Abstract

An active pulse control method is developed to reduce the vibrations of multibody systems resulting from impact loadings. The pulse, which is a function of system generalized coordinates and velocities, is determined analytically using energy and momentum balance equations of the impacting bodies. Elastic components in the multibody system are discretized using the finite element method. The system equations of motions and nonlinear algebraic constraint equations describing mechanical joints between different components are written in the Lagrangian formulation using a finite set of coupled reference position and local elastic generalized coordinates. A set of independent differential equations are identified by the generalized coordinate partitioning of the constraint Jacobian matrix. These equations are written in the state space formulation and integrated forward in time using a direct numerical integration method. Dependent coordinates are then determined using the constraint kinematic relations. Points in time at which impact occurs are monitored by an impact predictor function, which controls the integration algorithms and forces for the solution of the momentum relation, to define the jump discontinuities in the composite velocity vector as well as the system reaction forces. The effectiveness of the active pulse control in reducing the vibration of flexible multibody aircraft during the touchdown impact is investigated and numerical results are presented.

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