• Title/Summary/Keyword: Dynamic geometry

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Geometry and load effects on transient response of a VFGM annular plate: An analytical approach

  • Alavia, Seyed Hashem;Eipakchi, Hamidreza
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.70 no.2
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    • pp.179-197
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    • 2019
  • In this article, the effect of different geometrical, materials and load parameters on the transient response of axisymmetric viscoelastic functionally graded annular plates with different boundary conditions are studied. The behavior of the plate is assumed the elastic in bulk and viscoelastic in shear with the standard linear solid model. Also, the graded properties vary through the thickness according to a power law function. Three types of mostly applied transient loading, i.e., step, impulse, and harmonic with different load distribution respect to radius coordinate are examined. The motion equations and the corresponding boundary conditions are extracted by applying the first order shear deformation theory which are three coupled partial differential equations with variable coefficients. The resulting motion equations are solved analytically using the perturbation technique and the generalized Fourier series. The sensitivity of the response to the graded indexes, different transverse loads, aspect ratios, boundary conditions and the material properties are investigated too. The results are compared with the finite element analysis.

Design of large-scale sodium thermal-hydraulic integral effect test facility, STELLA-2

  • Lee, Jewhan;Eoh, Jaehyuk;Yoon, Jung;Son, Seok-Kwon;Kim, Hyungmo
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.54 no.9
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    • pp.3551-3566
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    • 2022
  • The STELLA program was launched to support the PGSFR development in 2012 and for the 2nd stage, the STELLA-2 facility was designed to investigate the integral effect of safety systems including the comprehensive interaction among PHTS, IHTS and DHRS. In STELLA-2, the long-term transient behavior after accidents can be observed and the overall safety aspect can also be evaluated. In this paper, the basic design concept from engineering basis to specific design is described. The design was aimed to meet similarity criteria and requirements based on various non-dimensional numbers and the result satisfied the key features to explain the reasoning of safety evaluation. The result of this study was used to construct the facility and the experiment is on-going. In general, the final design meets the similarity criteria of the multidimensional physics inside the reactor pool. And also, for the conservation of natural circulation phenomena, the design meets the similarity requirements of geometry and thermo-dynamic behavior.

Effect of Mixing Section Resonance Mode on Dynamic Combustion Characteristics in a Swirl-Stabilized Combustor (스월-안정화 연소기에서 혼합기 공진모드가 동적 연소특성에 미치는 영향)

  • Han, Sunwoo;Lee, Shinwoo;Hwang, Donghyun;Ahn, Kyubok
    • Journal of ILASS-Korea
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.18-25
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    • 2022
  • Hot-firing tests were performed to experimentally confirm the effect of the eigenmode in the fuel-air mixing section on combustion instability by changing mixing section length, inlet mean velocity, equivalence ratio, and swirler geometry. A premixed gas composed of air and ethylene was supplied to the combustion chamber through an mixing section and an axial swirler. As the mixing section length increased, the inlet velocity perturbation decreased, but the combustion instability increased more. It was found that the resonance frequency of the first longitudinal mode in the mixing section shifted to the third longitudinal mode as the length of the mixing section increased. The results implied that the transition of the resonace frquency by changing the length of the mixing section might cause combustion instability.

A study on the characteristics of acoustic emission signal in dynamic cutting process (동적 절삭과정에서 AE 신호의 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Jeong-Suk;Kang, Myeong-Chang;Kim, Duk-Whan
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.69-76
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    • 1994
  • AE(Acoustic Emission) signal is correlated to workpiece material, cutting conditions and tool geometry during metal cutting. The relationship between AE signal and cutting parameters can be obtained by theoretical model and experiments. The value of CR(Count Rate) is nearly constant in stable cutting, but when the chatter vibration occours, the value of CR is rapidly increased due to the vibration deformation zone. By experimental signal processing of AE, it is more effective than by RMS(Root Mean Square) measurement to detect the threshold of chatter vibration by CR measurement.

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Prediction the surface profile in the single point diamond turning (정밀 선삭가공에서의 표먼거칠기곡선 예측)

  • Yoon, Young-Sik;Lee, Sang-Jo
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.11 no.5
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    • pp.189-198
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    • 1994
  • The achievable machining accuracy depends upon the level of the micro-engineering, and the today's accuracy targets are dimensional tolerances in the order of 10nm and surface roughness in the order of 1nm. Such requirements cannot be satisfied by the conventional machining processes. Single point diamond turning is the one of new techniques which can produce the parts with such accuracy limits. The aims of this thesis are to get a better understanding of the complex cutting process with a diamond tool and, consequently, to develope a predicting model of a turned surface profile. In order to predict the turned surface profile, a numerical model has been developed. By means of this model, the influence of the operational settings-the material properties of the workpiece, the geometry of the cutting tool and the dynamic behaviour of the lathe-and their influences via the cutting forces upon the surface roughness have been estimated.

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Advances for the time-dependent Monte Carlo neutron transport analysis in McCARD

  • Sang Hoon Jang;Hyung Jin Shim
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.55 no.7
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    • pp.2712-2722
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    • 2023
  • For an accurate and efficient time-dependent Monte Carlo (TDMC) neutron transport analysis, several advanced methods are newly developed and implemented in the Seoul National University Monte Carlo code, McCARD. For an efficient control of the neutron population, a dynamic weight window method is devised to adjust the weight bounds of the implicit capture in the time bin-by-bin TDMC simulations. A moving geometry module is developed to model a continuous insertion or withdrawal of a control rod. Especially, the history-based batch method for the TDMC calculations is developed to predict the unbiased variance of a bin-wise mean estimate. The developed methods are verified for three-dimensional problems in the C5G7-TD benchmark, showing good agreements with results from a deterministic neutron transport analysis code, nTRACER, within the statistical uncertainty bounds. In addition, the TDMC analysis capability implemented in McCARD is demonstrated to search the optimum detector positions for the pulsed-neutron-source experiments in the Kyoto University Critical Assembly and AGN201K.

Free vibration analysis of FGP nanobeams with classical and non-classical boundary conditions using State-space approach

  • Tlidji, Youcef;Benferhat, Rabia;Daouadji, Tahar Hassaine;Tounsi, Abdelouahed;Trinh, L.Cong
    • Advances in nano research
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    • v.13 no.5
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    • pp.453-463
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    • 2022
  • This paper aims to investigate the vibration analysis of functionally graded porous (FGP) beams using State-space approach with several classical and non-classical boundary conditions. The materials properties of the porous FG beams are considered to have even and uneven distributions profiles along the thickness direction. The equation of motion for FGP beams with various boundary conditions is obtained through Hamilton's principle. State-space approach is used to obtain the governing equation of porous FG beam. The comparison of the results of this study with those in the literature validates the present analysis. The effects of span-to-depth ratio (L/h), of distribution shape of porosity and others parameters on the dynamic behavior of the beams are described. The results show that the boundary conditions, the geometry of the beams and the distribution shape of porosity affect the fundamental frequencies of the beams.

Dynamic analysis of viscoelastic FGM shells with porosities on elastic foundation

  • Mehmet Halil Calim;Omer Faruk Capar;Mehmet Bugra Ozbey;Yavuz Cetin Cuma
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.39 no.1
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    • pp.55-72
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    • 2024
  • This study investigates free and damped vibration behaviours of porous functionally graded shells supported by Winkler-Pasternak foundation, considering different geometries. Utilizing a higher-order shear deformation theory, the displacement field is determined. The equations of motion are formulated using Hamilton's principle, and the solutions are obtained Navier's method employing double Fourier series. Parametric studies regarding the effects of porosity, material distribution, elastic foundation, shell geometry and damping are carried out. Results are given in tabular and graphical form for the free and forced vibration analyses, respectively.

Simulation of Vehicle-Structure Dynamic Interaction by Displacement Constraint Equations and Stabilized Penalty Method (변위제한조건식과 안정화된 Penalty방법에 의한 차량 주행에 따른 구조물의 동적상호작용 해석기법)

  • Chung, Keun Young;Lee, Sung Uk;Min, Kyung Ju
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.26 no.4D
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    • pp.671-678
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    • 2006
  • In this study, to describe vehicle-structure dynamic interaction phenomena with 1/4 vehicle model, nonlinear Hertzian contact spring and nonlinear contact damper are adopted. The external loads acting on 1/4 vehicle model are selfweight of vehicle and geometry information of running surface. The constraint equation on contact surface is implemented by the Penalty method with stabilization and the reaction from constraint violation. To describe pitching motion of various vehicles two types of the displacement constraint equations are exerted to connect between car bodies and between bogie frames, i.e., the rigid body connection and the rigid body connection with pin, respectively. For the time integration of dynamic equations of vehicles and structure Newmark time integration scheme is adopted. To reduce the error caused by inadequate time step size, adaptive time-stepping technique is also adopted. Thus, it is expected that more versatile dynamic interaction phenomena can be described by this approach and it can be applied to various railway dynamic problems with low computational cost.

A large scale simulation of floe-ice fractures and validation against full-scale scenario

  • Lu, Wenjun;Heyn, Hans-Martin;Lubbad, Raed;Loset, Sveinung
    • International Journal of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.393-402
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    • 2018
  • While interacting with a sloping structure, an ice floe may fracture in different patterns. For example, it can be local bending failure or global splitting failure depending on the contact properties, geometry and confinement of the ice floe. Modelling these different fracture patterns as a natural outcome of numerical simulations is rather challenging. This is mainly because the effects of crack propagation, crack branching, multi fracturing modes and eventual fragmentation within a solid material are still questions to be answered by the on-going research in the Computational Mechanic community. In order to simulate the fracturing of ice floes with arbitrary geometries and confinement; and also to simulate the fracturing events at such a large scale yet with sufficient efficiency, we propose a semi-analytical/empirical and semi-numerical approach; but with focus on the global splitting failure mode in this paper. The simulation method is validated against data we collected during the Oden Arctic Technology Research Cruise 2015 (OATRC2015). The data include: 1) camera images based on which we specify the exact geometry of ice floes before and after an impact and fracturing event; 2) IMU data based on which the global dynamic force encountered by the icebreaker is extracted for the impact event. It was found that this method presents reasonably accurate results and realistic fracturing patterns upon given ice floes.