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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/N032829/1
Title: Techniques for Nonlinear Real-time Hybrid Testing
Principal Investigator: du Bois, Dr J L
Other Investigators:
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Best,Anthony,Dynamics Ltd Cobham plc
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Organisation: University of Bath
Scheme: First Grant - Revised 2009
Starts: 01 October 2016 Ends: 31 December 2018 Value (£): 101,247
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Aerospace, Defence and Marine Manufacturing
Construction Transport Systems and Vehicles
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
13 Apr 2016 Engineering Prioritisation Panel Meeting 13 April 2016 Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
Real-time hybrid testing is a powerful experimental technique but it cannot presently be used for a majority of practical engineering applications because of problems with compensating for delays in the control loop. This work seeks to address this challenge using a novel combination of forward prediction and adaptive tuning of the mechanical properties of the system. Exploitation of the method in commercial settings will lead to improved quality and reduced time-to-market, and in an academic context it will offer a valuable experimental tool across a breadth of fields.

Real-time hybrid testing (RTHT) is a technique for performing experiments on components of large or complex structures in a laboratory. The component is physically present in the laboratory, but the rest of the system exists only in a computer simulation. Motors, actuators, and sensors create a virtual link between the two so they behave as one system. The technique can offer radical time and cost savings in industrial development programmes and provides a uniquely powerful research tool, but its potential is currently limited by delays in the motors and actuators linking the two parts of the system. State-of-the-art delay compensation techniques remain ineffective in the presence of strong nonlinearities, as found in many practical engineering systems such as automotive shock absorbers, aircraft control mechanisms, and materials used to design safe buildings and bridges. This project addresses the difficulties in performing real-time hybrid tests of common nonlinear components, to allow the realisation of the currently untapped potential of RTHT.

A novel approach is taken, drawing inspiration from the mechanisms used in the human body to compensate delays in nerve signal transmissions. A combination of two strategies is employed: forward prediction of the forces and positions required, and tuning of the mechanical properties of the system to compensate for errors in those force and position predictions. Two key research questions are to be addressed, concerning firstly the ability to tune the system to match the desired mechanical properties, and secondly the extent of the improvements this makes to the RTHT capabilities. Three objectives are identified, centring on the experimental investigation of this configuration and the evaluation of its performance: analytical studies of the system configuration will be conducted to determine appropriate component sizing; the system will be built and the effectiveness of tuning of the mechanical properties will be evaluated; the final objective is to conduct full RTHT experiments to determine the extent of improvements to fidelity and stability of the results.

There are a variety of reasons for wanting to conduct hybrid tests. One field where they have established marked success is earthquake testing of large civil structures. The motivation here is threefold: firstly, large structures such as buildings or bridges cannot be fitted into a laboratory for testing in their entirety. Secondly, the conditions experienced in an earthquake are not readily reproduced for an entire building. Thirdly, experimental testing may deliberately or inadvertently lead to failure, which in this case would be dangerous and expensive. Other examples include simulations of satellite docking in zero gravity, testing of aeronautical equipment without the danger or expense of flight testing, and testing of automotive components before the full vehicle has been manufactured. Businesses and researchers in these fields are poised to take advantage of new techniques, which will greatly expand the classes of system which can benefit from real-time hybrid testing.

The benefits to businesses in terms of increased productivity and reduced costs, and academics in terms of better research tools, will translate to end users and the general public in terms of better quality of products, higher standards of living and improved safety.

Key Findings
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Potential use in non-academic contexts
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Impacts
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Organisation Website: http://www.bath.ac.uk