Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Viscoelastic Damper by Applying Fractional Derivative Method and Internal Variable Theory

  • Yeshou Xu
  • , Qi He
  • , Ying Qing Guo
  • , Xing Huai Huang
  • , Yao Rong Dong
  • , Zhong Wei Hu
  • , Jinkoo Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Viscoelastic dampers are conventional passive vibration control devices with excellent energy dissipation performance. The fractional derivative has a simple form and high accuracy in the modelling of viscoelastic materials/dampers. The internal variables reflect the internal state evolution of materials, and are often used to analyze the deformation and thermal process of materials. In the present work, the mechanical properties of a plate-shear-type viscoelastic damper at room temperature are tested under sinusoidal displacement excitations. The impacts of frequency and displacement amplitude on the dynamic properties of the viscoelastic damper in a wide frequency domain (0.1–25 Hz) are investigated. The higher-order fractional derivative model and the temperature–frequency equivalent principle are employed to characterize the frequency and temperature influence, and the internal variable theory considering the internal/microscale structure evolutions is introduced to capture the displacement affection. The higher-order fractional derivative model modified with the internal variable theory and temperature–frequency equivalent principle (ITHF) is accurate enough in describing the dynamic behaviors of viscoelastic dampers with varying frequencies and displacement amplitudes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number239
JournalBuildings
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2023

Keywords

  • higher-order fractional derivative model
  • internal variable theory
  • mechanical properties test
  • temperature–frequency equivalent principle
  • viscoelastic damper

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Viscoelastic Damper by Applying Fractional Derivative Method and Internal Variable Theory'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this