Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8947499 | Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing | 2019 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Tangled metal wire (TMW) devices can be used as damping elements in extreme environments where traditional materials such as viscoelastic polymers deteriorate or become ineffective. Dynamic properties of TMW devices are highly nonlinear because the microstructure consists of coiled metal wires that are compressed together. This paper examines the sensitivity of their dynamic stiffness and damping to loading conditions, in particular, pre-compression, dynamic amplitude and frequency of excitation. Using displacement-controlled experiments, it is shown that properties depend strongly on pre-compression and dynamic amplitude as would be expected in a structure comprising many frictional contact points. Frequency dependence is shown to be negligible over a broad frequency range that encompasses the region of interest for typical machine applications. This work identifies slow dynamic effects, with timescales of the order of around 10â¯s, which show that quasi-static testing, which is sometimes used for these materials, will not provide accurate estimates of dynamic properties.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Signal Processing
Authors
Kartik Chandrasekhar, Jem Rongong, Elizabeth Cross,