Estimating a nonlinear model from experimental measurements of a vibrating structure remains a challenge, despite huge progress in recent years. A major issue is that the dynamical behaviour of a nonlinear structure strongly depends on the magnitude of the displacement response. Thus, the validity of an identified model is generally limited to a certain range of motion. Also, outside this range, the stability of the solutions predicted by the model are not guaranteed. This raises the question as to how a nonlinear model derived using data from relatively low amplitude excitation can be used to predict the dynamical behaviour for higher amplitude excitation. This paper focuses on this problem, investigating the extrapolation capabilities of data-driven nonlinear state-space models based on a subspace approach. The experimental vibrating structure consists of a cantilever beam in which magnets are used to generate strong geometric nonlinearity. The beam is driven by an electrodynamic shaker using several levels of broadband random noise. Acceleration data from the beam tip are used to derive nonlinear state-space models for the structure. It is shown that model predictions errors generally tend to increase when extrapolating towards higher excitation levels. Furthermore, the validity of the estimated nonlinear models become poor for very strong nonlinear behaviour. Linearised models are also estimated to have a complete view of the performance of each candidate model for each level of excitation.

An investigation into model extrapolation and stability in the system identification of a nonlinear structure / Anastasio, D.; Marchesiello, S.; Gatti, G.; Goncalves, P. J. P.; Shaw, A. D.; Brennan, M. J.. - In: NONLINEAR DYNAMICS. - ISSN 0924-090X. - ELETTRONICO. - 111:19(2023), pp. 17653-17665. [10.1007/s11071-023-08770-7]

An investigation into model extrapolation and stability in the system identification of a nonlinear structure

Anastasio D.;Marchesiello S.;
2023

Abstract

Estimating a nonlinear model from experimental measurements of a vibrating structure remains a challenge, despite huge progress in recent years. A major issue is that the dynamical behaviour of a nonlinear structure strongly depends on the magnitude of the displacement response. Thus, the validity of an identified model is generally limited to a certain range of motion. Also, outside this range, the stability of the solutions predicted by the model are not guaranteed. This raises the question as to how a nonlinear model derived using data from relatively low amplitude excitation can be used to predict the dynamical behaviour for higher amplitude excitation. This paper focuses on this problem, investigating the extrapolation capabilities of data-driven nonlinear state-space models based on a subspace approach. The experimental vibrating structure consists of a cantilever beam in which magnets are used to generate strong geometric nonlinearity. The beam is driven by an electrodynamic shaker using several levels of broadband random noise. Acceleration data from the beam tip are used to derive nonlinear state-space models for the structure. It is shown that model predictions errors generally tend to increase when extrapolating towards higher excitation levels. Furthermore, the validity of the estimated nonlinear models become poor for very strong nonlinear behaviour. Linearised models are also estimated to have a complete view of the performance of each candidate model for each level of excitation.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
An investigation into model extrapolation nonlinear system identification - Anastasio_ND2023.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: 2a Post-print versione editoriale / Version of Record
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 2.03 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.03 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2981969