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Calculating response from FRF 2

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SrinivasAluri

Mechanical
Jun 24, 2004
62
I have different FRFs for a 3DOF system. I want to calculate the response at 3rd DOF due to a sinusoidal input at the 2nd DOF. How do go about doing the calculation?
 
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You need to know the principle of reciprocity, ie Hab=Hba, and then some cancellation.

You know

Haa
Hba
Hca

You want to know Hcb. I think it is Hcb= (Hca*Hba)/Haa

where all those operations are vector operations on the complex FRFs.




Cheers

Greg Locock
 
I have H32 and a force of 100*cos(18t) at location 2, looking for a time response at location 2.
 
Oops! I have H32 and a force of 100*cos(18t) at location 2, looking for a time response at location 3.
 
Good oh. You have all the information you need. Do you know how to read a Bode plot?



Cheers

Greg Locock
 
Is Bode plot the FRF plotted in Mag vs Freq and Phase vs freq form? I don't know how to calculate the time response for say 2 seconds for the input I mentioned earlier using the plots.
 
Well, the magnitude of the FRF at 18 rad/s tells you the ratio of the response to the input, say it is 2.5, then you'll have an amplitude 200 sine wave. the phase at 18 rad/s tells you the phase delay with respect to the driving signal, say it is pi/2 then your response will be

250*cos(pi/2+18*t)





Cheers

Greg Locock
 
One of the resonances for the system is close to 18 rad/sec, shouldn't the input force at 18 rad/sec cause the system response to increase considerably i.e., more than 2.5 times. I know damping of system keeps the response in check.

The reason I suspect this result is because I get a gradually increasing response using numerical integration.
 
What I meant to say was, if I plot Mag*cos(18*t+phase)based on the FRF data, I am not getting same results as calculating the response directly using numerical integration, which is a increasing in amplitude for 0 to 2 secs. I am unable to reconcile the difference between the two solutions.
 
That is correct. You obviously need to revisit your understanding of Fourier analysis. Applying a steady state excitation of 100cos(18t) is not the same as switching on the same signal at t=0



Cheers

Greg Locock
 
Greg, I am confused!! The excitation is steady state, its maintained at 100cos(18t) that's what I did using numerical integration, for calculating the response under steady state excitation.
 
Then you have made some other error, probably in your numerical integration.

Cheers

Greg Locock
 
Are you saying I should get 250*cos(pi/2+18*t)(assuming 2.5 is gain and pi/2 is phase diff) from numerical integration, instead of a gradually increasing response that I got?
 
Steady state input implies steady state output in a Fourier context, because the timeline stretches from -infinity to +infinity.

In the real world that is not what will happen, but the fourier analysis of your excitation would not be a single frequency, and neither would the response.




Cheers

Greg Locock
 
what initial conditions are you using in the integration approach?
 
Very small values equal to zero for all the initial displacements and initial velocities.
 


such initial conditions generally result in transients, how long are you waiting for "steady state"
 
I actually evaluated the response for 16 secs, ofcourse the load is also applied for 16 secs.
 
Re your numerical integration results. If the response signal is still increasing after 16 seconds then (by definition!) you haven't reached steady state yet. I do this sort of thing by running the integration for one cycle at a time. After each cycle I subtract the current cycle from the previous one and calculate the error. When the error is small enough I call it steady state.

M

--
Dr Michael F Platten
 
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