Abstract

In this study, a nonlinear absorber that works with a negative stiffness mechanism is suggested to mitigate vibration, and its effect on the reduction of vibration is investigated. The negative stiffness, which is inherently nonlinear, creates internal resonance; therefore, the vibration energy can be transmitted from low-frequency to high-frequency vibrating modes, causing vibration suppression. The nonlinear absorber is added to the primary nonlinear system, and when the main system is subjected to external resonance due to harmonic excitation, the negative stiffness parameter of absorber is so adjusted that autoparametric resonance occurs and vibration is reduced. First, the mathematical model of the system is presented and the governing differential equations of the motion are derived, and then, using the multiple scale method, the equations are solved for the case without, and with the 1:3 internal resonance. The responses and their stability are inspected, discussed, and compared. After that, the effect of negative stiffness and damping parameters on vibration amplitude reduction is investigated and the adequacy of the proposed absorber will be demonstrated by numerical analysis. Finally, the energy exchange between the primary system and the absorber will be demonstrated by plotting the responses in the state space and the displacement response Fourier spectrum.

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