Abstract

Recent developments in propulsion systems to improve energy efficiency and reduce hazardous emissions often lead to severe torsional oscillations and aggravated noise. Vibration absorbers are typically employed to palliate the untoward effects of powertrain oscillations, with nonetheless an adverse impact on cost and constrained efficacy over a limited frequency range. Recently, the authors proposed the use of nonlinear vibration absorbers to achieve more broadband drivetrain vibration attenuation with low complexity and cost. These lightweight attachments follow the concept of targeted energy transfer, whereby vibration energy is taken off from a primary system without tuning requirements. In this paper, the design and experimental investigation of a prototype absorber is presented. The absorber is installed on a drivetrain experimental rig driven by an electric motor through a universal joint connection placed at an angle, thus inducing the second-order torsional oscillations. Vibration time histories with and without the absorber acting are recorded and compared. Frequency–energy plots are superimposed to the system nonlinear normal modes to verify the previously developed design methodology, whereas the achieved vibration reduction is quantified by comparing the acceleration amplitudes of the primary system and monitoring the distribution of energy damped in the primary system and the absorber. The absorber prototype was found to lead to significant vibration reduction away from resonance and near resonance with the additional feature of activation over a relatively broad frequency range.

Highlights

  • Global legislations require the development of propulsion systems that produce lower levels of hazardous emissions, with particular emphasis on diesel engines

  • This paper presents the design and experimental analysis of an Nonlinear energy sinks (NESs) for suppressing torsional oscillations in a propulsion system

  • A combined numerical and experimental study was presented on the design and validation of an NES for torsional vibration mitigation purposes of a propulsion system

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Summary

Introduction

Global legislations require the development of propulsion systems that produce lower levels of hazardous emissions, with particular emphasis on diesel engines. These include tuned vibration absorbers, such as clutch pre-dampers, the dual mass flywheel (DMF) [2] and DMF with centrifugal pendulum vibration absorbers (CPVA) [3,4]. 1:1 stable sub-harmonic orbits (i.e. p:1 periodic orbits with period equal to p-times the period of the forcing term) were noted to act effectively on transferring energy from the primary system donor to the nonlinear vibration absorber. Limited number of studies exists on applications that include rotational NES, which are more suitable for attenuating torsional oscillations. Numerical analysis of the subsystem model with NES is presented, highlighting vibration attenuation over a broad frequency range. The design and experimental testing of the NES is presented, correlating well with the model results for operation away and near resonance

Subsystem model equipped with NES
Experimental set-up
Universal joint harmonics
Numerical model of the experimental layout
Results and discussion
Away from resonance
Near resonance
Conclusions
Full Text
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