A type of force generator which can respond to general feedback signals from a vibrating system in order to control the vibration but which does not require the power supply of a servomechanism is described. Computer simulation studies show that performance comparable to that of fully active vibration control systems can be achieved with the semi-active type of device. Physical embodiments of the concept are discussed and compared to hardware used in active and passive vibration control systems.
Stick-slip friction is present to some degree in almost all actuators and mechanisms and is often responsible for performance limitations. Simulation of stick-slip friction is difficult because of strongly nonlinear behavior in the vicinity of zero velocity. A straightforward method for representing and simulating friction effects is presented. True zero velocity sticking is represented without equation reformulation or the introduction of numerical stiffness problems.
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