Inverse dynamic equilibrium analysis of mechanical systems undergoing prescribed rotational motions

Thumbnail Image
Date
2008-07-01
Authors
Choi, Dong Hwan
Wickert, Jonathan
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Authors
Person
Wickert, Jonathan
Senior Vice President And Provost
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Organizational Unit
Mechanical Engineering
The Department of Mechanical Engineering at Iowa State University is where innovation thrives and the impossible is made possible. This is where your passion for problem-solving and hands-on learning can make a real difference in our world. Whether you’re helping improve the environment, creating safer automobiles, or advancing medical technologies, and athletic performance, the Department of Mechanical Engineering gives you the tools and talent to blaze your own trail to an amazing career.
Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Department
Mechanical Engineering
Abstract

Mechanical systems that undergo prescribed rotational motions arise in such engineered systems as robots, spacecraft, propulsion and power generation systems, and certain sensors and actuators. In order to avoid the resonance or the critical speed of the system and to keep the desired dynamic equilibrium state in the mechanical system undergoing rotational motions, the system’s design parameter values or driving angular speed should be tuned. In this work, a general formulation for the inverse dynamic equilibrium analysis is developed to directly calculate the driving angular speed or design parameter values which satisfy the condition of the desired dynamic equilibrium positions. The method is based upon the use of relative coordinates and a velocity transformation technique, and it is applicable to multibody systems having either open or closed loop configurations. To illustrate the method’s effectiveness, accuracy, and computational efficiency, two numerical examples are considered, and the results obtained analytically are compared with those obtained by using a commercial program’s transient analysis. In some cases, the equilibrium configuration is shown to have an operating condition for which the response has nearly zero standard deviations for small perturbations in a design parameter’s value. In that case, to verify the method’s effectiveness and usefulness, Monte-Carlo simulation results are shown.

Comments
Description
Keywords
Citation
DOI
Source
Subject Categories
Copyright
Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2008