Squeal occurrence classification using a harmonic balance vector signal model.
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Date
2025Journal
Journal of Structural DynamicsAbstract
Brake squeal is an instability that generates self-excited limit cycles which vary with time and operating conditions in real experiments. To analyze test results, it is proposed to use a Harmonic Balance Vector (HBV) signal model. It combines Harmonic Balance Method and analytic signal methodologies. From the Harmonic Balance Method, one uses the space-time decomposition where spatial distribution of each harmonic is described by a complex vector and frequency is common to all sensors. From analytic signal, one keeps the assumption that quantities are slowly varying in time. Synchronous demodulation and principal coordinate definitions are combined in a multistep algorithm that provides an HBV estimation. On an industrial brake test matrix, HBV estimation is shown to be robustly applicable. The HBV signal being slowly varying, time sub-sampling reduces the volume of test data by two orders of magnitude. Limit cycle frequency, amplitude and shapes can thus be added to the parallel coordinates that associate to each time sample the operating parameters: pressure, velocity, temperature, torque, disk position, disk/bracket distance, ... This opens a path to a range of analyzes otherwise difficult to perform. Classification of squeal occurrences is first discussed showing pressure and amplitude dependence. The effect of amplitude on both frequency and shape is next demonstrated. The entry and exit of instability when parameters change are then analyzed by proposing a transient root locus built from test. Thus squeal test results are related to the classical complex eigenvalue analysis. Intermittent growth/decay events are shown to be correlated with wheel position. Furthermore, distance measurements indicate that disk shape variations of a few microns play a clear parametric role. Parametric testing and clustering are then used to map the instability region and its edges. Pressure is shown to have an effect dominating other variations. Prospective uses of these results to combine test results and finite element models are discussed last.
Files in this item
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Communication avec acteMARTIN, Guillaume; VERMOT DES ROCHES, Guillaume; BALMES, Etienne; CHANCELIER, Thierry (2019)In brake FEM, model updating is often needed to improve the model accuracy and well describe problematic phenomena such as the squeal. To avoid performing a full model updating which is often time consuming, the use of the ...
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
ETIENNE, BALMES;
MARTIN, Guillaume; MALACRIDA ALVES, Guilherme; VERMOT DES ROCHES, Guillaume (Université de Liège, 2025-01-26)
Brake squeal is an instability that generates self-excited limit cycles that, in real experiments, vary with time and operating conditions. To analyze test results, it is proposed to use a Harmonic Balance Vector (HBV) ... -
Communication avec acteMARTIN, Guillaume; CHANCELIER, Thierry; VERMOT DES ROCHES, Guillaume; BALMES, Etienne (2018)In the presence of squeal, Operational Deflection Shapes (ODS) are classically performed to analyze behavior. A simple numeric example is used to show that two real shapes should dominate the response. This justifies an ...
-
Communication avec acteMARTIN, Guillaume; BALMES, Etienne; VERMOT DES ROCHES, Guillaume; CHANCELIER, Thierry (2016)Squeal occurrences are quite common in brakes in production and involve coupling of modes. Detailed understanding of vibration patterns typically requires FEM models updated using test results. The process used at Chassis ...
-
Communication avec acte
BALMES, Etienne; MARTIN, Guillaume;
VERMOT DES ROCHES, Guillaume; CHANCELIER, Thierry; THOUVIOT, Sylvain (Université Polytechnique Hauts de France (UPHF), 2022-05)
Since tests only provide measurements at sensors, it is interesting to use models to estimate the response at all degree of freedom, correct measurement errors and possibly allow updating of model parameters. The paper ...

