• DocumentCode
    3381951
  • Title

    Measuring instabilities and chaos in the real world: applications in rotating machinery

  • Author

    Hall, Paul W.

  • Author_Institution
    Lake Stevens Instrument Div., Hewlett-Packard Co., Everett, WA, USA
  • fYear
    1992
  • fDate
    7-9 Oct 1992
  • Firstpage
    217
  • Lastpage
    220
  • Abstract
    Rotor dynamic instabilities have resulted in seldom understood and costly failures in high-performance rotating machinery. At times, machines test perfectly in the lab, yet fail under load and cannot achieve their designed capacities in the field. Nonlinear dynamics offers a way to help understand and possibly prevent these problems. Computed order tracking prepares experimental data for dynamical analysis by resampling data in real time to match a time-varying forcing function which in this instance is the rotational speed of the machine. A commercially available instrument can be used to view Poincare diagrams of a rotor test set as it begins to exhibit signs of instability
  • Keywords
    angular velocity measurement; chaos; computerised instrumentation; machine testing; nonlinear dynamical systems; real-time systems; rotors; sampled data systems; stability; time-varying systems; tracking; Poincare diagrams; chaos; computed order tracking; dynamical analysis; instabilities; nonlinear dynamics; real time; resampling; rotating machinery; rotational speed; rotor test set; time-varying forcing function; Chaos; Frequency; Instruments; Machinery; Optical pulse generation; Pulse measurements; Rotating machines; Rotation measurement; Time measurement; Velocity measurement;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Statistical Signal and Array Processing, 1992. Conference Proceedings., IEEE Sixth SP Workshop on
  • Conference_Location
    Victoria, BC
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-0508-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SSAP.1992.246810
  • Filename
    246810