Passive variable negative stiffness device and methods of use thereof
10760643 ยท 2020-09-01
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16F2228/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F15/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A passive variable negative stiffness device (passive VNSD) configured to facilitate a transition to zero stiffness by using elastic devices (e.g., springs) combined with translating and rotating components. An exemplary embodiment of a passive VNSD may comprise at least one pretensioned and/or precompressed elastic device to produce the desired force-displacement profiles. For instance, an exemplary embodiment of a passive VNSD may be adapted to produce force-displacement profiles that transition from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then to positive stiffness (ZNP) and from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then back to zero stiffness (ZNZ).
Claims
1. A system comprising: a translation component; a first pair of discs in association with said translation component, said first pair of discs comprised of a first disc that is associated with a second disc, said first pair of discs further comprising a first elastic device that extends between said first disc and said second disc; and a second pair of discs in association with said translation component, said second pair of discs comprised of a third disc that is associated with a fourth disc, said second pair of discs further comprising a second elastic device that extends between said third disc and said fourth disc; wherein said first pair of discs is adapted to create forces in response to translation of said translation component such that said forces are transferred to said translation component to induce a negative stiffness; and wherein said second pair of discs is adapted to create forces in response to translation of said translation component such that said forces are transferred to said translation component to induce a combination of negative stiffness and positive stiffness.
2. The system of claim 1 wherein said system is adapted to produce force-displacement profiles that transition from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then to positive stiffness (ZNP) and from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then back to zero stiffness (ZNZ).
3. The system of claim 1 wherein said first elastic device is connected on an outer half of each said first disc relative to the other said second disc of said first pair of discs.
4. The system of claim 1 wherein said first elastic device is connected at or near an outermost circumference of each said first disc relative to the other said second disc of said first pair of discs.
5. The system of claim 1 wherein said first elastic device is pretensioned.
6. The system of claim 1 wherein: said first disc is engaged with said translation component; and said second disc is separated from said translation component; wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce rotation of said first disc, which in turn causes counter-rotation of said second disc.
7. The system of claim 1 wherein said second elastic device is connected on an inner half of said third disc relative to said fourth disc and on an outer half of said fourth disc relative to said third disc.
8. The system of claim 7 wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce respective torques to develop about said third disc and said fourth disc that are in opposite directions relative to each other.
9. The system of claim 1 wherein said second elastic device is connected at or near an innermost circumference of said third disc relative to said fourth disc and at or near an outermost circumference of said fourth disc relative to said third disc.
10. The system of claim 9 wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce respective torques to develop about said third disc and said fourth disc that are in opposite directions relative to each other.
11. The system of claim 1 wherein said second elastic device is pretensioned.
12. The system of claim 11 wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce respective torques to develop about said third disc and said fourth disc that are in opposite directions relative to each other.
13. The system of claim 1 further comprising an additional disc positioned between said fourth disc and said translation component such that said additional disc is engaged with said fourth disc and said translation component; wherein said additional disc is adapted to rotate in a direction of translation of said translation component.
14. The system of claim 1 wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce respective torques to develop about said third disc and said fourth disc that are in a same direction.
15. The system of claim 1 wherein said second elastic device is connected on an outer half of said third disc relative to said fourth disc and on an inner half of said fourth disc relative to said third disc.
16. The system of claim 15 wherein said second elastic device is connected at or near an outermost circumference of said third disc relative to said fourth disc and at or near an innermost circumference of said fourth disc relative to said third disc.
17. The system of claim 15 wherein said second elastic device is precompressed.
18. The system of claim 1 wherein translation of said translation component is adapted to induce respective torques to develop about said third disc and said fourth disc that are in opposite directions relative to each other.
19. The system of claim 1 wherein said system is a rack-and-pinion mechanism.
20. The system of claim 1 further comprising at least one ball-screw to convert translation of said translation component to rotation of at least one of said first, second, third and fourth discs.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENT(S)
(13) Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are directed to variable negative stiffness devices (VNSD) that, for example, may be used as an effective alternative to the state-of-the-art in adaptive passive negative stiffness devices. An example of a VNSD may be a simple, compact, efficient, reliable, and/or relatively inexpensive device that is capable of transitioning to zero stiffness at large displacements (see, e.g.,
(14) In light of the aforementioned characteristics, an exemplary embodiment of a VNSD may be used in a variety of applications, not limited to building or bridge applications. Some other examples of general vibration isolation applications are vehicle suspensions, vehicle seat suspensions, and sensitive equipment. In view of the disclosure herein, it will be apparent that many other uses are possible to address undesirable vibration or other movement of a structure, system, device, etc.
(15) A first exemplary embodiment of a VNSD (i.e., Configuration 1 or system 10) is shown in
(16) In particular, first disc pair 20 is comprised of a disc 22 that is engaged or otherwise associated with disc 24. In this embodiment, first disc pair 20 also includes a pretensioned elastic device 26 that is respectively connected on the outer half (more preferably at or near the outermost circumference) of each disc (relative to the other disc, as determined when the discs are in a stationary state; an imaginary dashed line 28 is shown for purposes of example on disc 22 to indicate an outer half and an inner half) such that the elastic device 26 extends between disc 22 and disc 24. Disc 22 is engaged or otherwise associated with component 40, whereas disc 24 is separated from and not directly engaged with component 40. Translation of component 40 therefore induces rotation of disc 22, which in turn causes counter-rotation of disc 24. The resulting forces exerted on component 40 then induce negative stiffness.
(17) Second disc pair 30 is comprised of a disc 32 that is associated with disc 34. However, in this instance, disc 32 is separated from and not directly engaged with disc 34. In this pairing, a pretensioned elastic device 36 is connected on the inner half (more preferably at or near the innermost circumference) of disc 32 and the outer half (more preferably at or near the outermost circumference) of disc 34 (relative to the other disc, as determined when the discs are in a stationary state) such that the elastic device 36 extends between disc 32 and disc 34. In order to facilitate the desired rotation of disc 34 in this exemplary embodiment, an additional disc 38 is positioned between disc 34 and component 40. In particular, disc 38 is engaged or otherwise associated with disc 34 and component 40 such that disc 38 is adapted to rotate in the direction of translation of component 40. Disc 32 is also engaged or otherwise associated with component 40. However, due at least in part to elastic device 36 and disc 38, translation of component 40 induces rotation of disc 32 and disc 34 such that disc 32 and disc 34 (via disc 38) create forces that are transferred to component 40 to induce positive stiffness and negative stiffness, respectively. Specifically, in this exemplary embodiment, disc 32 and disc 34 are adapted to rotate in opposite directions due to disc 38, and the torques that are adapted to develop about disc 32 and disc 34 are in the same direction due at least in part to elastic device 36 and disc 38. The torque about disc 34, however, is transferred to disc 38 in the opposite direction. As a result, the torque from disc 32 resists the motion of the translating component, while the torque from disc 34 assists the motion of the translating component, via disc 38.
(18) With reference to
F.sub.VNSD=F.sub.N.sub.
where F.sub.N.sub.
(19)
where r.sub.N.sub.
T.sub.N.sub.
(20) The forces in the springs, F.sub.N.sub.
F.sub.N.sub.
where L.sub.N.sub.
(21)
In Eq. (7), the disc rotation angles are a function of the translation u, and are given by:
(22)
Meanwhile, the stretched length and perpendicular distances for the N-P disc pair are given by:
(23)
and d is the center-to-center distance between the discs, and must be greater than the sum of the disc radii (d>r.sub.NP.sub.
(24)
(25) Equations (1)-(12) may be used to describe the force F.sub.VNSD as a function of the displacement u. The exemplary embodiment of Configuration 1 shown in
(26) A second exemplary embodiment of a VNSD (i.e., Configuration 2 or system 100) is shown in
(27) The force-displacement relationship for Configuration 2 can be obtained by modifying Eqs. (4) and (9)-(11) of the N-P disc pair in Configuration 1 as shown below (wherein superscript indicates a modification):
(28)
(29) Configuration 2 can be used to obtain a force-displacement profile that transitions from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then back to zero stiffness. However, the actual-to-apparent yield ratio resulting from Configuration 2 will be smaller than that achieved from ZNZ1. Configuration 2 will be hereafter referred to as ZNZ2.
(30) A third exemplary embodiment of a VNSD (i.e., Configuration 3 or system 200) is shown in
(31) For this exemplary embodiment, the force-displacement relationship can be obtained by modifying Eqs. (9)-(11) of the N-P disc pair of Configuration 1 as shown below (superscript indicates a modification):
(32)
(33) Configuration 3 can produce a force-displacement profile that transitions from zero stiffness, to negative stiffness, and then back to zero stiffness. However, the profile is different than that achieved from ZNZ1 after the transition from negative stiffness to zero stiffness occurs. Configuration 3 will be hereafter referred to as ZNZ3.
(34) Force-Displacement Profiles
(35) In order to identify the parameters of Configurations 1, 2, and 3 leading to the desired force-displacement profiles, the disc sizes, ratios of disc sizes, spring stiffnesses, and spring preloads were varied during simulations. The resulting force-displacement profiles for each configuration are shown in
(36) Numerical Validation
(37) Configurations 1-3 were modeled in SolidWorks, and their force-displacement properties were validated through numerical simulations. For Configuration 1, only ZNZ1 was simulated, as ZNP1 is based on the same configuration with different parameters, and therefore did not require separate validation. The exemplary models used rack-and-pinion for converting between translation and rotation, and torque and force. The SolidWorks models, and the results of the validation, are shown in
(38) Scalability
(39) The force-displacement profiles of a VNSD may be scaled to the amplitude of, for example, the translating component displacements. With respect to such a system, this is achievable because the profiles depend on the relationships of the rotation angles within and between disc pairs, which in turn depend on the disc sizes and the translating component displacement. Scaling the system for larger or smaller translating component displacement amplitudes requires scaling the disc sizes in proportion, while maintaining the disc ratios within and between disc pairs.
(40) Force Amplification
(41) In an exemplary embodiment, the magnitude of the VNSD force depends at least in part on the stiffnesses of the springs, which in turn is related to the spring sizes. For applications requiring large VNSD forces, amplification may be used to achieve the required forces while minimizing the spring sizes. For the example of a VNSD 300 using a rack-and-pinion configuration, each disc 302 connected to the translating component 304 may be fixed to a larger disc 306 such that the original discs 302 and the larger discs 306 rotate about the same axis (see
(42) In order to demonstrate an example of amplification in the VNSD-A, a model of Configuration 1 with amplification was created in SolidWorks, and the force-displacement profile was obtained through simulation. The model was created so that the larger discs had radii that were two times those of the original discs, resulting in an amplification factor of two, and the springs connected to the larger discs had spring stiffnesses that were reduced by a factor of four relative to the un-amplified VNSD. The force-displacement profile for this exemplary embodiment of a VNSD-A is shown in
(43) Linear-to-Rotation and Torque-to-Force Conversion
(44) In
(45) Any embodiment of the present invention may include any of the optional or preferred features of the other embodiments of the present invention. The exemplary embodiments herein disclosed are not intended to be exhaustive or to unnecessarily limit the scope of the invention. The exemplary embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the present invention so that others skilled in the art may practice the invention. Having shown and described exemplary embodiments of the present invention, those skilled in the art will realize that many variations and modifications may be made to the described invention. Many of those variations and modifications will provide the same result and fall within the spirit of the claimed invention. It is the intention, therefore, to limit the invention only as indicated by the scope of the claims.