Vibration control of flexible beams using sensor averaging and actuator averaging methods

Techniques are developed for the suspension of flexible elements for non-contact handling in manufacturing processes. In support of this work, a magnetic suspension testbed is constructed, using eight actuators and eight sensors to control the flexible modes of a 3-m-long, 6.35-mm-diameter steel tub...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on control systems technology 2002-07, Vol.10 (4), p.568-577
Hauptverfasser: Ming-Chih Weng, Xiaodong Lu, Trumper, D.L.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Techniques are developed for the suspension of flexible elements for non-contact handling in manufacturing processes. In support of this work, a magnetic suspension testbed is constructed, using eight actuators and eight sensors to control the flexible modes of a 3-m-long, 6.35-mm-diameter steel tube with varying boundary conditions. A novel approach has been developed for the control of such noncontact suspensions through sensor averaging and actuator averaging. The difficult stability and robustness problems imposed by the flexible dynamics of the workpiece can be overcome by taking a properly weighted average of the outputs of a distributed array of motion sensors (sensor averaging), and/or by applying a properly weighted distributed array of actuating forces (actuator averaging) to the workpiece. These approaches generate spatial filters on a broad range of undesired resonance modes without adversely affecting the phase, and the resulting modal gains are independent of the specific boundary conditions and longitudinal dimensions of the workpiece. The averaging arrangement can also eliminate possible non-collocation problems. These approaches are thus generally applicable to a wide range of structural control problems. In this paper, the averaging methods applied to beams are presented in detail. The experimental results with a beam suspension confirm the value of the averaging techniques, and suggest the wide future application of these ideas in industrial processes that require noncontact handling of workpieces.
ISSN:1063-6536
1558-0865
DOI:10.1109/TCST.2002.1014676