1,794 research outputs found

    Design and Control Modeling of Novel Electro-magnets Driven Spherical Motion Generators

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    Large deployable antenna program. Phase 1: Technology assessment and mission architecture

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    The program was initiated to investigate the availability of critical large deployable antenna technologies which would enable microwave remote sensing missions from geostationary orbits as required for Mission to Planet Earth. Program goals for the large antenna were: 40-meter diameter, offset-fed paraboloid, and surface precision of 0.1 mm rms. Phase 1 goals were: to review the state-of-the-art for large, precise, wide-scanning radiometers up to 60 GHz; to assess critical technologies necessary for selected concepts; to develop mission architecture for these concepts; and to evaluate generic technologies to support the large deployable reflectors necessary for these missions. Selected results of the study show that deployable reflectors using furlable segments are limited by surface precision goals to 12 meters in diameter, current launch vehicles can place in geostationary only a 20-meter class antenna, and conceptual designs using stiff reflectors are possible with areal densities of 2.4 deg/sq m

    Extended analytical charge modeling for permanent-magnet based devices : practical application to the interactions in a vibration isolation system

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    This thesis researches the analytical surface charge modeling technique which provides a fast, mesh-free and accurate description of complex unbound electromagnetic problems. To date, it has scarcely been used to design passive and active permanent-magnet devices, since ready-to-use equations were still limited to a few domain areas. Although publications available in the literature have demonstrated the surface-charge modeling potential, they have only scratched the surface of its application domain. The research that is presented in this thesis proposes ready-to-use novel analytical equations for force, stiffness and torque. The analytical force equations for cuboidal permanent magnets are now applicable to any magnetization vector combination and any relative position. Symbolically derived stiffness equations directly provide the analytical 3 £ 3 stiffness matrix solution. Furthermore, analytical torque equations are introduced that allow for an arbitrary reference point, hence a direct torque calculation on any assembly of cuboidal permanent magnets. Some topics, such as the analytical calculation of the force and torque for rotated magnets and extensions to the field description of unconventionally shaped magnets, are outside the scope of this thesis are recommended for further research. A worldwide first permanent-magnet-based, high-force and low-stiffness vibration isolation system has been researched and developed using this advanced modeling technique. This one-of-a-kind 6-DoF vibration isolation system consumes a minimal amount of energy (Ç 1W) and exploits its electromagnetic nature by maximizing the isolation bandwidth (> 700Hz). The resulting system has its resonance > 1Hz with a -2dB per decade acceleration slope. It behaves near-linear throughout its entire 6-DoF working range, which allows for uncomplicated control structures. Its position accuracy is around 4mum, which is in close proximity to the sensor’s theoretical noise level of 1mum. The extensively researched passive (no energy consumption) permanent-magnet based gravity compensator forms the magnetic heart of this vibration isolation system. It combines a 7.1kN vertical force with <10kN/m stiffness in all six degrees of freedom. These contradictory requirements are extremely challenging and require the extensive research into gravity compensator topologies that is presented in this thesis. The resulting cross-shaped topology with vertical airgaps has been filed as a European patent. Experiments have illustrated the influence of the ambient temperature on the magnetic behavior, 1.7h/K or 12N/K, respectively. The gravity compensator has two integrated voice coil actuators that are designed to exhibit a high force and low power consumption (a steepness of 625N2/W and a force constant of 31N/A) within the given current and voltage constraints. Three of these vibration isolators, each with a passive 6-DoF gravity compensator and integrated 2-DoF actuation, are able to stabilize the six degrees of freedom. The experimental results demonstrate the feasibility of passive magnet-based gravity compensation for an advanced, high-force vibration isolation system. Its modular topology enables an easy force and stiffness scaling. Overall, the research presented in this thesis shows the high potential of this new class of electromagnetic devices for vibration isolation purposes or other applications that are demanding in terms of force, stiffness and energy consumption. As for any new class of devices, there are still some topics that require further study before this design can be implemented in the next generation of vibration isolation systems. Examples of these topics are the tunability of the gravity compensator’s force and a reduction of magnetic flux leakage

    Modeling and Analysis of Permanent Magnet Spherical Motors by A Multi-task Gaussian Process Method and Finite Element Method for Output Torque

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    Permanent magnet spherical motors (PMSMs) operate on the principle of the dc excitation of stator coils and three freedom of motion in the rotor. Each coil generates the torque in a specific direction, collectively they move the rotor to a direction of motion. Modeling and analysis of the output torque are of critical importance for precise position control applications. The control of these motors requires precise output torques by all coils at a specific rotor position, which is difficult to achieve in the three-dimension space. This article is the first to apply the Gaussian process to establish the relationship of the rotor position and the output torque for PMSMs. Traditional methods are difficult to resolve such a complex three-dimensional problem with a reasonable computational accuracy and time. This article utilizes a data-driven method using only input and output data validated by experiments. The multitask Gaussian process is developed to calculate the total torque produced by multiple coils at the full operational range. The training data and test data are obtained by the finite-element method. The effectiveness of the proposed method is validated and compared with existing data-driven approaches. The results exhibit superior performance of accuracy

    Electromagnetic fields and interactions in 3D cylindrical structures : modeling and application

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    The demand for more efficient and compact actuation systems results in a search for new electromagnetic actuator configurations. To obtain actuators that meet these challenging specifications, accurate modeling of the electromagnetic fields is often a prerequisite. To date, analytical modeling techniques are widely used to predict electromagnetic fields in classical rotary and linear machines represented in two dimensional coordinate systems. This thesis presents the extension of an analytical modeling technique to predict the 3D field distribution in new cylindrical actuator configurations. One specific technique that is used to analyze and design electromagnetic devices is based on Fourier series to describe sources and the resultingmagnetic fields. In this research, the harmonic modeling technique is extended to describe electromagnetic fields due to presence of permanent magnets in regular and irregular shaped 3D cylindrical structures. The researched modeling technique can be applied to current-free cylindrical problems exhibiting periodicity or a soft-magnetic boundary in the axial direction. The cylindrical structure can posses either circumferential slots, axial slots or rectangular cavities. The assignment and a method to solve the various boundary conditions are discussed in a generic manner to enable model application to a wide range of 3D cylindrical structures. The magnetic field solutions are provided, and the model implementation is presented in matrix form. Model validation is presented by means of a comparison of the magnetic fields in a cylindrical structure with a rectangular cavity calculated using the analytical model and a finite element model. To calculate the magnetic interactions, e.g., attraction and cogging forces due to permanent magnets, the Maxwell stress tensor is analytically evaluated. The harmonic magnetic field solution is used in this evaluation resulting in compact force equations describing the 3D force components between concentric cylinders

    Design, Actuation, and Functionalization of Untethered Soft Magnetic Robots with Life-Like Motions: A Review

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    Soft robots have demonstrated superior flexibility and functionality than conventional rigid robots. These versatile devices can respond to a wide range of external stimuli (including light, magnetic field, heat, electric field, etc.), and can perform sophisticated tasks. Notably, soft magnetic robots exhibit unparalleled advantages among numerous soft robots (such as untethered control, rapid response, and high safety), and have made remarkable progress in small-scale manipulation tasks and biomedical applications. Despite the promising potential, soft magnetic robots are still in their infancy and require significant advancements in terms of fabrication, design principles, and functional development to be viable for real-world applications. Recent progress shows that bionics can serve as an effective tool for developing soft robots. In light of this, the review is presented with two main goals: (i) exploring how innovative bioinspired strategies can revolutionize the design and actuation of soft magnetic robots to realize various life-like motions; (ii) examining how these bionic systems could benefit practical applications in small-scale solid/liquid manipulation and therapeutic/diagnostic-related biomedical fields

    Electric and Magnetic Manipulation of Liquid Metals

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    Over the past decade, gallium-based liquid metals have attracted enormous attention, emerging as a new cutting-edge multi-functional material for reconfigurable electronics, soft robotics, microfluidics, and biomedical applications, based on utilizing the intrinsic advantages of liquid metal. These unique advantages that combine high electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, biocompatibility, low mechanical compliance, and viscosity all-in-one make the liquid metal applicable for a tremendous number of applications. Moreover, the self-passivating oxide skin of the liquid metal in an ambient environment forms a unique core (oxide skin)-shell (liquid metal) structure and provides a new strategy for two-dimensional thin films with a thickness of a few nanometers. The reports on the liquid metal can be mainly divided into three categories: 1) liquid-metal-based composite structures; 2) the core-shell strategy for thin films; and 3) electrochemical manipulation of the liquid metal in electrolyte. The liquid metal (LM) composites represent material systems in which LM alloys are either suspended as small droplets within a soft polymer matrix or mixed with metallic nanoparticles to form a biphasic composition, through which the electrical, dielectric, and thermal properties of composites can be controlled, thus enabling their applications in soft-matter sensing, actuation, and energy harvesting. Moreover, the fluidity and conductivity of the liquid metal make it suitable to be directly patterned (i.e., liquid metal ink) on various soft substrates (e.g., polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) for ultra-stretchable electronics. Compared to the traditional electronics, which are typically composed of intrinsically rigid materials that have limited deformability, the liquid metal based soft electronics are highly flexible, stretchable, and conformable. Most importantly, they are capable of electrical self-healing, enabling their electrical functionality, even under severe damage. These properties and applications of liquid metal composites show great potential for practical usage

    Technology for large space systems: A special bibliography with indexes (supplement 04)

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    This bibliography lists 259 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between July 1, 1980 and December 31, 1980. Its purpose is to provide information to the researcher, manager, and designer in technology development and mission design in the area of the Large Space Systems Technology Program. Subject matter is grouped according to systems, interactive analysis and design. Structural concepts, control systems, electronics, advanced materials, assembly concepts, propulsion, solar power satellite systems, and flight experiments
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