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Nonlinear structure-extended cavity interaction simulation using a new version of harmonic balance method.

Yiu-Yin Lee
- 03 Jul 2018 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 7
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TLDR
The new version of the multilevel residue harmonic balance method can generate the higher-level nonlinear solutions ignored in the previous version and the effect of the extended cavity, which has not been considered in previous studies, is examined.
Abstract
This study addresses the nonlinear structure-extended cavity interaction simulation using a new version of the multilevel residue harmonic balance method. This method has only been adopted once to solve a nonlinear beam problem. This is the first study to use this method to solve a nonlinear structural acoustic problem. This study has two focuses: 1) the new version of the multilevel residue harmonic balance method can generate the higher-level nonlinear solutions ignored in the previous version and 2) the effect of the extended cavity, which has not been considered in previous studies, is examined. The cavity length of a panel-cavity system is sometimes longer than the panel length. However, many studies have adopted a model in which the cavity length is equal to the panel length. The effects of excitation magnitude, cavity depth, damping and number of structural modes on sound and vibration responses are investigated for various panel cases. In the simulations, the present harmonic balance solutions agree reasonably well with those obtained from the classical harmonic balance method. There are two important findings. First, the nonlinearity of a structural acoustic system highly depends on the cavity size. If the cavity size is smaller, the nonlinearity is higher. A large cavity volume implies a low stiffness or small acoustic pressure transmitted from the source panel to the nonlinear panel. In other words, the additional volume in an extended cavity affects the nonlinearity, sound and vibration responses of a structural acoustic system. Second, if an acoustic resonance couples with a structural resonance, nonlinearity is amplified and thus the insertion loss is adversely affected.

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The effect of large amplitude vibration on the pressure-dependent absorption of a structure multiple cavity system.

TL;DR: This study addresses the effects of large-amplitude vibration on the pressure-dependent absorption of a structure multiple-cavity system and the proposed harmonic balance method, which has recently been adopted to solve nonlinear beam problems and other nonlinear structural-acoustic problems.
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Modified residue harmonic balance solution for coupled integrable dispersionless equations with disturbance terms

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References
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Book

Sound and Structural Vibration: Radiation, Transmission and Response

TL;DR: Wave in Fluids and Structures and Numerically Based Analyses of Fluid-Structure Interaction are presented, which show the importance of knowing the carrier and removal properties of wave energy.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Incremental Harmonic Balance Method for Nonlinear Vibration of Axially Moving Beams

TL;DR: In this paper, the incremental harmonic balance (IHB) method is formulated for the nonlinear vibration analysis of axially moving beams, and the Galerkin method is used to discretize the governing equations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response and stability of a SDOF strongly nonlinear stochastic system with light damping modeled by a fractional derivative

TL;DR: In this article, a stochastic averaging procedure for a single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) strongly nonlinear system with light damping modeled by a fractional derivative under Gaussian white noise excitations is developed by using the so-called generalized harmonic functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fully-coupled fluid-structure interaction simulation of the aortic and mitral valves in a realistic 3D left ventricle model.

TL;DR: A fully-coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) framework that combines smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) and nonlinear finite element (FE) method to investigate the coupled aortic and mitral valves structural response and the bulk intraventricular hemodynamics in a realistic left ventricle (LV) model during the entire cardiac cycle is presented.
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