The present invention generally refers to an attenuating device for vibrations and shockwaves which are transmitted through a chain of structures belonging to a vehicle.
More specifically, the present invention refers to a passive type of attenuating device which reduces vibrations and shockwaves generated during flight in a space vehicle and transmitted through the structure of the space vehicle.
Passive attenuation devices are known in the state of the art, U.S. Pat. No. 6,202,961 by Wilke et al., for example, discloses a passive attenuation device reducing vibrations and shockwaves generated during the spacecraft flight.
This passive attenuation device comprises a straight circular hollow cylinder in which a set of horizontal rectangular slots have been made, distributed in several vertical planes or layers.
The horizontal slots are distributed so that they draw spatial curves in the manner of helices, i.e. they are not vertically aligned in columns. There are a large number of slots on each horizontal plane or layer, specifically more than six.
Each horizontal slot has an elongated rectangular shape, i.e. the vertical parallel sides are comparatively smaller in dimension than the horizontal sides of the rectangular horizontal slot.
The slotted hollow cylinder is externally surrounded by several rectangular segments made of a viscoelastic material completely covering the outside of the slotted cylinder. The rectangular segments or sheets are in turn externally surrounded by several rectangular sheets made of a rigid material such that they form a cylindrical ring holding the sheets of viscoelastic material against the slotted hollow cylinder.
The disclosed adaptor device has a series of drawbacks derived from its construction. For example, one drawback is derived from the high number of separations or bridges existing in each horizontal layer and, generally, in the slotted hollow cylinder. Bridge or separation is understood to be the part of material existing between two adjacent horizontal slots.
A distribution having excessive axial symmetry both in the number of slots and in that of the bridges between them is observed. This translates into a loss of attenuation (even a possible amplification) at certain frequencies associated to cylindrical structure breathing modes and support conditions with axial symmetry. This is illustrated in the drawings of FIGS. 9 to 12 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,202,961 of Wilke et al., which show the features of the proposed system.
Associated to this type of configuration is the fact that the structural transition between the different layers and the two end ones and the adjacent structures is very sudden (there is no surface to diffuse stresses), which implies an overload of the sheets of the attenuator as well as of the adjacent structures which must bear important peaks of tractive/compressive stresses (overflows).
Another drawback is the loss of rigidity due to the high number of horizontal layers and also the high number of horizontal slots per layer. It must be taken into account that rigidity is required for good control over the spacecraft flight course and, therefore, a compromise must be reached between attenuation and rigidity, given that a greater number of layers and slots mean greater attenuation, which leads to less rigidity, perhaps giving rise to the stall of the spacecraft and thus the payload.
On the other hand, it is observed that the outer cylinder, floating over the viscoelastic material, contributes very little to the overall rigidity of the system. In the same manner its contribution to damping is scarcely effective. External loads induce relative movements between the different layers. These movements generate shear deformations of the viscoelastic material. However, these deformations are at most half the movement generated between the upper and lower interfaces, demultiplying the reaction to shear force.
The most important drawback of this configuration is, in any case, the inability of decoupling the contradictory attenuation and rigidity requirements. By basing its operation on the linear load-deformation behaviour (both of the metal as well as the viscoelastic components), any increase in rigidity must be performed at the expense of a loss in attenuating capacity and vice versa.
Therefore, it is necessary to develop an attenuation device which attenuates high and low frequency vibrations and shockwaves, which provides a minimum level of rigidity that allows achieving precise navigation of the spacecraft without affecting the attenuating capacity.
The attenuation device of the present invention comprises a surface of revolution of circular cross section, such that a set of slots is distributed between both faces of the surface of revolution and is adapted such as to confine an elastic material within the limits defined by the slots.
An object of the present invention is to generate a structural labyrinth for passing the load from the lower interface of the surface of revolution, for example, a straight hollow cylinder, up to the upper interface.
Another object is to fill in the cavities of the slots with an elastic material such that the elastic material and the remaining material of the surface of revolution form two continuous and complementary labyrinth structures, that is, where there is elastic material there is no material corresponding to the surface of revolution and vice versa.
With this arrangement a compact and reduced weight structure is achieved which works as a block of composite material, that is, a matrix corresponding to the elastic material and fibre corresponding to the surface of revolution, such that each element plays a part, for example, the material of the cylindrical surface of revolution would work as the fibres providing rigidity features, and the elastic material would work as the matrix complementing the rigidity and providing energy dissipation capacity.
Another advantage of the present invention is that elastic and dampening means form part of the structure itself, such that they are integrated along its entire surface and allow being adjusted to interfaces of large dimensions such as in the field of space vehicles such as shuttles and/or satellites. Therefore, low and mid frequency vibrations (0 to 2000 Hz) of long duration, lasting several minutes, induced by engines and cyclic operation elements, and short duration transitory phenomena such as shocks induced by separations and which generate vibrations in a very wide spectrum (up to 10000 Hz) but of a duration of a thousandth of a second, are attenuated and dampened.
The advantage of this arrangement is that it allows managing the contribution of each element in the manner most suitable to the application requirements. If more dissipating function and less rigidity are required, it will suffice to increase and decrease the proportions of each material respectively. Taken to the limit, the functions of matrix and fibre could be reversed.
Consequently, the configuration described allows resolving the problem of compatibility between the minimum rigidity required for flying and the attenuation capacity. On the one hand the matrix, an elastic material, provides the mechanical properties required for the fibre, a surface of revolution, to operate suitably, as the matrix is confined in the fibre. On the other hand this contribution does not eliminate the attenuation and filtering capacities as the slotted surface of revolution is still the main load pathway since it is the most rigid.
Another advantage added by the fibre-matrix composite in relation to compatibility between flying and filtering is the non-linearity in its response to external loads. While the slotted surface of revolution operates on an elastic basis, i.e. linear, the elastic material operates on an inelastic basis, i.e. non-linear, which contributes to the isolating capacity of the system, as the external loads increase deformations of the matrix, the latter responds by increasing rigidity due to its elastic nature.
The aforementioned phenomenon is very effective even when the elastic material is sufficiently confined. This confinement is ensured by the configuration of the slotted surface of revolution.
Thus, when the slotted surface of revolution is deformed such that it decreases the thickness of the slots, the elastic material occupying the slots is forced to compress and tries to expand in a direction that is perpendicular to that of the deformation, which is partially prevented by the elastic material occupying the rest of the slot. With an angled slot arrangement, the same effect is achieved whether the deformation is in the vertical direction or in the horizontal direction.
Therefore, the passive attenuation device of the invention may reduce and/or eliminate the vibrations and shockwaves generated during the flight of a space vehicle, namely a spacecraft, such that if the vibrations and shockwaves generated during the flight were to reach the payload transported, they would not produce any damage in the payload.
A more detailed explanation of the invention is provided in the following description based on the attached figures in which,
In said figure it can be observed that the primary structures in charge of the structural continuity and integrity of the vehicle consist in large cylindrical or conical structures, generally with revolution symmetry, which propagate through themselves the vibratory phenomena produced during flight, without hardly dampening them due to their low dissipation coefficient and occasionally amplifying them at certain frequencies. Accordingly, the equipment and payloads must be qualified to endure this environment, which leads to greater complexity in their structural design.
Each slot 12 may have a predetermined shape, that is, the slot 14 extends according to a given curve, i.e. a circle, for example slot 14 is generated by a line passing through a fixed point, the vertex, which may be located at the axis of revolution of the straight cylinder 11, and follows the circle.
The slots 14 of both vertical sides of the straight cylinder 11 may be joined in some sections and not in others. This can be observed, for example, in fragment 14-1 according to axes A-A′, B-B′, shown in
Accordingly, the central part of the straight cylinder 11 has a predetermined spool shape, i.e. two cones joined at the vertex.
As can be seen in
Also, in this case the slots 14 of the upper part of the fragment of section 14-2 are not joined and, however, the slots 14 of the lower part are joined. Therefore, the central part of the straight cylinder 11 has a predetermined H-type shape.
Coming back to
Accordingly, the attenuating device of a cylindrical body 11 thus has a compact configuration equivalent to that of fibre-resin type composite materials in which the space that is not occupied by the fibre is occupied by the resin and vice versa. As shown in
It must be observed that the elastic material 15 has two parts or bands, an upper part corresponding to the upper slots 14 and a lower part corresponding to the lower slots 14 of the cylinder 11. In the same
In a similar manner,
In short, the elastic material 15 on both sides of the slotted cavity 14 is joined, i.e. it has a physical continuity, areas 15-3, through each one of the slots, and where the elastic material 15 is further enclosed or confined externally by the outer walls of the straight cylinder 14. It must be observed that confinement of the elastic material 15 varies on the basis of the flight stage of the craft.
Coming back to
These three parts are not completely separated, rather the upper part is joined with the intermediate part in at least three areas, and in another three areas, at 60° to the former, the intermediate and the lower parts are joined, see
The only possible pathway for the disturbance is through the six passages between the different levels, therefore through a labyrinthic pathway. That is, the two levels of slots 14 perform the function of attenuating the shockwaves attempting to advance from the lower part 13 of the spacecraft towards the upper part 12 thereof where the payload is located, which is rather sensitive to said shockwaves.
Coming back to
The resistance of these bands of elastic material 15 to movement provides on the one hand dampening strength due to the reaction of the elastic material 15 to shear deformation being a movement dampening factor, and on the other even more importantly, the increase in rigidity as the compressive deformation increases, i.e. the non-linear behaviour. Therefore, the elastic material 15 contributes to the rigidity of the cylinder this contribution being completely compatible with the requirement to attenuate, as described below.
The resistance to deformation provides an increase in the rigidity of the attenuating device, which was reduced with the slots 14. Furthermore, this rigidity is of a variable nature, i.e. it increases with displacement. For very small displacements, which are those produced when the shock event propagates through the structures, the rigidity provided is negligible. It is as if it were not present. Thus, as can be seen in
Continuing through these sections and finding the next level of slots 14 preventing passage, one part of the disturbance is reflected in them and another part travels circularly through the structural area between the slots 14, see the intermediate part of
In
Since the elastic material 15 is embedded in the slotted cylinder 15, the elastic material 15 opposes resistance to these non-linear deformations, which is translated into a new load pathway through the elastic material 15 as can be seen in
In
In fact, the greater the attenuation capacity of the device the less uniform the flow in the adjacent structures given that this is achieved by reducing the load passage areas, bridges, to a minimum. In order to compensate this effect, the non-linear component, the elastic material 15, plays an important role due to the compact configuration of the device.
Likewise, it is observed that the elastic material 15 is confined in the cavities created by the slots 14 and their shape, whether V-shape and inverted V-shape or H-shape and inverted H-shape, multiplies the rigidity effect.
When the elastic material 15 is compressed between two surfaces that are close to each other but the edges of which are free, the volume of elastic material 15 is maintained and rigidity decreases. If the edges are closed expansion of the elastic material 15 through them is prevented and it is only possible to bring the surfaces closer to each other by decreasing the volume, which means using the energy required to compress a confined fluid. Therefore, rigidity increases. The V-shape or H-shape of the horizontal levels of slots 14 are those which provide the confinement in a simple and natural manner.
It must be stressed that this shape of slot 14 allows, at the same time, reacting with loads parallel and normal to the surface of the elastic material 15, thus achieving that the latter works in shear, dissipating energy and dampening, and in compression providing additional rigidity.
Another feature affecting the behaviour of the attenuating device of the invention is the shape of each one of the slots 14 distributed in layers. As observed in
They may also follow a special course which helps to avoid the occurrence of overflows, as shown in
The mechanical features of the attenuating device may be easily varied to adapt to different requirements that may be demanded of it. For this it will be sufficient to adjust the size of the slots 14 to a compromise between the filtering requirements and the mechanical requirements.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES02/00577 | 12/4/2002 | WO | 10/3/2005 |