30,127 research outputs found
Piezoceramics-based Devices for Active Balancing of Flexible Shafts
This paper focuses on vibration control of flexible shafts by means of rotorfixed piezoelectric materials. The target is to realize compact solutions for the suppression of problematic resonant vibration at so-called flexural critical speeds. For analysis, parametric finite element models of flexible rotors with piezoceramic sheets and strain or displacement sensors are developed, where the number of degrees of freedom is kept low. Several mechanisms which can destabilize flexible rotors are quantisized, such as rotor material damping, dissipation of currents induced in rotor-fixed piezoceramics and active feedback control proportional to rotor strain rates. The effectiveness of low frequency feedback and feedforward control for the suppression of the unbalance response is demonstrated using analytic and experimental results. Emphasis is on the interaction between the dynamics of the rotor and that of the connected electronic circuits. The experimental setup which is used for validation is a flexible shaft equipped with piezoceramic sheets and strain sensors. A slipring assembly is used to simplify measurements with, and control of, the sensors and actuators on the shaft and to facilitate the development of compact drive electronics
A new approach to model tyre/road contact
In the Structural Dynamics and Acoustics group at the University of Twente, we aim to develop a quantitative tyre/road noise model. An essential part of this model is an accurate contact algorithm which is fast enough to simulate tyre vibrations up to the acoustic frequencies. In this paper we present a contact algorithm, describing the contact between a tyre and a road surface, which has the potential to be made very fast using the multigrid techniques developed in the field of elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication. For the development of the algorithm a flexible ring model is used to describe the tyre. The friction model is based on Coulomb’s friction. We present (quasi-)static results obtained from the algorithm for various friction coefficients, as well as frictionless results for a rotating tyre. The vibrations of the tyre obtained by this model have been used to calculate the radiated sound field by means of a boundary element program (BEMSYS)
Hybrid isolation of structure-borne sound
Interior noise problems become more important due to the tendency to construct lighter vehicles. An important source for interior noise in a vehicle is the engine. The structural vibrations induced by the engine will transmit through the vehicle and will finally result in interior noise elsewhere in the vehicle, so-called structure-borne sound. To reduce the interior noise a solution is sought in a combination of passive and active isolation (hybrid isolation) of the engine. A project has been started to investigate this type of isolation and to develop experimentally validated numerical simulations for the design of hybrid isolation system. \ud
This paper focuses on the numerical modelling approach for this type of problems. The model consists of a structural and a bounded acoustic part that are representative for a vehicle. The responses of both parts are determined efficiently with modal superposition. The controller design, necessary for the active part of the isolation, is performed with the optimal control theory that is based on minimization of a cost function. Different cost functions will be compared with each other with emphasis on the performance of the structural related cost functions (e.g. minimization of structural velocities) in comparison with the acoustical cost functions (e.g. minimization of sound pressures)
A new Determination of the Extragalactic Background of Diffuse Gamma Rays taking into account Dark Matter Annihilation
The extragalactic background (EGB) of diffuse gamma rays can be determined by
subtracting the Galactic contribution from the data. This requires a Galactic
model (GM) and we include for the first time the contribution of dark matter
annihilation (DMA), which was previously proposed as an explanation for the
EGRET excess of diffuse Galactic gamma rays above 1 GeV.
In this paper it is shown that the newly determined EGB shows a
characteristic high energy bump on top of a steeply falling soft contribution.
The bump is shown to be compatible with a contribution from an extragalactic
DMA signal from weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) with a mass
between 50 and 100 GeV in agreement with the EGRET excess of the Galactic
diffuse gamma rays and in disagreement with earlier analysis. The remaining
soft contribution of the EGB is shown to resemble the spectra of the observed
point sources in our Galaxy.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by A&A, made Fig. 4 and table 1
consisten
Design of fibre reinforced PV concepts for building integrated applications
Fibre reinforced polymers present an interesting encapsulation medium for PV-modules. Glass fibres can provide increased strength and stiffness to thin polymer layers overcoming the brittleness and limited deformability of glass-panes. Glass fibre reinforced polymers allows for transparency over a broad range of the solar spectrum while the material properties and integral production processes create possibilities for novel product concepts with embedded PV technology. To explore such possibilities, innovative design methods were used to design novel PV product concepts for applications in the build environment.\ud
In our paper three conceptual designs are presented; (1) a thin film module with an adjoining interconnection system functioning as structural element for geodetic roofing structures, (2) a PV lamella with single-axis tracking utilizing a linear concentration effect caused by the geometry of the product and the materials applied, and (3) a prepreg PV-material which allows for easy shaping during the production of PV modules with complex geometries. Each concept employs a specific PV technology and demonstrates a possible application aimed at a specific market. In this way we show the potential of integration of PV technology in fibre reinforced composites. The paper will be illustrated by concept renderings
Spontaneous electro-weak symmetry breaking and cold dark matter
In the standard model, the weak gauge bosons and fermions obtain mass after
spontaneous electro-weak symmetry breaking, which is realized through one
fundamental scalar field, namely Higgs field. In this paper we study the
simplest scalar cold dark matter model in which the scalar cold dark matter
also obtains mass through interaction with the weak-doublet Higgs field, the
same way as those of weak gauge bosons and fermions. Our study shows that the
correct cold dark matter relic abundance within uncertainty () and experimentally allowed Higgs boson mass
( GeV) constrain the scalar dark matter mass within GeV. This result is in excellent agreement with that of W. de
Boer et.al. ( GeV). Such kind of dark matter annihilation can
account for the observed gamma rays excess () at EGRET for energies
above 1 GeV in comparison with the expectations from conventional Galactic
models. We also investigate other phenomenological consequences of this model.
For example, the Higgs boson decays dominantly into scalar cold dark matter if
its mass lies within GeV.Comment: 4 Revtex4 pages, refs adde
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