<p>I was introduced to structural control by Raphael Haftka and Bill Hallauer during a one year stay at the Aerospace and Ocean Engineering department of Virginia Tech., during the academic year 1985-1986. At that time, there was a tremendous interest in large space structures in the USA, mainly bec
Vibration Control of Active Structures: An Introduction
β Scribed by AndrΓ© Preumont (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 375
- Series
- Solid Mechanics and Its Applications 96
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book consists of 14 chapters. Chapters 2 and 3 are devoted to the dynamics of active structures; the open loop transfer functions are derived from the constitutive equations; the discussion includes active trusses with piezoelectric struts, and beams and shells with embedded laminar piezoelectric actuators and sensors. Chapters 4 and 5 discuss the virtues of collocated actuator/sensor configurations and how they can be exploited to develop active damping with guaranteed stability. Chapter 6 addresses vibration isolation for one and 6 d.o.f.. Chapter 7 discusses optimal control for SISO systems with symmetric root locus. Chapter 8 discusses the design tradeoffs for SISO systems in the frequency domain, including the Bode amplitude/phase relationship. Chapter 9 provides a more general discussion of optimal control using of optimal control using the Riccati equation; spillover is examined. Chapters 10 and 11 review briefly the concepts of controllability, observability and stability. Chapter 12 discusses the semi-active control, including some materials on magneto-rheological fluids. Chapter 13 describes various practical applications to active damping, precision positioning and vibroacoustics, and chapter 14 discusses the active damping of cable- structures.
β¦ Table of Contents
Introduction....Pages 1-15
Some concepts of structural dynamics....Pages 17-36
Actuators, piezoelectric materials, and active structures....Pages 37-74
Collocated versus non-collocated control....Pages 75-90
Active damping with collocated pairs....Pages 91-111
Active vibration isolation....Pages 113-136
State space approach....Pages 137-163
Analysis and synthesis in the frequency domain....Pages 165-192
Optimal control....Pages 193-220
Controllability and Observability....Pages 221-243
Stability....Pages 245-262
Semi-active control....Pages 263-276
Applications....Pages 277-320
Tendon Control of Cable Structures....Pages 321-345
β¦ Subjects
Vibration, Dynamical Systems, Control; Mechanical Engineering; Automotive and Aerospace Engineering, Traffic
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This textbook is an introduction to the dynamics of active structures and to the feedback control of lightly damped flexible structures; the emphasis is placed on basic issues and simple control strategies that work.</p><p>Now in its fourth edition, more chapters have been added, and comments
This textbook is an introduction to the dynamics of active structures and to the feedback control of lightly damped flexible structures; the emphasis is placed on basic issues and simple control strategies that work. Now in its fourth edition, more chapters have been added, and comments and feedback
<p><p>This text is an introduction to the dynamics of active structures and to the feedback control of lightly damped flexible structures; the emphasis is placed on basic issues and simple control strategies that work.</p><p>Now in its third edition, more chapters have been added, and comments and f
This book consists of 14 chapters. Chapters 2 and 3 are devoted to the dynamics of active structures; the open loop transfer functions are derived from the constitutive equations; the discussion includes active trusses with piezoelectric struts, and beams and shells with embedded laminar piezoelectr
<p><p></p><p>This book focuses on safeguarding civil structures and residents from natural hazards such as earthquakes through the use of active control. It proposes novel proportional-derivative (PD) and proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controllers, as well as discrete-time sliding mode contr