
Experimental research on energy dissipation based on damping of magnetic fluid
Author(s) -
Wenrong Yang,
Jianzheng Su,
Dejie Wei,
Yumeng Zhang,
Ying Chen,
Qingxin Yang,
Xiaoguang Yang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
materials research express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2053-1591
DOI - 10.1088/2053-1591/abc190
Subject(s) - damper , dissipation , excitation , magnetic field , vibration , magnetic damping , mechanics , kinetic energy , finite element method , magnetic energy , damping torque , natural frequency , materials science , physics , structural engineering , classical mechanics , engineering , acoustics , thermodynamics , magnetization , quantum mechanics , direct torque control , voltage , induction motor
Energy dissipation of tall building structures suffering frequent violent shaking under strong excitation is a key research topic for the safety of such buildings. In this paper, a new-type tuned magnetic fluid damper with copper balls immersed is proposed to reduce the vibration under different excitation frequencies. First, the natural frequency of the damper was deduced by the Kinetic equations of magnetic fluid, and the sizes of the copper balls in the damper were determined by constructing the equivalent damping ratio model. Meanwhile, the viscosity changes of the magnetic fluid with different magnetic fields were obtained by establishing the finite element simulation of the magnetic field and carrying out the magnetic-viscous experiment about the magnetic fluid. The kinetic energy of magnetic fluid and copper balls were obtained by constructing dynamic finite element simulation model. The vibration experiment was carried out to verify the damping effect of the damper. Finally, the conversion of dissipated energy in the process of energy dissipation was analyzed by building fitting functions, and then analyzed in combination with the simulation results. The experimental results showed that the amplitude attenuation of horizontal vibration was obvious under the action of the damper when the excitation frequency was close to the natural frequency of the damper. In addition, most dissipated energy was converted into the kinetic energy of magnetic fluid and copper balls.