Bolt-loosening Fault Diagnosis in Rotor Systems with Nonlinear Vibration Transmissibility Function-based Features and Indexes

These methods that rely on features and indices derived from nonlinear vibration transmissibility functions (NVTFs) have found widespread success in detecting potential bolt-loosening faults within nonrotating systems such as bridges, railways, and satellites. To improve and extend existing NVTF-bas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Structural health monitoring 2024-08
Hauptverfasser: Li, Quankun, Zhao, Qingzhou, Wang, Siji, Jing, Xingjian
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:These methods that rely on features and indices derived from nonlinear vibration transmissibility functions (NVTFs) have found widespread success in detecting potential bolt-loosening faults within nonrotating systems such as bridges, railways, and satellites. To improve and extend existing NVTF-based methods for diagnosing bolt-loosening faults in rotor systems, a novel method is proposed with detailed theoretical analysis and experimental study in this paper. First, a general rotor dynamic model, considering bolt-loosening forces, radial unbalance forces, and nonlinear support forces, is built for the nonlinear rotor dynamic analysis and the definition of rotor-domain NVTFs. Importantly, by dividing the rotor system into a series of rotor subsystems and analyzing corresponding rotor dynamic submodels to be diagnosed only, relationships between NVTFs and bolt-loosening forces are summarized, and then three sensitive fault features are defined. Based on this, local diagnosis indexes are developed, and a novel method with detailed operating flowchart is proposed accordingly. Finally, results from experimental cases on a testing rotor system with single/multiple stage bolt-loosening faults and loosened pedestals verify and demonstrate the effectiveness of the novel method. The study in this article successfully improves and extends existing NVTF-based methods for nonrotating systems to diagnose potential bolt-loosening faults in rotor systems even with nonlinear supports such as loosened pedestals.
ISSN:1475-9217
1741-3168
DOI:10.1177/14759217241268871