4.7 Article

The effect of various damping on the isolation performance of quasi-zero-stiffness system

Journal

MECHANICAL SYSTEMS AND SIGNAL PROCESSING
Volume 171, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymssp.2022.108944

Keywords

Quasi-zero-stiffness system; Damping; Hybrid damping model; Hydraulic damper; Thermoplastic rubber damper

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This paper discusses the effects of three types of damping on a quasi-zero-stiffness (QZS) vibration isolator and proposes two hybrid damping models to improve performance. Theoretical and experimental analysis show that the hybrid linear and nonlinear damping provided better isolation for both low- and high-frequency vibrations.
A quasi-zero-stiffness (QZS) vibration isolation system was designed to attenuate low-frequency and ultra-low-frequency vibrations. Because nonlinearity exists in QZS systems, various nonlinear dynamic behaviours inevitably influence the vibration isolation performance. Thus, damping is the key for suppressing nonlinear effects. The effects of three types of damping, viscous damping, hysteretic damping, and nonlinear hysteretic damping on the QZS vibration isolator are discussed in this paper. The Duffing-Ueda equation was used to describe the dynamic motion of the QZS system, which was solved using the harmonic balance method (HBM). Two hybrid-damping models were then proposed to avoid unbounded nonlinear responses for excessive base excitation. Based on theoretical and numerical analysis, the effect of the two hybrid damping models, the hysteretic-nonlinear hysteretic (H-NH) damping model and viscous hysteretic-nonlinear hysteretic (V-H-NH) damping model, on the transmissibility is discussed in detail. To verify the theoretical results, QZS isolator prototypes with two types of hybrid damping were designed and manufactured. A hydraulic damper and a thermoplastic rubber (TPR) damper were used respectively in the two models of the experiments. The experimental results reveal that the isolator with hybrid linear and nonlinear damping provides a better isolation effect for both low-and high-frequency vibrations.

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