Abstract

Large flexible solar panels have the properties of light weight, low stiffness, and weak damping, which leads to low-frequency and large-amplitude vibrations. The existing vibration control methods of solar panels mainly adopt intelligent piezoelectric structures. However, the disadvantage is that the large stroke drive and control are limited. In the present study, a semi-active vibration control approach is proposed for flexible space solar panels based on magnetically controlled joints. The magnetic stiffness comes from the linear relationship between the joint output torque and rotation angle. The magnetic damping stems from the eddy current damping resulting from the relative motion between the permanent magnet rotor and the stator core of the joint. Firstly, the coupling dynamic modeling of a flexible plate and magnetic joints is established by adopting the Lagrange equation and the assumed mode approach. Secondly, semi-active vibration control simulations of the coupled system are performed. Meanwhile, the influence of the variable joint stiffness on the system frequency-shift effect is studied. Finally, the experimental platform is built, and simultaneously, non-contact permanent magnets and airflow are used to simulate single- and multi- frequency excitations, respectively. The experimental results indicate that, in the range of 0.06–0.343 Hz, magnetic damping is the leading factor with magnetic stiffness being the auxiliary. Additionally, it is also experimentally verified that the dual joint actuation has good synchronization. This study provides a new solution for the low-frequency vibration control of large flexible space structures.

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