270 research outputs found
The application of vibration characteristics to damage modelling and identification in plate structures
Damage modelling is essential in the preliminary design of structures. Moreover, the identification of damage using numerical methods can make maintenance more efficient and economical. Also, applying damage detection procedures at an early stage can prevent catastrophic structure failures. For this project, vibration parameters (natural frequencies and mode shapes) are used to identify the location and severity of damage in classical thin plates.
A delaminated composite plate is introduced in a comparative study, for which natural frequencies are obtained using an exact strip model to verify the proposed detection method. Next, the direct problem of calculating the relative change in natural frequencies of an isotropic simple supported plate due to a predefined single arbitrary crack with random direction, location, depth and length is mainly addressed, giving a comprehensive understanding of the relationship between the location and severity of the crack and the free vibration natural frequencies and mode shapes. This study is highly pertinent, and a hybrid model is proposed which couples exact strip analysis for the undamaged part and finite element analysis for the damaged part. In the finite element part, a crack is modelled as a rotational spring stiffness giving additional degrees of freedom to the stiffness matrix. The finite element and exact strip dynamic stiffness matrices are assembled into a global dynamic stiffness matrix, coupled using Lagrangian Multipliers to equate the displacements at the boundaries of the two parts. Applying an efficient bandwidth method for Gaussian elimination, the resulting transcendental eigenvalue problem is solved by a simplified form of the Wittrick-Williams algorithm for the first six natural frequencies.
For the inverse problem, chosen natural frequencies are calculated accurately for both undamaged and damaged cases. The changes in natural frequencies are normalised to isolate the effect of damage location and severity individually. The same normalisation procedure is applied to measured natural frequencies. Point estimates of the damage location are obtained for noise free measurements, while an interval estimate is given by noisy measurements. A relevant severity range is then estimated. Mode shapes are monitored by an automatic sign method for correctly tracking the propagation of damage
The Impact of Digital Platform Rapid Release Strategy on App Update Behavior: An Empirical Study of Firefox
The success of platform-based software ecosystems depends on the crucial coordination between the platform and third-party applications during co-evolution. Leveraging the change of platform release governance of Firefox, this paper examines the impact of the rapid release process on app update behavior (app responsiveness and app size change). Drawing on boundary resource perspective, we theorize how rapid release process as a social boundary resource affects app update behavior, and how app developers’ usage of technical boundary resource (i.e. platform API) affects this impact. Using a unique longitudinal dataset in Firefox, we conduct empirical analyses and conclude that the rapid release process decreases size change of app updates while platform API usage enhances app responsiveness. Moreover, platform API usage strengthens the effects of the rapid release process on app update behavior. This research enhances our understanding of the impact of platform governance practices on platform-third party coordination and provides practical guidance. Keywords: Platform-based software ecosystem, platform governance, app update, Rapid Release, boundary resourc
Numerical analysis of unsteady cavitating turbulent flow and shedding horse-shoe vortex structure around a twisted hydrofoil
AbstractCavitating turbulent flow around hydrofoils was simulated using the Partially-Averaged Navier–Stokes (PANS) method and a mass transfer cavitation model with the maximum density ratio (ρl/ρv,clip) effect between the liquid and the vapor. The predicted cavity length and thickness of stable cavities as well as the pressure distribution along the suction surface of a NACA66(MOD) hydrofoil compare well with experimental data when using the actual maximum density ratio (ρl/ρv,clip=43391) at room temperature. The unsteady cavitation patterns and their evolution around a Delft twisted hydrofoil were then simulated. The numerical results indicate that the cavity volume fluctuates dramatically as the cavitating flow develops with cavity growth, destabilization, and collapse. The predicted three dimensional cavity structures due to the variation of attack angle in the span-wise direction and the shedding cycle as well as its frequency agree fairly well with experimental observations. The distinct side-lobes of the attached cavity and the shedding U-shaped horse-shoe vortex are well captured. Furthermore, it is shown that the shedding horse-shoe vortex includes a primary U-shaped vapor cloud and two secondary U-shaped vapor clouds originating from the primary shedding at the cavity center and the secondary shedding at both cavity sides. The primary shedding is related to the collision of a radially-diverging re-entrant jet and the attached cavity surface, while the secondary shedding is due to the collision of side-entrant jets and the radially-diverging re-entrant jet. The local flow fields show that the interaction between the circulating flow and the shedding vapor cloud may be the main mechanism producing the cavitating horse-shoe vortex. Two side views described by iso-surfaces of the vapor volume fraction for a 10% vapor volume, and a non-dimensional Q-criterion equal to 200 are used to illustrate the formation, roll-up and transport of the shedding horse-shoe vortex. The predicted height of the shedding horse-shoe vortex increases as the vortex moves downstream. It is shown that the shape of the horse-shoe vortex for the non-dimensional Q-criterion is more complicated than that of the 10% vapor fraction iso-surface and is more consistent with the experiments. Further, though the time-averaged lift coefficient predicted by the PANS calculation is about 12% lower than the experimental value, it is better than other predictions based on RANS solvers
Large Eddy Simulation and theoretical investigations of the transient cavitating vortical flow structure around a NACA66 hydrofoil
AbstractCompared to non-cavitating flow, cavitating flow is much complex owing to the numerical difficulties caused by cavity generation and collapse. In this paper, the cavitating flow around a NACA66 hydrofoil is studied numerically with particular emphasis on understanding the cavitation structures and the shedding dynamics. Large Eddy Simulation (LES) was coupled with a homogeneous cavitation model to calculate the pressure, velocity, vapor volume fraction and vorticity around the hydrofoil. The predicted cavitation shedding dynamics behavior, including the cavity growth, break-off and collapse downstream, agrees fairly well with experiment. Some fundamental issues such as the transition of a cavitating flow structure from 2D to 3D associated with cavitation–vortex interaction are discussed using the vorticity transport equation for variable density flow. A simplified one-dimensional model for the present configuration is adopted and calibrated against the LES results to better clarify the physical mechanism for the cavitation induced pressure fluctuations. The results verify the relationship between pressure fluctuations and the cavity shedding process (e.g. the variations of the flow rate and cavity volume) and demonstrate that the cavity volume acceleration is the main source of the pressure fluctuations around the cavitating hydrofoil. This research provides a better understanding of the mechanism driving the cavitation excited pressure pulsations, which will facilitate development of engineering designs to control these vibrations
Crucial Feature Capture and Discrimination for Limited Training Data SAR ATR
Although deep learning-based methods have achieved excellent performance on
SAR ATR, the fact that it is difficult to acquire and label a lot of SAR images
makes these methods, which originally performed well, perform weakly. This may
be because most of them consider the whole target images as input, but the
researches find that, under limited training data, the deep learning model
can't capture discriminative image regions in the whole images, rather focus on
more useless even harmful image regions for recognition. Therefore, the results
are not satisfactory. In this paper, we design a SAR ATR framework under
limited training samples, which mainly consists of two branches and two
modules, global assisted branch and local enhanced branch, feature capture
module and feature discrimination module. In every training process, the global
assisted branch first finishes the initial recognition based on the whole
image. Based on the initial recognition results, the feature capture module
automatically searches and locks the crucial image regions for correct
recognition, which we named as the golden key of image. Then the local extract
the local features from the captured crucial image regions. Finally, the
overall features and local features are input into the classifier and
dynamically weighted using the learnable voting parameters to collaboratively
complete the final recognition under limited training samples. The model
soundness experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our method through the
improvement of feature distribution and recognition probability. The
experimental results and comparisons on MSTAR and OPENSAR show that our method
has achieved superior recognition performance
SAR Ship Target Recognition via Selective Feature Discrimination and Multifeature Center Classifier
Maritime surveillance is not only necessary for every country, such as in
maritime safeguarding and fishing controls, but also plays an essential role in
international fields, such as in rescue support and illegal immigration
control. Most of the existing automatic target recognition (ATR) methods
directly send the extracted whole features of SAR ships into one classifier.
The classifiers of most methods only assign one feature center to each class.
However, the characteristics of SAR ship images, large inner-class variance,
and small interclass difference lead to the whole features containing useless
partial features and a single feature center for each class in the classifier
failing with large inner-class variance. We proposes a SAR ship target
recognition method via selective feature discrimination and multifeature center
classifier. The selective feature discrimination automatically finds the
similar partial features from the most similar interclass image pairs and the
dissimilar partial features from the most dissimilar inner-class image pairs.
It then provides a loss to enhance these partial features with more interclass
separability. Motivated by divide and conquer, the multifeature center
classifier assigns multiple learnable feature centers for each ship class. In
this way, the multifeature centers divide the large inner-class variance into
several smaller variances and conquered by combining all feature centers of one
ship class. Finally, the probability distribution over all feature centers is
considered comprehensively to achieve an accurate recognition of SAR ship
images. The ablation experiments and experimental results on OpenSARShip and
FUSAR-Ship datasets show that our method has achieved superior recognition
performance under decreasing training SAR ship samples
Experimental measurements of bulk modulus for two types of hydraulic oil at pressures to 140MPa and temperatures to 180°C
Bulk modulus of hydraulic oil represents the resistance of hydraulic oil to compression and is the reciprocal of compressibility. The bulk modulus is a basic thermodynamic property of hydraulic oil that has a very important influence on work efficiency and dynamic characteristics of hydraulic systems, especially for the hydraulic systems at ultra-high pressure or ultra-high temperature. In this study, a bulk modulus experimental equipment for hydraulic oil was designed and manufactured, two types of hydraulic oil were selected and its isothermal secant bulk modulus were measured at pressures to 140MPa and temperatures of 20~180°C. Compared the experimental results with the calculated results from the prediction equations of liquid bulk modulus that proposed by Klaus, Hayward, and Song, it is found that the experimental results are not completely identical with the calculated results
SAR ATR Method with Limited Training Data via an Embedded Feature Augmenter and Dynamic Hierarchical-Feature Refiner
Without sufficient data, the quantity of information available for supervised
training is constrained, as obtaining sufficient synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
training data in practice is frequently challenging. Therefore, current SAR
automatic target recognition (ATR) algorithms perform poorly with limited
training data availability, resulting in a critical need to increase SAR ATR
performance. In this study, a new method to improve SAR ATR when training data
are limited is proposed. First, an embedded feature augmenter is designed to
enhance the extracted virtual features located far away from the class center.
Based on the relative distribution of the features, the algorithm pulls the
corresponding virtual features with different strengths toward the
corresponding class center. The designed augmenter increases the amount of
information available for supervised training and improves the separability of
the extracted features. Second, a dynamic hierarchical-feature refiner is
proposed to capture the discriminative local features of the samples. Through
dynamically generated kernels, the proposed refiner integrates the
discriminative local features of different dimensions into the global features,
further enhancing the inner-class compactness and inter-class separability of
the extracted features. The proposed method not only increases the amount of
information available for supervised training but also extracts the
discriminative features from the samples, resulting in superior ATR performance
in problems with limited SAR training data. Experimental results on the moving
and stationary target acquisition and recognition (MSTAR), OpenSARShip, and
FUSAR-Ship benchmark datasets demonstrate the robustness and outstanding ATR
performance of the proposed method in response to limited SAR training data
SAR Ship Target Recognition Via Multi-Scale Feature Attention and Adaptive-Weighed Classifier
Maritime surveillance is indispensable for civilian fields, including
national maritime safeguarding, channel monitoring, and so on, in which
synthetic aperture radar (SAR) ship target recognition is a crucial research
field. The core problem to realizing accurate SAR ship target recognition is
the large inner-class variance and inter-class overlap of SAR ship features,
which limits the recognition performance. Most existing methods plainly extract
multi-scale features of the network and utilize equally each feature scale in
the classification stage. However, the shallow multi-scale features are not
discriminative enough, and each scale feature is not equally effective for
recognition. These factors lead to the limitation of recognition performance.
Therefore, we proposed a SAR ship recognition method via multi-scale feature
attention and adaptive-weighted classifier to enhance features in each scale,
and adaptively choose the effective feature scale for accurate recognition. We
first construct an in-network feature pyramid to extract multi-scale features
from SAR ship images. Then, the multi-scale feature attention can extract and
enhance the principal components from the multi-scale features with more
inner-class compactness and inter-class separability. Finally, the adaptive
weighted classifier chooses the effective feature scales in the feature pyramid
to achieve the final precise recognition. Through experiments and comparisons
under OpenSARship data set, the proposed method is validated to achieve
state-of-the-art performance for SAR ship recognition
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