Publication | Closed Access
Controllable viscous damping: an experimental study of an electrorheological long-stroke damper under proportional feedback control
86
Citations
10
References
1999
Year
Feedforward ControlEngineeringBingham PlasticElectrorheological Long-stroke DamperMechanical EngineeringMechatronicsMechanical SystemsLinearization StrategyActive Vibration ControlNonlinear Vibration ControlVibration IsolationProportional Feedback ControlSmart FluidsStructural MechanicsVibration ControlControllable Viscous DampingStructural Vibration
It is now well known that smart fluids (electrorheological (ER) and magnetorheological) can form the basis of controllable vibration damping devices. With both types of fluid, however, the force/velocity characteristic of the resulting damper is significantly nonlinear, possessing the general form associated with a Bingham plastic. In a previous paper the authors suggested that by using a linear feedback control strategy it should be possible to produce the equivalent of a viscous damper with a continuously variable damping coefficient. In the present paper the authors describe a comprehensive investigation into the implementation of this linearization strategy on an industrial scale ER long-stroke vibration damper. Using mechanical excitation frequencies up to 5 Hz it is shown that linear behaviour can be obtained between well defined limits and that the slope of the linearized force/velocity characteristic can be specified through the choice of a controller gain term.
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