International audienceVibration peaks occurring at rational fractions of the fundamental rotating critical speed, here named Local Resonances, facilitate cracked shaft detection during machine shut-down. A modified Jeffcott-rotor on journal bearings accounting for gravity effects and oscillating around nontrivial equilibrium points is employed. Modal parameter selection allows this linear model to represent first mode characteristics of real machines. Orbit evolution and vibration patterns are analyzed, yielding useful results. Crack detection results indicate that, instead of 1x and 2x components, analysis of the remaining local resonances should have priority; this is due to crack-residual imbalance interaction and to 2x multiple induced origins. Therefore, local resonances and orbital evolution around 1/2, 1/3 and 1/4 of the critical speed are emphasized for various crack-imbalance orientations
In this paper, the controllability property for a class of Takagi-Sugeno (T-S) fuzzy models is analyzed, while a fully nonlinear stabilizer is designed in a practical way. It is shown that global fuzzy stabilizers can be constructed in a nonconservative way by means of a relatively simple approach. The existence of such controllers depends on the fuzzy controllability conditions, which are derived in a straightforward way. The main advantage of the proposed approach is that the convergence of the closedloop system can be imposed arbitrarily. Some examples are given in order to illustrate the validity of the method. Finally, the proposed controller is applied on an underactuated system known as "pendubot" and the results are compared with an stabilizer designed on the basis of LMIs.
Index Terms-FuzzyAckermann's formula, fuzzy controllability, fuzzy stability, Takagi-Sugeno (T-S) fuzzy models.
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