reference point.
1 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0 0 0
r
0 0 0 1 0 0
0 0 0 0 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 1
(A-4)
L T M r (A-5)
Li j
ij (A-6)
m̂ i i
Each m̂ i i coefficient is 1 if the eigenvectors have been normalized with respect to the mass
matrix.
The effective modal mass m eff , i vector for mode i and dof j is
m eff , i j
L i j 2
(A-7)
m̂ i i
The natural frequency results for the sample problem are calculated using the program:
six_dof_iso.m.
12
six_dof_iso.m ver 1.2 March 31, 2005
Enter m (lbm)
4.28
Enter Jx (lbm in^2)
44.9
Enter Jy (lbm in^2)
39.9
Enter Jz (lbm in^2)
18.8
Enter kx (lbf/in)
80
Enter ky (lbf/in)
80
Enter kz (lbf/in)
80
Enter a1 (in)
6.18
Enter a2 (in)
-2.68
Enter b (in)
3.85
Enter c1 (in)
3
13
Enter c2 (in)
3
m =
0.0111 0 0 0 0 0
0 0.0111 0 0 0 0
0 0 0.0111 0 0 0
0 0 0 0.1163 0 0
0 0 0 0 0.1034 0
0 0 0 0 0 0.0487
k =
1.0e+004 *
0.0320 0 0 0 0 0.1232
0 0.0320 0 0 0 -0.1418
0 0 0.0320 -0.1232 0.1418 0
0 0 -0.1232 0.7623 -0.5458 0
0 0 0.1418 -0.5458 1.0140 0
0.1232 -0.1418 0 0 0 1.2003
Eigenvalues
lambda =
1.0e+005 *
14
Natural Frequencies =
1. 7.338 Hz
2. 12.02 Hz
3. 27.04 Hz
4. 27.47 Hz
5. 63.06 Hz
6. 83.19 Hz
15
APPENDIX B
The following definition is taken from Reference 3. Note that the mode shape functions are
unscaled. Hence, the participation factor is unscaled.
P
p( x , t ) o p( x ) f ( t ) (B-1)
L
1 L
L 0
i p( x ) i ( x ) dx (B-2)
where
16
APPENDIX C
The following convention appears to be more useful than that given in Appendix B.
Let
Yn ( x ) = mass-normalized eigenvectors
m(x) = mass per length
L
n m( x ) Yn ( x )dx (C-1)
0
2
L
0 m( x ) Yn ( x )dx
m eff , n (C-2)
0 m(x) Yn (x) dx
L 2
m( x ) Yn ( x )2 dx 1
L
0 (C-3)
Thus,
2
L
m eff , n n 2 m( x ) Yn ( x )dx (C-4)
0
17
APPENDIX D
2 EI 2 8
L
1 2 L
L2 2
2 EI
2 4 0 0
L2
2 EI 2 8
L
3 9 2 L
L2 3 9 2
2 EI
4 16 0 0
L2
2 EI 2 8
L
5 25 2 L
L2 5 25 2
2 EI
6 36 0 0
L2
2 EI 2 8
L
7 49 2 L
L2 7 49 2
95% of the total mass is accounted for using the first seven modes.
18
Table D-2. Bending Vibration, Fixed-Free Beam
Natural Participation Effective Modal
Mode
Frequency n Factor Mass
2
1 1.87510 EI
0.7830 L 0.6131 L
L
2
2 4.69409 EI
0.4339 L 0.1883 L
L
2
3 5 EI
0.2544 L 0.06474 L
2L
2
4 7 EI
0.1818 L 0.03306 L
2L
90% of the total mass is accounted for using the first four modes.
19
APPENDIX E
E
c (E-1)
93% of the total mass is accounted for by using the first three modes.
20