Abstract

Large-amplitude (geometrically nonlinear) forced vibrations of a stainless-steel thin rectangular plate carrying different concentrated masses are experimentally studied. The experimental boundary conditions are close to those of a clamped plate. The plate is vertically and horizontally tested in order to investigate the gravity effect. Harmonic excitation is applied by using electrodynamic exciter and the plate vibration is measured by using a laser Doppler vibrometer with displacement decoder. The harmonic excitation is controlled in closed-loop in order to keep constant the desired force and is increased (or decreased) by very small discrete steps. Numerical simulations on reduced-order models, obtained by using Von Kármán nonlinear plate theory and global discretization, are also carried out and compared to experiments in order to better understand the system. Results show that concentrated masses have no effect on the trend of nonlinearity of the vertical plate, while they play a role in case of horizontal plate due to the static flexural deflection caused by gravity, which reduces the hardening-type nonlinearity. Initial geometric imperfection (deviation from flat surface in vertical position) of the plate is measured and taken into account; it plays a significant role.

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