Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process

Balancing rotating systems is a challenging task, which requires (dis)assembly of the system to enable mass adjustments; thus the development of a method to balance rotatives in-situ (i.e. without disassembly) using pulsed laser ablation (PLA) is a key technology enabler. PLA for in-situ balancing o...

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Main Author: Stoesslein, Moritz
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31376/
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author Stoesslein, Moritz
author_facet Stoesslein, Moritz
author_sort Stoesslein, Moritz
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Balancing rotating systems is a challenging task, which requires (dis)assembly of the system to enable mass adjustments; thus the development of a method to balance rotatives in-situ (i.e. without disassembly) using pulsed laser ablation (PLA) is a key technology enabler. PLA for in-situ balancing offers inherent advantages of an adjustable frequency (to match that of the rotating part) and variable pulse energy (to control the mass removal). This thesis presents a novel methodology for balancing components in-situ using PLA in a controlled and automated manner. The method utilises a sensor to measure the acceleration of the rigid rotor-bearing system. After signal conditioning using an adaptive peak filter (i.e. an inverted notch filter), a developed peak detection algorithm determines the maxima of the signal to find the angular imbalance position. If corrective action is necessary, PLA occurs. The method accounts for the time delays in the laser system and electronic circuit. Validation on a rotating part showed a PLA targeting accuracy of < 50μm and a precision of < 30μm; the feasibility of the method was confirmed using a simulation and by balancing a rotor with an arbitrary added imbalance. A concept, which was devised to optimise the PLA strategy for removing imbalances, bases on a novel combination of an analytical and machine learning approach. It determines the optimum process parameters of an ablated feature with a specified shape and volume. Additionally, an error budget for the method has been developed. The concept has been validated and shown to be accurate to < 4mg. The error budget could account for variations. It has been shown long features in the circumferential direction of the part increase the material removal rate with only minor increases in the error magnitude. To conclude, a concept for the integration of the two developed models is presented.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
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publishDate 2016
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spelling nottingham-313762025-02-28T13:22:51Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31376/ Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process Stoesslein, Moritz Balancing rotating systems is a challenging task, which requires (dis)assembly of the system to enable mass adjustments; thus the development of a method to balance rotatives in-situ (i.e. without disassembly) using pulsed laser ablation (PLA) is a key technology enabler. PLA for in-situ balancing offers inherent advantages of an adjustable frequency (to match that of the rotating part) and variable pulse energy (to control the mass removal). This thesis presents a novel methodology for balancing components in-situ using PLA in a controlled and automated manner. The method utilises a sensor to measure the acceleration of the rigid rotor-bearing system. After signal conditioning using an adaptive peak filter (i.e. an inverted notch filter), a developed peak detection algorithm determines the maxima of the signal to find the angular imbalance position. If corrective action is necessary, PLA occurs. The method accounts for the time delays in the laser system and electronic circuit. Validation on a rotating part showed a PLA targeting accuracy of < 50μm and a precision of < 30μm; the feasibility of the method was confirmed using a simulation and by balancing a rotor with an arbitrary added imbalance. A concept, which was devised to optimise the PLA strategy for removing imbalances, bases on a novel combination of an analytical and machine learning approach. It determines the optimum process parameters of an ablated feature with a specified shape and volume. Additionally, an error budget for the method has been developed. The concept has been validated and shown to be accurate to < 4mg. The error budget could account for variations. It has been shown long features in the circumferential direction of the part increase the material removal rate with only minor increases in the error magnitude. To conclude, a concept for the integration of the two developed models is presented. 2016-07-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31376/1/Thesis%20Final.pdf Stoesslein, Moritz (2016) Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Stoesslein, Moritz
Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title_full Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title_fullStr Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title_full_unstemmed Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title_short Method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
title_sort method for in-situ balancing of rotatives by use of an on-the-fly pulsating material removal process
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31376/