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This article addresses the bifurcation characteristics and vibration reduction of a $$2$$ 2 -DOF dynamical system simulating the nonlinear oscillation of an asymmetric rotor model subjected to simultaneous multiparametric and external excitations. To suppress the system's vibrations, two $$1/2$$ 1 / 2 -DOF active dampers are attached to the system in linear and cubic nonlinear forms via a magnetic coupling actuator. The closed-loop system model is derived as two differential equations with multi-control terms, including cubic, quantic, and septic, coupled nonlinearly to two first-order systems. Applying perturbation theory, the system model is solved, and the autonomous system describing the closed-loop slow-flow dynamics is obtained. Through numerical algorithms, the motion bifurcation is analyzed using various tools such as 2D and 3D bifurcation diagrams, two-parameter stability charts, basins of attraction, orbit plots, and time response profiles. The analytical investigations confirm that the uncontrolled model behaves like a hardening Duffing oscillator with multistability characteristics, displaying simultaneous mono-stable, bi-stable, tri-stable, or quadri-stable periodic oscillations depending on both the asymmetric nonlinearities and angular velocity. Subsequently, the influence of different control parameters is analyzed to determine the threshold between mono and multi-stability conditions. Finally, optimal control parameters are designed to eliminate multistability characteristics and achieve minimum and safe vibration levels.
This article addresses the bifurcation characteristics and vibration reduction of a $$2$$ 2 -DOF dynamical system simulating the nonlinear oscillation of an asymmetric rotor model subjected to simultaneous multiparametric and external excitations. To suppress the system's vibrations, two $$1/2$$ 1 / 2 -DOF active dampers are attached to the system in linear and cubic nonlinear forms via a magnetic coupling actuator. The closed-loop system model is derived as two differential equations with multi-control terms, including cubic, quantic, and septic, coupled nonlinearly to two first-order systems. Applying perturbation theory, the system model is solved, and the autonomous system describing the closed-loop slow-flow dynamics is obtained. Through numerical algorithms, the motion bifurcation is analyzed using various tools such as 2D and 3D bifurcation diagrams, two-parameter stability charts, basins of attraction, orbit plots, and time response profiles. The analytical investigations confirm that the uncontrolled model behaves like a hardening Duffing oscillator with multistability characteristics, displaying simultaneous mono-stable, bi-stable, tri-stable, or quadri-stable periodic oscillations depending on both the asymmetric nonlinearities and angular velocity. Subsequently, the influence of different control parameters is analyzed to determine the threshold between mono and multi-stability conditions. Finally, optimal control parameters are designed to eliminate multistability characteristics and achieve minimum and safe vibration levels.
This article explores the nonlinear dynamical analysis and control of a [Formula: see text] DOF system that emulates the lateral vibration of an asymmetric rotor model under external, multi-parametric, and mixed excitation. The linear integral resonant controller ([Formula: see text]) has been coupled to the rotor as an active damper through a magnetic actuator. The complete mathematical model, governing the nonlinear interaction among the rotor, controller, and actuator, is derived based on electromagnetic theory and the principle of solid mechanics. This results in a discontinuous [Formula: see text] DOF system coupled with two [Formula: see text] DOF systems, incorporating the rub-impact effect between the rotor and stator. The complicated mathematical model is investigated using analytical techniques, employing the perturbation method, and validated numerically through time response, basins of attraction, bifurcation diagrams, [Formula: see text] chaotic test, and Poincaré return map. The main findings indicate that the asymmetric system model may exhibit nonzero bistable forward whirling motion under external excitation. Additionally, it can whirl either forward or backward under multi-parametric excitation, besides the trivial stable solution. Furthermore, in the case of mixed excitation, the rotor displays nontrivial tristable solutions, with two corresponding to forward whirling orbits and the other one corresponding to backward whirling oscillation. These findings are validated through the establishment of different basins of attraction. Finally, the performance of the [Formula: see text] in mitigating rotor vibrations and averting nonlinear catastrophic bifurcations under various excitation conditions. Furthermore, the rotor’s dynamical behavior and stability are explored in the event of an abrupt failure of one of the connected controllers. The outcomes demonstrate that the proposed [Formula: see text] effectively eliminates dangerous nonlinearities, steering the system to respond akin to a linear system with controllable oscillation amplitudes. However, the sudden controller failure induces a local rub-impact effect, leading to a nonlocal quasiperiodic oscillation and restoring the dominance of the nonlinearities on the system’s response.
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