Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation

Low-stiffness or compliant materials are inherently difficult to characterize in terms of dynamic mechanical properties. Their free-vibration behavior is not frequently analyzed, given that performing classic vibration testing in these type of materials may imply the tampering of the results by exte...

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Main Authors: Arlindo Ricarte, José Meireles, Octávio Inácio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Vibration
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-631X/4/1/5
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spelling doaj-19fe05bd80504d8bae8fab07d67319a02021-01-11T00:00:23ZengMDPI AGVibration2571-631X2021-01-0145647410.3390/vibration4010005Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic ExcitationArlindo Ricarte0José Meireles1Octávio Inácio2Instituto Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Parnamirim 59143-455, BrazilMechanical Engineering and Resource Sustainability Center, University of Minho, Campus de Azurém, 4800-058 Guimarães, PortugalInAcoustics, Engenharia Acústica, Vibrações e Ambiente, Lda, 4470-157 Maia, PortugalLow-stiffness or compliant materials are inherently difficult to characterize in terms of dynamic mechanical properties. Their free-vibration behavior is not frequently analyzed, given that performing classic vibration testing in these type of materials may imply the tampering of the results by external sources, either by changes in the geometry of the sample, by gravity-induced buckling, or the instrumentation itself (e.g., the mass of accelerometers). This study proposes an approach to determine the frequency response of these types of materials, using a noncontact methodology based on acoustic excitation and displacement measurement by Laser Döppler Vibrometry. The detailed method may be optimized by changing the sample design into a half-cane configuration to increase sample stiffness. This approach significantly increases the sample eigenmodes, facilitating their excitation by the acoustic pressure source. Numerical analysis using the values of the dynamic Young’s modulus from the experimental approaches validates the overall procedure. It is shown that the combination of numerical analysis and the proposed experimental method is a possible route for the determination of the dynamic Young’s modulus of these types of materials by inverse engineering.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-631X/4/1/5Laser Döppler Vibrometrymodal analysisfrequency response functionlow stiffnessinverse engineering
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arlindo Ricarte
José Meireles
Octávio Inácio
spellingShingle Arlindo Ricarte
José Meireles
Octávio Inácio
Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
Vibration
Laser Döppler Vibrometry
modal analysis
frequency response function
low stiffness
inverse engineering
author_facet Arlindo Ricarte
José Meireles
Octávio Inácio
author_sort Arlindo Ricarte
title Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
title_short Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
title_full Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
title_fullStr Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing the Frequency Response of Compliant Materials by Laser Döppler Vibrometry Coupled Acoustic Excitation
title_sort characterizing the frequency response of compliant materials by laser döppler vibrometry coupled acoustic excitation
publisher MDPI AG
series Vibration
issn 2571-631X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Low-stiffness or compliant materials are inherently difficult to characterize in terms of dynamic mechanical properties. Their free-vibration behavior is not frequently analyzed, given that performing classic vibration testing in these type of materials may imply the tampering of the results by external sources, either by changes in the geometry of the sample, by gravity-induced buckling, or the instrumentation itself (e.g., the mass of accelerometers). This study proposes an approach to determine the frequency response of these types of materials, using a noncontact methodology based on acoustic excitation and displacement measurement by Laser Döppler Vibrometry. The detailed method may be optimized by changing the sample design into a half-cane configuration to increase sample stiffness. This approach significantly increases the sample eigenmodes, facilitating their excitation by the acoustic pressure source. Numerical analysis using the values of the dynamic Young’s modulus from the experimental approaches validates the overall procedure. It is shown that the combination of numerical analysis and the proposed experimental method is a possible route for the determination of the dynamic Young’s modulus of these types of materials by inverse engineering.
topic Laser Döppler Vibrometry
modal analysis
frequency response function
low stiffness
inverse engineering
url https://www.mdpi.com/2571-631X/4/1/5
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