Libro 2 PDF
Libro 2 PDF
http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/48621
1. Introduction
Rotating machinery is commonly used in many mechanical systems, including electrical
motors, machine tools, compressors, turbo machinery and aircraft gas turbine engines.
Typically, these systems are affected by exogenous or endogenous vibrations produced by
unbalance, misalignment, resonances, bowed shafts, material imperfections and cracks.
Vibration can result from a number of conditions, acting alone or in combination. The
vibration problems may be caused by auxiliary equipment, not just the primary equipment.
Control of machinery vibration is essential in the industry today to increase running speeds
and the requirement for rotating machinery to operate within specified levels of vibration.
Vibration caused by mass imbalance is a common problem in rotating machinery. Rotor
imbalance occurs when the principal inertia axis of the rotor does not coincide with its
geometrical axis and leads to synchronous vibrations and significant undesirable forces
transmitted to the mechanical elements and supports. A heavy spot in a rotating component
will cause vibration when the unbalanced weight rotates around the rotor axis, creating a
centrifugal force. Imbalance could be caused by manufacturing defects (machining errors,
casting flaws, etc.) or maintenance issues (deformed or dirty fan blades, missing balance
weights, etc.). As rotor speed changes, the effects of imbalance may become higher.
Imbalance can severely reduce bearing life-time as well as cause undue machine vibration.
Shaft misalignment is a condition in which the shafts of the driving and driven machines are
not on the same centre-line generating reaction forces and moments in the couplings.
Flexible couplings are used to reduce the misalignment effects and transmit rotary power
without torsional slip.
Many methods have been developed to reduce the unbalance-induced vibration by using
different devices such as active balancing devices, electromagnetic bearings, active squeeze
film dampers, lateral force actuators, pressurized bearings and movable bearings (see, e.g.,
Blanco et al., 2003, 2007, 2008, 2010a, 2010b; Chong-Won, 2006; Dyer et al., 2002; El-Shafei,
© 2012Blanco-Ortega et al., licensee InTech. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of
the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
214 Advances on Analysis and Control of Vibrations – Theory and Applications
2002; Green et al., 2008; Guozhi et al. 2000; Hredzak et al., 2006; Sheu et al., 1997; Zhou y Shi,
2001, 2002). These active balancing control schemes require information of the eccentricity of
the involved rotating machinery. On the other hand, there exists a vast literature on
identification and estimation methods, which are essentially asymptotic, recursive or
complex, which generally suffer from poor speed performance (see, e.g., Ljung, 1987;
Soderstrom, 1989; and Sagara and Zhao, 1989, 1990).
Passive, semi-active and active control schemes have been proposed in order to cancel or
attenuate the vibration amplitudes in rotating machinery. In passive control the rotating
machinery is modified off-line, e.g. the rotor is stopped to adjust some of its parameters such
as mass, stiffness or damping. Balancing consist of placing correction masses onto the
rotating shaft (inertial disk) so that centrifugal forces due to these masses cancel out those
caused by the residual imbalance mass.
Active vibration control (AVC) changes the dynamical properties of the system by using
actuators or active devices during instantaneous operating conditions measured by the
appropriate sensors. The main advantage of active control (compared to passive control) is
the versatility in adapting to different load conditions, perturbations and configurations of
the rotating machinery and hence, extending the system's life while greatly reducing
operating costs.
Semiactive vibration control devices are increasingly being investigated and implemented.
These devices change the system properties such as damping and stiffness while the rotor is
operating. This control scheme is based on the analysis of the open loop response. Semi-
active control devices have received a great deal of attention in recent years because they
offer the adaptability of active control without requiring the associated large power sources.
This chapter deals with the active cancellation problem of mechanical vibrations in rotor-
bearing systems. The use of an active disk is proposed for actively balancing a rotor by
placing a balancing mass at a suitable position. Two nonlinear controllers with integral
compensation are proposed to place the balancing mass at a specific position. Algebraic
identification is used for on-line eccentricity estimation as the implementation of this active
disk is based on knowledge of the eccentricity. An important property of this algebraic
identification is that the eccentricity identification is not asymptotic but algebraic, in contrast
to most of the traditional identification methods, which generally suffer of poor speed
performance. In addition, a velocity control is designed to drive the rotor velocity to a
desired operating point during the first critical speed.
The proposed results are strongly based on the algebraic parameter identification approach
for linear systems reported in (Flies and Sira, 2003), which requires a priori knowledge of
the mathematical model of the system. This approach has been used for parameter and
signal estimation in nonlinear and linear vibrating mechanical systems, where numerical
simulations and experimental results show that the algebraic identification provides high
robustness against parameter uncertainty, frequency variations, small measurement errors
and noise (Beltran et al., 2005, 2006, 2010).
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 215
Thearle (Thearle, 1932) developed a machine for dynamically balancing rotating elements or
high speed rotors (figure 2), where an out-of-balance mass of a rotating element or body can
quickly and easily be located, providing the exact amount and location of the balancing mass
that should be placed or removed to reduce the vibration. The balancing machine contains a
balancing head with a clutch which is first opened to release a set of balls to naturally take
place in the balancing positions. Subsequently, the clutch is closed producing a clamping of the
balls in the adjusted positions, while the body is being rotated above its critical speed and then
released. Other automatic balancing devices have been proposed; essentially using one of the
four balancing methods; two angular arms, two sliding arms, one angular and sliding arm, or,
one spirally sliding arm (Chong-Won, 2006; Zhou y Shi, 2001).
The use of piezoelectric actuators as active vibration dampers in rotating machines has been
considered in the past. Palazzolo, et al. (Palazzolo et al., 1993) first used the piezoelectric
pusher for active vibration control in rotating machinery as it is shown in Figure 3.a. The
pusher is soft mounted to the machine case to improve the electromechanical stability and
connected to the squirrel cage-ball bearing supports of a rotating shaft, to actively control
the unbalance, transient and subsynchronous responses of the test rotor, using velocity
feedback. The piezoelectric actuators are modeled as dampers and springs. Recently,
Carmignani et al. (Carmignani et al., 2001) developed an adaptive hydrodynamic bearing
made of a mobile housing mounted on piezoelectric actuators to attenuate the vibration
amplitudes in constant speed below the first critical speed. The actuators, arranged at 90° on
a perpendicular plane to the shaft axis, exert two sinusoidal forces with a tuned phase angle
to produce a balancing or, alternatively, a dampering effect. The authors presented
experimental and numerical results.
Active Magnetic Bearings (AMBs) are the mostly used devices but their use in the industrial
field is still limited due to a low stiffness and the need of additional conventional bearings
for fault emergency. An AMB system is a collection of electromagnets used to suspend an
object and stabilization of the system is performed by feedback control, see Figure 3.b. In
recent decades, AMBs has been widely used as a non-contact, lubrication-free, support in
many machines and devices. Many researchers (Lee, 2001; Sheu-Yang, 1997) have proposed
a variety of AMBs that are compact and simple-structured. The AMB system, which is open-
loop unstable and highly coupled due to nonlinearities inherited in the system such as the
gyroscopic effect and imbalance, requires a dynamic controller to stabilize the system.
Another device for AVC in rotating machinery is the one based on fluid film bearings. The
dynamics of a rotor system supported by fluid film bearings is inherently a nonlinear
problem and these fluid film bearings have been used in combination with other devices,
such as piezoelectric actuators, magneto or electro-rheological fluids, etc. (see Figure 4).
Guozhi et al. (2000) proposed the use of a fluid bearing with rheological fluids to reduce the
vibrations around the first critical speed. Magnetorheological (MR) or electrorheological
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 217
(ER) fluids are materials that respond to an applied magnetic or electric field with a
dramatic change in rheological behavior. To attenuate the vibration amplitudes around the
first critical speed an on/off control is proposed to control the large amplitude around the
first critical speed.
Hathout and El-Shafei (Hathout and El-Shafei, 1997) proposed a hybrid squeeze film
damper (HSFD), (see Figure 4.b), to attenuate the vibrations in rotating machinery for both
sudden unbalance and transient run-up through critical speeds. El-Shafei (El-Shafei, 2000)
have implemented different control algorithms (PID-type controllers, LQR, gain scheduling,
adaptive and bang-bang controllers) for active control of rotor vibrations for HSFD-
supported rotors. Controlling the fluid pressure in the chamber, the bearing properties of
stiffness and damping can be changed.
rotor
Ball Spring
bearing
Ball
bearing rotor
Squirrel
cage
a) b)
Figure 4. Fluid film bearings: a) using rheological fluids and b) using a pressure chamber.
Sun y Kroedkiewski (Sun and Krodkiewski, 1997, 1998) proposed a new type of active oil
bearing, see Figure 5.a. The active bearing is supplied with a flexible sleeve whose
deformation can be changed during rotor operation. The flexible sleeve is also a part of a
hydraulic damper whose parameters can be controlled during operation as well. The oil film
and the pressure chamber are separated by the flexible sealing. The equilibrium position of
the flexible sleeve and the bearing journal is determined by load and pressure, which can be
controlled during operation. Parameters of this damper can also be varied during operation
to eliminate the self exciting vibration and increase the stability of the equilibrium position
of the rotor-oil bearing system.
Figure 5. a) Fluid film bearing with flexible sleeve and b) electromagnetically actuated unbalance
compensator.
3. Rotor-bearing system
3.1. Mathematical model
The rotor-bearing system consists of a planar and rigid disk of mass M mounted on a
flexible shaft of negligible mass and stiffness k at the mid-span between two symmetric
bearing supports (see Fig. 6 when a=b). Due to rotor imbalance the mass center is not located
at the geometric center of the disk S but at the point G (center of mass of the unbalanced
disk), the distance between these points is known as disk eccentricity or static unbalance u
(see Vance, 1988; Dimarogonas, 1996).
In the analysis, the rotor-bearing system has an active disk (Blanco et al., 2008) mounted on
the shaft and near the main disk (see Fig. 6). The active disk is designed in order to move a
mass in all angular and radial positions inside of the disk given by and , respectively.
In fact, these movements can be obtained with some mechanical elements such as helical
gears and a ball screw (see Fig. 7.a). The mass and the radial distance are designed in
order to compensate the residual unbalance of the rotor bearing system by means of the
correct angular position of the balancing mass. The angular position of the unbalance is
denote by , see Fig. 7.b.
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 219
The mathematical model of the five degree-of-freedom rotor-bearing system with active
disk was obtained using Euler-Lagrange equations, which is given by
( + ) + + = ( )
( + ) + + = ( )
+ = + ( ) (1)
+2 + =
− + =
with
= + ²+ ²
Here c is the equivalent viscous damping provided by the isotropic bearings, and
are the inertia polar moment and the viscous damping of the rotor, respectively. ( ) is
the applied torque (control input) for rotor speed regulation, and are the orthogonal
coordinates that describe the disk position, and denote the radial and angular
positions of the balancing mass, which is controlled by means of the control force ( )
and the ( ) control torque (servomechanism). The angular position of the rotor is denote
by .
Defining the state variables as = , = , = , = , = , = , = , =
, = and = , the following state space description is obtained.
220 Advances on Analysis and Control of Vibrations – Theory and Applications
= ( + ) + + − .
∆
= + ( − ) + − .
∆
= − − − − . (2)
∆
1
= ( − sin + )
1
= ( − −2 )
= +
with
= + − − , = + − − , =− − ,
= + , = + + , = + and ∆= + − .
The rotor-bearing system with active disk is then described by the five degree-of-freedom,
highly nonlinear and coupled model (2). The proposed control objective consists of reducing
as much as possible the rotor vibration amplitude, denoted in non-dimensional units by
= (3)
for run-up, coast-down or steady state operation of the rotor system, even in presence of
small exogenous or endogenous perturbations.
In the following table the rotor system parameters used throughout the chapter are presented.
= =0 = 0.04
6
In order to design the position controllers for the balancing mass , consider its associated
dynamics:
1
= ( − sin + )
1
= ( − −2 )
=
From these equations, the exact linearization method (Sira et al., 2005) is applied and the
following nonlinear controllers can be obtained with integral compensation to take the
balancing mass to the equilibrium position = ̅= , = = + :
= + sen − (4)
= + cos +2 (5)
222 Advances on Analysis and Control of Vibrations – Theory and Applications
with
∗( )− ∗ ∗ ∗
= − ( ) − − ( ) − − ( ) .
∗( )− ∗ ∗ ∗
= − ( ) − − ( ) − − ( ) .
where ∗ ( ) and ∗ ( ) are desired trajectories for the outputs and . Thus, the tracking
errors = − ∗ ( ) and = − ∗ ( ), obey the following set of linear, decoupled,
homogeneous differential equations:
( )
+ + + =0
( )
+ + + =0
( )= + + +
( )= + + +
are Hurwitz polynomials.
It is evident, however, that the controllers (4) and (5) require information of the disk
eccentricity ( , ). In what follows the algebraic identification method to estimate the disk
eccentricity ( , ) is applied.
+( + ) + =
= (6)
From this equation, the following PI controller to asymptotically track a desired reference
trajectory ∗ ( ) can be obtained:
= +( + ) +
∗( )− ∗( ) − ∗( )
= − − . (7)
The use of this controller yields the following closed-loop dynamics for the trajectory
tracking error = − ∗ ( ) as follows
+ + =0 (8)
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 223
( + ) + + = sen( + )+ cos( + )+
+ sen( + )+ cos( + )
+ sen( + )− cos( + )
Multiplying (9) by the quantity and integrating the result twice with respect to time , the
following is obtained:
( )
( + ) + + =
( ) ( )
sen( + ) + sen( + ).
( )
( + ) + + (10)
( ) ( )
= cos( + ) + cos( + ).
( )
where ( ) are iterated integrals of the form ⋯ ( ) ⋯ , with
( )= ( ) and a positive integer.
( )
= ( + )−2 ( + ) +.
( )
+ ( + )−2 ( + ). (11)
( ) ( ) ( )
( + ) −4 +2 + −2 + =.
( )
=− ( + )−2 ( + ) +.
( )
+ ( + )−2 ( + )
224 Advances on Analysis and Control of Vibrations – Theory and Applications
The above integral-type equations (11), after some algebraic manipulations, lead to the
following linear equations system:
( ) = ( ) (12)
( ) ( ) ( )
( )= , ( )=
− ( ) ( ) ( )
whose components are time functions specified as
( )
= sen −2 sen .
( )
= cos −2 cos .
=( + ) + ( − 4( + ) ).
( ) ( )
+ ( sen( + )) + (2( + ) −2 + )+ 2 sen( + ).
=( + ) + ( − 4( + ) )..
( )
+ ( cos( + )) − 2 cos( + ).
From equation (12) it can be concluded that the parameter vector is algebraically identifiable
if, and only if, the trajectory of the dynamical system is persistent in the sense established by
Fliess and Sira-Ramírez (Fliess and Sira-Ramírez, 2003), that is, the trajectories or dynamic
behavior of the system satisfy the condition
det ( ) ≠ 0
In general, this condition holds at least in a small time interval ( , + , where is a
positive and sufficiently small value. The parameter identification is quickly performed and
it is almost exact with respect to the real parameters. It is also evident the presence of
singularities in the algebraic identifier, i.e., when the determinant den=det(A) is zero. The
first singularity, however, occurs after the identification has been finished.
In (Beltran, 2010) is described the application of an on-line algebraic identification
methodology for parameter and signal estimation in vibrating systems. The algebraic
identification is employed to estimate the frequency and amplitude of exogenous vibrations
affecting the mechanical system using only position measurements. Some simulations and
experimental results are presented using the on-line algebraic identification scheme for an
electromechanical platform (ECP™ rectilinear plant) with a single degree-of-freedom mass-
spring-damper system.
By solving equations (12) the following algebraic identifier for the unknown eccentricity
parameters is obtained:
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 225
=
∀ ∈( , + (13)
= +
= cos
5. Simulation results
In Fig. 9 it is depicted the identification process of the eccentricity. A good and
fast estimation ( ≪ 0.1 ) can be observed. Fig. 10 shows the dynamic behavior of the
adaptive-like control scheme (7), which starts using the nominal value u= 0 . A desired
reference trajectory was considered for regulating the evolution of the output variable
towards the desired equilibrium = ̅ = 300 / , which is given by a Bezier type
polynomial in time.
-4
x 10
1.5
u
1
ue [m]
0.5
0
0 0.001 0.002 0.003 0.004 0.005 0.006 0.007 0.008 0.009 0.01
t [s]
0.8
0.6
[rad]
0.4
e
0.2
0
0 0.001 0.002 0.003 0.004 0.005 0.006 0.007 0.008 0.009 0.01
t [s]
300
200
y1 [rad/s]
100
0
0 50 100 150
t [s]
0.4
[Nm
1
0.2
0
0 50 100 150
t [s]
Fig. 11 shows the dynamic behavior of the active disk controllers when the balancing mass
is driven to the equilibrium position ̅= , = + . In this position the active disk
cancels the unbalance, as it is shown in the Fig. 12. The controllers are implemented when
the eccentricity has been estimated.
Automatic Balancing of Rotor-Bearing Systems 227
4
0.04
3
0.035
y3 [rad]
y2 [m]
0.03 2
0.025 1
0.02
0
0.015
0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3
t [s] t [s]
-3
x 10
0.02 1
0.01
0
[Nm]
F [N]
0
2 -1
-0.01
-0.02 -2
0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3
t [s] t [s]
Figure 11. Dynamic response of the balancing mass: radial position (y2=z₇), angular position (y3=z₉),
control force (F) and moment force (τ2).
30
25
20
Unbalance response
without active disk
R [m/m]
15
10
Automatic
balancing
5 using active disk
0
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
z6 [rad/s]
Figure 12. Unbalance response with automatic balancing and without active disk.
228 Advances on Analysis and Control of Vibrations – Theory and Applications
6. Conclusions
The active vibration control of rotor-bearing systems using active disks for actively
balancing a rotor is addressed. This approach consists of locating a balancing mass at a
suitable position. Since this active control scheme requires information of the eccentricity, a
novel algebraic identification approach is proposed for the on-line estimation of the
eccentricity parameters. This approach is quite promising, in the sense that from a
theoretical point of view, the algebraic identification is practically instantaneous and robust
with respect to parameter uncertainty, frequency variations, small measurement errors and
noise. Thus the algebraic identification is combined with two control schemes to place the
balancing mass in the correct position to cancel the unbalance of the rotor. A velocity control
is designed to take the rotor velocity to a desired operating point over the first critical speed
in order to show the vibration cancellation. The controllers were developed in the context of
an off-line prespecified reference trajectory tracking problem. Numerical simulations were
included to illustrate the proposed high dynamic performance of the active vibration control
scheme proposed.
Author details
Andrés Blanco-Ortega, Jorge Colín-Ocampo, Marco Oliver-Salazar and Gerardo Vela-Valdés
Centro Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico, CENIDET, México
Gerardo Silva-Navarro
Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN, CINVESTAV, México
Acknowledgement
Research reported here was supported by grants of the Dirección General de Educación
Superior Tecnológica, DGEST through PROMEP under Project "Vibration control of rotating
machinery".
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