30 research outputs found
Improving the vibration suppression capabilities of a magneto-rheological damper using hybrid active and semi-active control
This paper presents a new hybrid active & semi-active control method
for vibration suppression in flexible structures. The method uses a combination of a
semi-active device and an active control actuator situated elsewhere in the structure
to suppress vibrations. The key novelty is to use the hybrid controller to enable
the magneto-rheological damper to achieve a performance as close to a fully active
device as possible. This is achieved by ensuring that the active actuator can assist
the magneto-rheological damper in the regions where energy is required. In addition,
the hybrid active & semi-active controller is designed to minimize the switching of the
semi-active controller. The control framework used is the immersion and invariance
control technique in combination with sliding mode control. A two degree-of-freedom
system with lightly damped resonances is used as an example system. Both numerical
and experimental results are generated for this system, and then compared as part
of a validation study. The experimental system uses hardware-in-the-loop to simulate
the effect of both the degrees-of-freedom. The results show that the concept is viable
both numerically and experimentally, and improved vibration suppression results can
be obtained for the magneto-rheological damper that approach the performance of an
active device