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Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid magnetorheological fluid–elastomeric lag dampers for helicopter stability augmentation

TLDR
In this article, a hybrid magnetorheological fluid elastomeric (MRFE) damper is investigated for adjustable or programmable lag mode damping in helicopters, so that damping requirements can be varied as a function of different flight conditions.
Abstract
A laboratory demonstration of a hybrid magnetorheological fluid?elastomeric (MRFE) damper is investigated for adjustable or programmable lag mode damping in helicopters, so that damping requirements can be varied as a function of different flight conditions. The laboratory demonstration of this hybrid MRFE lag damper consists of a double lap shear elastomeric damper in parallel with two magnetorheological (MR) flow mode dampers. This is compared to a damper where only elastomeric materials are implemented, i.e., a double lap shear specimen. The relationship between the output force and the quasi-steady harmonic displacement input to a flow mode MR damper is exploited, where the output force can be adjusted as a function of applied magnetic field. Equivalent viscous damping is used to compare the damping characteristics of the hybrid damper to a conventional elastomeric damper under steady-state sinusoidal displacement excitation. To demonstrate feasibility, a hybrid MRFE damper test setup is designed, and single frequency (lag frequency or rotor in-plane bending frequency) and dual frequency (lag frequency and rotor frequency) tests are conducted under different magnetic fields. The hybrid MRFE damper exhibits amplitude-dependent damping behavior. However, with application of a magnetic field, the damping level is controlled to a specific damping level objective as a function of displacement amplitude. Similarly, under dual frequency conditions, damping degradation at the lag frequency, because of lag motion at the rotor frequency, can also be recovered by increasing magnetic field. A time-domain analysis is developed to study the nonlinear dynamic behavior of the hybrid MRFE damper. Using rate-dependent elasto-slides, the amplitude-dependent behavior of the hybrid MRFE damper is accurately reconstructed using both constant and current-dependent (i.e.?controllable) parameters. The analysis is physically motivated and can be applied to the elastomer and MR fluid damper components separately.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetorheological fluid dampers: a review of parametric modelling

TL;DR: In this paper, the characteristics of magnetorheological dampers are summarized according to the measured responses under different conditions and the state-of-the-art parametric dynamic modelling, identification and validation techniques for MR dampers were reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetorheological fluid dampers: A review on structure design and analysis

TL;DR: The magnetorheological fluid dampers could offer an outstanding capability in semiactive vibration control due to excellent dynamical features such as fast response, environmentally robust characteristics, large force capacity, low power consumption, and simple interfaces between electronic input and mechanical output as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A state of art on magneto-rheological materials and their potential applications:

TL;DR: A recent progressive review on magneto-rheological materials technology is presented in this paper, focusing on numerous application devices and systems utilizing magneto rheology materials, including fluids, foams, grease, elastomers, and plastomers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Powered Magnetorheological Dampers

TL;DR: In this paper, the feasibility and effectiveness of a self-powered magnetorheological (MR) damper using in-situ energy harvested from the vibration and shock environment in which it is deployed is addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Semi-Active Control of Vertical Stroking Helicopter Crew Seat for Enhanced Crashworthiness

TL;DR: Choi et al. as mentioned in this paper used a variable load energy absorber (VLEA) to adjust the stroking load of the VLEA according to the occupant's weight and spinal load.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Properties and applications of commercial magnetorheological fluids

TL;DR: In this article, the rheological and magnetic properties of several commercial magnetorheological (MR) fluids are discussed and compared using appropriate figures of merit based on conventional design paradigms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nondimensional analysis of semi-active electrorheological and magnetorheological dampers using approximate parallel plate models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed nonlinear quasi-steady electrorheological and magnetorheological damper models using an idealized Bingham plastic shear flow mechanism, where damping forces are developed in an annular bypass via Couette (shear mode), Poiseuille (flow mode) flow, or combined Couette and Poiseiulle flow (mixed mode).
Journal ArticleDOI

Idealized Hysteresis Modeling of Electrorheological and Magnetorheological Dampers

TL;DR: In this paper, the hysteresis behavior of a linear stroke magnetorheological damper is characterized for sinusoidal displacement excitation at 2.0 Hz (nominal).
Journal ArticleDOI

Vibration Control of a MR Seat Damper for Commercial Vehicles

TL;DR: In this paper, a cylindrical magneto-rheological (MR) seat damper is designed on the basis of the Bingham model of the MR fluid, and a skyhook controller is formulated and realized in a closed-loop control fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometry optimization of MR valves constrained in a specific volume using the finite element method

TL;DR: In this article, the geometric optimal design of magnetorheological (MR) valves in order to improve valve performance, such as pressure drop, is presented, where the optimization problem is to find the optimal geometric dimensions of MR valves constrained in a specific volume.
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