Simulation and Control Aspects of FHT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Simulation and Control Aspects of FHT

Description:

Has no inertia effects of interest ... Has significant inertia effects ... Physical substructure has no masses of significance, hence no inertia effects ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:54
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: victor83
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Simulation and Control Aspects of FHT


1
Simulation and Control Aspects of FHT
  • M. V. Sivaselvan
  • CO-PI CU-NEES
  • Assistant Professor
  • Dept. of Civil, Environmental and Architectural
    Eng.
  • University of Colorado at Boulder
  • siva_at_colorado.edu

2
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

3
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

4
Multi-story Building
5
(No Transcript)
6
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

7
Use of hybrid simulation
Laboratory Testing
Hybrid Simulation is useful for
qualification/proof-of-concept testing when the
interaction of a component with its surroundings
needs to be accurately represented
  • Examine the performance of a component in its
    host environment
  • Proof of concept tests
  • Interaction with surroundings may significantly
    modify input
  • Hybrid simulation is useful
  • Hybrid simulation not very useful for this
    purpose
  • Some kind of computation-in-the-loop with
    geometric reasoning about state-space may be
    possible

8
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

9
Feedback interaction in reality
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
10
In hybrid simulation however
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Actuator / Transfer Device
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
11
In hybrid simulation however
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Actuator / Transfer Device
Sensor
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
12
In hybrid simulation however
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Sensor
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
13
In hybrid simulation however
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Sensor
Actuator Feedback
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
14
In hybrid simulation however
External Input (Eg. Ground Motion)
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
NEW DYNAMICS
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Sensor
Actuator Feedback
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
15
Challenges
  • These additional dynamics create significant
    problems
  • When the structure to be simulated is lightly
    damped, almost always renders the system unstable
  • Need to develop control algorithms to make hybrid
    simulation possible
  • Causality ? Design of such algorithms requires
    knowledge about physical substructure (predictive
    model, implicit integration etc.) ? This is a
    conflict ? Robustness of algorithm with respect
    to modeling of the physical substructure
  • A numerical algorithm need not be causal, a
    hybrid simulation algorithm does

16
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

17
Hybrid Simulation
Pseudo-dynamic
Dynamic
Has no inertia effects of interest
Has significant inertia effects
  • More practical applications necessitate this form
    of hybrid simulation
  • My research is in this area
  • Born from the displacement-based finite element
    one of the elements is now physical !
  • Algorithms also reflect this
  • If in addition, there are no frequency-dependent
    behavior is the physical substructure can be
    done as slowly as we want to

18
Hybrid Simulation
Pseudo-dynamic
Dynamic
Real-time
Slow
Hybrid simulation with Shaking Tables
CU NEES Site
CU NEES Site
19
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

20
Recall
External Input
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Motivation Want actuator to behave the same way
as Substructure 1
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Sensor
Actuator Feedback
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
21
Introduce a controller
External Input
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Controller
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Actuator Feedback
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
22
Introduce a controller
External Input
Substructure 1 Computational
Boundary Condition
Controller
Natural Physical Feedback
Actuator / Transfer Device
Actuator Feedback
Substructure 2 Physical
Work Conjugate Boundary Condition
23
Model Reference Control
  • Controller designed so that does the same
    thing as
  • Part implemented in the computer

24
Another Approach
Internal Model Control - IMC
25
Equivalence of different approaches
  • The two approaches can be shown to be shown to be
    different parametrizations of a 2 DOF controller
  • Each offers a different perspective
  • MRC useful in design
  • IMC useful in robustness analysis

26
CU FHT Algorithm
  • Computer implementation of IMC

Discretize at 10 ms
Discretize at 1 ms
CU FHT Algorithm !! (Shing et. al., 2005)
27
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

28
Hybrid Simulation with a Shaking Table
  • Necessary when physical substructure has
    distributed mass
  • In many cases of practical interest for hybrid
    simulation, mass is distributed and there is no
    such natural way of lumping the mass for
    substructuring.
  • Examples
  • Nonstructural components in civil structures
  • Payloads in aerospace structures
  • Machine components
  • Dams, chimneys and other continuum civil
    structures
  • Soil / fluid-structure interaction
  • The interface device must be able to dynamically
    excited a system with distributed mass shaking
    table

Physical substructure has no masses of
significance, hence no inertia effects (Hence
pseudo-dynamic)
29
Outline
  • What is hybrid simulation?
  • Why do it?
  • Challenges in implementing a hybrid simulation
    system
  • Types of hybrid simulation
  • Hybrid simulation algorithms architecture and
    equivalence
  • Hybrid testing with shaking tables
  • Current and planned work, Conclusions

30
Hybrid Testing with Shaking Tables
  • 1.5 m x 1.5 m working area
  • /- 200 mm dynamic stroke
  • Frequency range 0-50 Hz
  • Maximum payload 2000 kg
  • Maximum Acceleration 1.0-2.9 g
  • Maximum Velocity 1 m/s
  • Will give CU structures lab capability to perform
    such hybrid simulations as listed in the previous
    slide
  • Collaboration with MTS Systems

Hybrid Simulation Configurations
Combination of Shaking Table and External Actuator
Shaking Table Only
Response Feedback
Response Feedback
Computational Substructure
External Actuator
Physical Substructure
Physical Substructure
Physical Substructure
Reaction Wall
Shaking Table
Shaking Table
Computational Substructure
31
Conclusions
  • Hybrid simulation online combination of
    computation and physical experimentation
  • Useful for qualification/proof-of-concept testing
    when the interaction of a component with its
    surroundings needs to be accurately represented
  • Challenge added dynamics and feedback paths
    created by the transfer system/actuator applying
    that applied interface conditions between the two
    substructures.
  • More difficult in dynamic hybrid simulation where
    physical substructure has significant inertia (as
    opposed to pseudo-dynamic)
  • Algorithms based on a control-systems perspective
    offer more promise than those motivated by the
    finite element method
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com