A waveguide model of the axial dynamic sti!ness for cylindrical vibration isolators in the audible frequency range is presented. The problems of satisfying the cylinder boundary conditions simultaneously are removed, by adopting the mode-matching technique, using the dispersion relation for an in"ni
ON THE WAVEGUIDE MODELLING OF DYNAMIC STIFFNESS OF CYLINDRICAL VIBRATION ISOLATORS. PART II: THE DISPERSION RELATION SOLUTION, CONVERGENCE ANALYSIS AND COMPARISON WITH SIMPLE MODELS
โ Scribed by L. KARI
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 697 KB
- Volume
- 244
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-460X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Based on a waveguide model presented in a companion paper (L. Kari 2001 Journal of Sound and <ibration 244, 211}233 [1]), the in#uences of higher order modes and structure-borne sound dispersion on the axial dynamic sti!ness for cylindrical vibration isolators are investigated. On the whole, a moderate mode number results in an accurate sti!ness prediction while an accurate stress point value prediction requires more modes. The dispersion relation is solved by a modi"ed Newton}Raphson method with initial values given by an asymptotic expansion or a winding integral method. The integral technique is based on the argument principle; but, as the square root operators in the dispersion relation yield branch points, some modi"cations are needed. To create single-valued functions conforming to the argument principle, the winding integral search domain is split into branch cut absent subdomains, containing adaptively de"ned square root operators. The subregion method used for the ful"lment of the boundary conditions at the lateral surfaces is shown to converge faster than for the point-matching method. However, the latter reveals a similar convergence rate as the former at overdetermination. Comparisons with simple sti!ness models are made. These models, known as the long rod, the Love, the Bishop, the Kynch, the Mindlin and Herrmann and the Mindlin and McNiven theories are shown to diverge substantially from the presented &&exact'' theory. To a great extent, the pertinent stress and displacement "elds, derived from the presented waveguide model, explain the discrepancies reported for the approximate theories.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES