Isolated resonance curves, or isolas, are resonance branches of the harmonically forced system that exist separately from the main nonlinear forced response curve, leading to excessive vibrations. Traditional stepped or swept sine simulations and tests rely on continuation along the frequency parameter, typically resulting in a jump phenomenon along the primary resonance branch, prior to the disconnected isola. The main objective of this research is to propose an approach to identify isolated resonance curves by performing continuation along the input amplitude that initializes the response from a low-amplitude solution in the linear regime. Furthermore, this is achieved with the open-loop fixed frequency voltage control method that continues along the shaker voltage parameter and measures the so-called S-curves, which are theoretically a continuous solution branch that connect to the isola. The methodology is demonstrated on a fixture-wing-pylon assembly with a vibro-impact nonlinearity localized in a pylon subcomponent attachment. Multi-harmonic balance simulations are deployed to compute both the nonlinear forced response curves and S-curves to demonstrate the isola detection strategy on a reduced-order finite element model of the nonlinear system. Swept sine and fixed frequency voltage control tests are then conducted on the physical structure to demonstrate the isola detection experimentally, revealing the existence of the large amplitude vibrations that are undetected in the forces levels and frequencies measured with traditional frequency sweeping.
Robbins, Eric, et al. "Detecting isolated resonance curves using fixed frequency voltage control tests." Nonlinear Dynamics, vol. 113, no. 17, Jun. 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11071-025-11347-1
Robbins, Eric, Kuether, Robert J., Pacini, Benjamin Robert, & Moreu, Fernando (2025). Detecting isolated resonance curves using fixed frequency voltage control tests. Nonlinear Dynamics, 113(17). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11071-025-11347-1
Robbins, Eric, Kuether, Robert J., Pacini, Benjamin Robert, et al., "Detecting isolated resonance curves using fixed frequency voltage control tests," Nonlinear Dynamics 113, no. 17 (2025), https://doi.org/10.1007/s11071-025-11347-1
@article{osti_2587518,
author = {Robbins, Eric and Kuether, Robert J. and Pacini, Benjamin Robert and Moreu, Fernando},
title = {Detecting isolated resonance curves using fixed frequency voltage control tests},
annote = {Isolated resonance curves, or isolas, are resonance branches of the harmonically forced system that exist separately from the main nonlinear forced response curve, leading to excessive vibrations. Traditional stepped or swept sine simulations and tests rely on continuation along the frequency parameter, typically resulting in a jump phenomenon along the primary resonance branch, prior to the disconnected isola. The main objective of this research is to propose an approach to identify isolated resonance curves by performing continuation along the input amplitude that initializes the response from a low-amplitude solution in the linear regime. Furthermore, this is achieved with the open-loop fixed frequency voltage control method that continues along the shaker voltage parameter and measures the so-called S-curves, which are theoretically a continuous solution branch that connect to the isola. The methodology is demonstrated on a fixture-wing-pylon assembly with a vibro-impact nonlinearity localized in a pylon subcomponent attachment. Multi-harmonic balance simulations are deployed to compute both the nonlinear forced response curves and S-curves to demonstrate the isola detection strategy on a reduced-order finite element model of the nonlinear system. Swept sine and fixed frequency voltage control tests are then conducted on the physical structure to demonstrate the isola detection experimentally, revealing the existence of the large amplitude vibrations that are undetected in the forces levels and frequencies measured with traditional frequency sweeping.},
doi = {10.1007/s11071-025-11347-1},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/2587518},
journal = {Nonlinear Dynamics},
issn = {ISSN 0924-090X},
number = {17},
volume = {113},
place = {United States},
publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC},
year = {2025},
month = {06}}