Lecture 1c
Lecture 1c
Vibrations
Content
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1. Introduction to Vibration and Free Response
• Viscous Damping
• Mass-Spring-Damper system
• Equation of motion, solution
• Critical Damping
• Overdamped Motion
• Underdamped Motion
• Sample problems
• Logarithmic decrement
Viscous damping
Called: dashpot or damper
Unit: [N/m/s]
f c cx(t )
oil
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Mass-Spring-Damper System
Equation of Motion:
mx(t ) f k f c
kx (t ) cx (t )
Frictionless surface
x(0) x0 , x(0) v0
Solution
x(t ) Cet
Frictionless surface (m 2 c k )Cet 0
mx(t ) cx(t ) kx(t ) 0 (m 2 c k ) x(t ) 0
x(0) x0 , x(0) v0
m 2 c k 0
Characteristic equation
c k
2 0
m m
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m 2 c k 0
Solution
c k
2 0
m m
c c 2 4mk
mx(t ) cx(t ) kx(t ) 0 1,2
2m
x(0) x0 , x(0) v0
2
c c k
1,2
2m 2m m
Solution 2
c c k
1,2
2m 2m m
2
c k
Frictionless 0 or c 2 4mk 0
surface 2m m
mx(t ) cx(t ) kx(t ) 0
x(0) x0 , x(0) v0 ccr 2 km 2m k / m 2mn
c c c
Viscous damping ratio:
ccr 2 km 2mn
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Solution
mx(t ) cx(t ) kx(t ) 0
c k
x(t ) x(t ) x(t ) 0
m m
x(t ) 2n x(t ) n2 x(t ) 0
Frictionless surface
c c k
2 2 2n n2 0
1,2
2m 2m m
c
c
c 1,2 in terms of and n
ccr 2 km 2mn
c
2n 1,2 n n 2 1
m
1) Overdamped Motion(>1)
x(t ) C1e1t C2e2t
1,2 n n 2 1
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The Response of Overdamped Systems (No Vibration!)
1,2 n n 2 1
1 2 n
Frictionless surface
x(t ) C1e1t C2te 2t
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2) Critically damped motion (1) (No Vibration!)
No oscillatory motion
Used for door closing systems, dials of analogue gauges etc.
nt
x(t ) [ x0 (v0 n x0 )t ]e
3) Underdamped Motion(<1)
1,2 n n 2 1
1,2 n jn 1 2
Two complex conjugate roots
1 n jn 1 2
2 n jn 1 2
1 n jd
d n 1 2
2 n jd
d : Damped natural frequency
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3) Underdamped Motion(<1)
x(t ) e nt (C1e jnt 1 2
C2e jnt 1 2
)
d n 1 2
x(t ) e nt (C1e jd t C2e jd t )
Note: If C1 and C2 are complex conjugates,
one gets real A1 and A2. A2=C1+C2, A1=(C1-C2)j
3) Underdamped Motion(<1)
1
A (v0 n x0 ) 2 ( x0d ) 2
d
mx(t ) cx(t ) kx(t ) 0
x(0) x0 , x(0) v0 x0d
tan 1
v0 n x0
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x(t ) e nt ( A1 sin(d t ) A2 cos(d t )) x(t ) Ae nt sin(d t )
A2 xo A A12 A22
vo n xo
A1 tan 1 (
A2
)
d A1
1
A (v0 n x0 ) 2 ( x0d ) 2
d
Underdamped Motion(<1)
d n 1 2
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time
k c1 + c2
d n 1 2
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Sample Problem
A 30 cm long spring with a spring constant of k = 857.8 N/m is fixed to a
rigid wall (ground) and a rigid block with 49.2 x 10-3 kg mass is attached
to the other end of the spring. Viscous damping coefficient is given as
c = 0.11 kg/s. Determine the viscous damping ratio for this system.
20 cycle 2 rad
n 125.66 rad/s
1 s cycle
d 125.66 1 ( 0.224 ) 122.467 rad/s
2
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vo n xo vo
A , d 122.66, v0 0.6, x0 0
d d
0.6
A =0.0049m, =0
d
x(t ) 0.0049e nt (sin d t ) 0.0049e 28.148t sin(122.467t )
If no damping:
0.6
max ( x ) n2 A n2 ( 0.6 ) (125.66 m/s ) 75.4 m/s
2 2
n
1g
Maximum Acceleration 75.40 m/s 2 7.68 g
9.81 m/s 2
Sample Problem
The general response of the underdamped system can also be
written as:
x(t ) ent ( A1 sin d t A2 cos d t )
Determine the constants A1 and A2 using the initial conditions.
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Sample Problem
Logarithmic decrement: d
Definition, derivation
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The response of underdamped system
Logarithmic decrement: d
x(t ) Aent sin(d t )
Xi
d ln
X i 1
Logarithmic decrement: d Xi
d ln
Deplasman, [mm]
X i 1
Xi
X i 1 T X i (ti ) Ae nti
X i 1 (ti T ) Ae n (ti T )
ti
Zaman, [s] Xi
enT
X i 1
Xi
d ln nT
X i 1
Xi
If damping is small d ln nT 2
X i 1
1 Xi d
d ln
n X in 2
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Logarithmic decrement: d
Xi
enT
X i 1
Xi
d ln nT
X i 1
2 2
If damping is NOT small T
d n 1 2
Xi 2
d ln nT n
X i 1 n 1 2
Xi 2 d
d ln
X i 1 1 2
(2 ) 2 d 2
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