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    Ground-Based Vibration Response of a Spinning, Cyclic, Symmetric Rotor With Gyroscopic and Centrifugal Softening Effects

    Source: Journal of Vibration and Acoustics:;2009:;volume( 131 ):;issue: 002::page 21007
    Author:
    Hyunchul Kim
    ,
    I. Y. Shen
    DOI: 10.1115/1.3025847
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: This paper is to study ground-based vibration response of a spinning, cyclic, symmetric rotor through a theoretical analysis and an experimental study. The theoretical analysis consists of three steps. The first step is to analyze the vibration characteristics of a stationary, cyclic, symmetric rotor with N identical substructures. For each vibration mode, we identify a phase index n and derive a Fourier expansion of the mode shape in terms of the phase index n. The second step is to predict the rotor-based vibration response of the spinning, cyclic, symmetric rotor based on the Fourier expansion of the mode shapes and the phase indices. The rotor-based formulation includes gyroscopic and centrifugal softening terms. Moreover, rotor-based response of repeated modes and distinct modes is obtained analytically. The third step is to transform the rotor-based response to ground-based response using the Fourier expansion of the stationary mode shapes. The theoretical analysis leads to the following conclusions. First, gyroscopic effects have no significant effects on distinct modes. Second, the presence of gyroscopic and centrifugal softening effects causes the repeated modes to split into two modes with distinct frequencies ω1 and ω2 in the rotor-based coordinates. Third, the transformation to ground-based observers leads to primary and secondary frequency components. In general, the ground-based response presents frequency branches in the Campbell diagram at ω1±kω3 and ω2±kω3, where k is phase index n plus an integer multiple of cyclic symmetry N. When the gyroscopic effect is significantly greater than the centrifugal softening effect, two of the four frequency branches vanish. The remaining frequency branches take the form of either ω1+kω3 and ω2−kω3 or ω1−kω3 and ω2+kω3. To verify these predictions, we also conduct a modal testing on a spinning disk carrying four pairs of brackets evenly spaced in the circumferential direction with ground-based excitations and responses. The disk-bracket system is mounted on a high-speed, air-bearing spindle. An automatic hammer excites the spinning disk-bracket system and a laser Doppler vibrometer measures its vibration response. A spectrum analyzer processes the hammer excitation force and the vibrometer measurements to obtain waterfall plots at various spin speeds. The measured primary and secondary frequency branches from the waterfall plots agree well with those predicted analytically.
    keyword(s): Spin (Aerodynamics) , Rotors , Vibration , Shapes , Frequency , Bifurcation AND Disks ,
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      Ground-Based Vibration Response of a Spinning, Cyclic, Symmetric Rotor With Gyroscopic and Centrifugal Softening Effects

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/142297
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    contributor authorHyunchul Kim
    contributor authorI. Y. Shen
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:36:01Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:36:01Z
    date copyrightApril, 2009
    date issued2009
    identifier issn1048-9002
    identifier otherJVACEK-28899#021007_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/142297
    description abstractThis paper is to study ground-based vibration response of a spinning, cyclic, symmetric rotor through a theoretical analysis and an experimental study. The theoretical analysis consists of three steps. The first step is to analyze the vibration characteristics of a stationary, cyclic, symmetric rotor with N identical substructures. For each vibration mode, we identify a phase index n and derive a Fourier expansion of the mode shape in terms of the phase index n. The second step is to predict the rotor-based vibration response of the spinning, cyclic, symmetric rotor based on the Fourier expansion of the mode shapes and the phase indices. The rotor-based formulation includes gyroscopic and centrifugal softening terms. Moreover, rotor-based response of repeated modes and distinct modes is obtained analytically. The third step is to transform the rotor-based response to ground-based response using the Fourier expansion of the stationary mode shapes. The theoretical analysis leads to the following conclusions. First, gyroscopic effects have no significant effects on distinct modes. Second, the presence of gyroscopic and centrifugal softening effects causes the repeated modes to split into two modes with distinct frequencies ω1 and ω2 in the rotor-based coordinates. Third, the transformation to ground-based observers leads to primary and secondary frequency components. In general, the ground-based response presents frequency branches in the Campbell diagram at ω1±kω3 and ω2±kω3, where k is phase index n plus an integer multiple of cyclic symmetry N. When the gyroscopic effect is significantly greater than the centrifugal softening effect, two of the four frequency branches vanish. The remaining frequency branches take the form of either ω1+kω3 and ω2−kω3 or ω1−kω3 and ω2+kω3. To verify these predictions, we also conduct a modal testing on a spinning disk carrying four pairs of brackets evenly spaced in the circumferential direction with ground-based excitations and responses. The disk-bracket system is mounted on a high-speed, air-bearing spindle. An automatic hammer excites the spinning disk-bracket system and a laser Doppler vibrometer measures its vibration response. A spectrum analyzer processes the hammer excitation force and the vibrometer measurements to obtain waterfall plots at various spin speeds. The measured primary and secondary frequency branches from the waterfall plots agree well with those predicted analytically.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleGround-Based Vibration Response of a Spinning, Cyclic, Symmetric Rotor With Gyroscopic and Centrifugal Softening Effects
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume131
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Vibration and Acoustics
    identifier doi10.1115/1.3025847
    journal fristpage21007
    identifier eissn1528-8927
    keywordsSpin (Aerodynamics)
    keywordsRotors
    keywordsVibration
    keywordsShapes
    keywordsFrequency
    keywordsBifurcation AND Disks
    treeJournal of Vibration and Acoustics:;2009:;volume( 131 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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