Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6955075 | Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing | 2016 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Glass fibre-reinforced polymer (GFRP) composites offer a higher stiffness-to-weight ratio than conventional rotor materials used in turbomachinery. However, the material behaviour of GFRP high-speed rotors is difficult to predict due to the complexity of the composite material and the dynamic loading conditions. Consequently dynamic expansion measurements of GRFP rotors are required in situ and with micron precision. However, the whirling motion amplitude is about two orders of magnitude higher than the desired precision. To overcome this problem, a multi-sensor system capable of separating rotor expansion and whirling motion is proposed. High measurement rates well above the rotational frequency and micron uncertainty are achieved at whirling amplitudes up to 120µm and surface velocities up to 300 m/s. The dynamic elliptical expansion of a GFRP rotor is investigated in a rotor loading test rig under vacuum conditions. In situ measurements identified not only the introduced damage but also damage initiation and propagation.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Signal Processing
Authors
K. Philipp, A. Filippatos, R. Kuschmierz, A. Langkamp, M. Gude, A. Fischer, J. Czarske,