4.7 Article

Characterization and interaction of geometric and contact/impact nonlinearities in dynamical systems

Journal

MECHANICAL SYSTEMS AND SIGNAL PROCESSING
Volume 167, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymssp.2021.108481

Keywords

Contact; Freeplay; Nonlinear coupling; Bifurcation analysis; Grazing

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This work investigates the interaction between contact/impact nonlinearity and geometric cubic nonlinearity in an oscillator system, focusing on bifurcation behavior and secondary resonances. It is found that the nonlinearities do not destructively interfere and have different effects on super-and sub-harmonic resonances. Contact nonlinearity affects superharmonic resonance more, while cubic nonlinearity influences subharmonic resonance and tends to lead to multistable behavior. Perturbation theory helps determine when cubic nonlinearity dominates over contact nonlinearity.
In this work, we study how a contact/impact nonlinearity interacts with a geometric cubic nonlinearity in an oscillator system. Specific focus is shown to the effects on bifurcation behavior and secondary resonances (i.e., super-and sub-harmonic resonances). The effects of the individual nonlinearities are first explored for comparison, and then the influences of the combined nonlinearities, varying one parameter at a time, are analyzed and discussed. Nonlinear characterization is then performed on an arbitrary system configuration to study super-and sub harmonic resonances and grazing contacts or bifurcations. Both the cubic and contact nonlinearities cause a drop in amplitude and shift up in frequency for the primary resonance, and they activate high-amplitude subharmonic resonance regions. The nonlinearities seem to never destructively interfere. The contact nonlinearity generally affects the system's superharmonic resonance behavior more, particularly with regard to the occurrence of grazing contacts and the activation of many bifurcations in the system's response. The subharmonic resonance behavior is more strongly affected by the cubic nonlinearity and is prone to multistable behavior. Perturbation theory proved useful for determining when the cubic nonlinearity would be dominant compared to the contact nonlinearity. The limiting behaviors of the contact stiffness and freeplay gap size indicate the cubic nonlinearity is dominant overall. It is demonstrated that the presence of contact may result in the activation of several bifurcations. In addition, it is proved that the system's subharmonic resonance region is prone to multistable dynamical responses having distinct magnitudes.

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