Low-force magneto-rheological damper design for small-scale structural control experimentation
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
1-1-2015
Abstract
© 2015 SPIE. Experimental validation of novel structural control algorithms is a vital step in both developing and building acceptance for this technology. Small-scale experimental test-beds fulfill an important role in the validation of multiple-degree-offreedom (MDOF) and distributed semi-active control systems, allowing researchers to test the control algorithms, communication topologies, and timing-critical aspects of structural control systems that do not require full-scale specimens. In addition, small-scale building specimens can be useful in combined structural health monitoring (SHM) and LQG control studies, diminishing safety concerns during experiments by using benchtop-scale rather than largescale specimens. Development of such small-scale test-beds is hampered by difficulties in actuator construction. In order to be a useful analog to full-scale structures, actuators for small-scale test-beds should exhibit similar features and limitations as their full-scale counterparts. In particular, semi-active devices, such as magneto-rheological (MR) fluid dampers, with limited authority (versus active mass dampers) and nonlinear behavior are difficult to mimic over small force scales due to issues related to fluid containment and friction. In this study, a novel extraction-type small-force (0- 10 N) MR-fluid damper which exhibits nonlinear hysteresis similar to a full-scale, MR-device is proposed. This actuator is a key development to enable the function of a small-scale structural control test-bed intended for wireless control validation studies. Experimental validation of this prototype is conducted using a 3-story scale structure subjected to simulated single-axis seismic excitation. The actuator affects the structural response commanded by a control computer that executes an LQG state feedback control law and a modified Bouc-Wen lookup table that was previously developed for full-scale MR-applications. In addition, damper dynamic limitations are characterized and presented including force output magnitude and frequency characteristics.
Publication Title
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Recommended Citation
Winter, B.,
Velazquez, A.,
&
Swartz, R.
(2015).
Low-force magneto-rheological damper design for small-scale structural control experimentation.
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering,
9435.
http://doi.org/10.1117/12.2082715
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/12054