CaptainCrunch
Mechanical
- May 8, 2002
- 31
Hello All,
I've been thinking about problems I've come across doing vibration analysis. Say I test a structure during operation and measure acceleration. Then I create an FEA model and input the acceleration to get stress as a function of frequency. If a have a case where stress at one freqeuncy in one location is much higher than all other frequencies then its pretty straight forward to use some simple fatigue life prediction equation to estimate the life of the component.
But say I have several high stress frequencies in a single location. The structure is experiencing all these frequencies simultaneously (but at different frequencies of course). Also to simplify the case, say that of all frequencies of interest will have enough cycles, N, to have infinite life.
So we have stress as a function of frequency and space (i.e. a location on a 3D structure), AND we have several significant stress frequencies. My questions are:
1. How would you come up with a composite stress level to predict fatigue life?
Assuming linearity we can superpose the stress solution at speocific frequenies. But:
2. Are the motion in phase form one frequency to another? You could imagine a situation where two frequencies were 180 degrees out of phase and cancel each other.
3. What if for shell elements in FEA, one frequency max occurred at one edge and a different frequency occurred at the other edge. How could yuou logically add those?
Sorry for the long winded post but I wanted to express myself clearly.
What I'm looking for is a references or ideas on how to come up with a "composite" stress level.
Thanks in advance for info,
George
I've been thinking about problems I've come across doing vibration analysis. Say I test a structure during operation and measure acceleration. Then I create an FEA model and input the acceleration to get stress as a function of frequency. If a have a case where stress at one freqeuncy in one location is much higher than all other frequencies then its pretty straight forward to use some simple fatigue life prediction equation to estimate the life of the component.
But say I have several high stress frequencies in a single location. The structure is experiencing all these frequencies simultaneously (but at different frequencies of course). Also to simplify the case, say that of all frequencies of interest will have enough cycles, N, to have infinite life.
So we have stress as a function of frequency and space (i.e. a location on a 3D structure), AND we have several significant stress frequencies. My questions are:
1. How would you come up with a composite stress level to predict fatigue life?
Assuming linearity we can superpose the stress solution at speocific frequenies. But:
2. Are the motion in phase form one frequency to another? You could imagine a situation where two frequencies were 180 degrees out of phase and cancel each other.
3. What if for shell elements in FEA, one frequency max occurred at one edge and a different frequency occurred at the other edge. How could yuou logically add those?
Sorry for the long winded post but I wanted to express myself clearly.
What I'm looking for is a references or ideas on how to come up with a "composite" stress level.
Thanks in advance for info,
George