Abstract

The two-field vibroacoustic finite-element (FE) model requires a relatively large number of degrees of freedom compared to the monophysics model, and the conventional force identification method for structural vibration can be adjusted for multiphysics problems. In this study, an effective inverse force identification method for an FE vibroacoustic interaction model of an interior fluid–structure system was proposed. The method consists of: (1) implicit inverse force identification based on the Newmark-β time integration algorithm for stability and efficiency, (2) second-order ordinary differential formulation by avoiding the state-space form causing large degrees of freedom, (3) projection-based multiphysics reduced-order modeling for further reduction of degrees of freedom, and (4) Tikhonov regularization to alleviate the measurement noise. The proposed method can accurately identify the unmeasured applied forces on the in situ application and concurrently reconstruct the response fields. The accuracy, stability, and computational efficiency of the proposed method were evaluated using numerical models and an experimental testbed. A comparative study with the augmented Kalman filter method was performed to evaluate its relative performance.

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