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Evaluation of Accelerometer Mechanical Filters on Submerged Cylinders Near an Underwater Explosion
Author(s) -
George Yiannakopoulos,
P.J. van der Schaaf
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
shock and vibration
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.418
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1875-9203
pISSN - 1070-9622
DOI - 10.1155/1998/513249
Subject(s) - accelerometer , acoustics , acceleration , underwater , piezoresistive effect , spurious relationship , filter (signal processing) , cylinder , robustness (evolution) , materials science , engineering , computer science , physics , electrical engineering , mechanical engineering , geology , biochemistry , oceanography , chemistry , classical mechanics , machine learning , gene , operating system
An accelerometer, mounted to a structure near an explosion to measure elasto-plastic deformation, can be excited at its resonant frequency by impulsive stresses transmitted within the structure. This results in spurious high peak acceleration levels that can be much higher than acceleration levels from the explosion itself. The spurious signals also have higher frequencies than the underlying signal from the explosion and can be removed by a low pass filter. This report assesses the performance of four accelerometer and filter assemblies. The assessment involves measurements of the response of a mild steel cylinder to an underwater explosion, in which each assembly is mounted onto the interior surface of the cylinder. Three assemblies utilise a piezoresistive accelerometer in which isolation is provided mechanically. In the fourth assembly, a piezoelectric accelerometer, with a built-in filter, incorporates both mechanical and electronic filtering. This assembly is found to be more suitable because of its secure mounting arrangement, ease of use, robustness and noise free results

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