Kuye, S. I.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta
Sulaiman, M. A.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, College of Engineering and Environmental Studies, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye
ABSTRACT
Vibration is a subject of primary concern to engineers as
most engineering structures and machines experience it to some degree and their
design generally requires consideration of their oscillatory behavior. Viscous
materials strain linearly with time while elastic materials strain
instantaneously when stretched and quickly return to their original state once
the stress is removed. This paper investigated the free vibration of a
viscoelastic pipe conveying an incompressible fluid. The pipe was idealized as a viscoelastic
beam, the governing differential equation for the lateral vibration of the structure
adopted was of the Euler-Bernoullis method and the material property of the
beam model used is Kelvin-Voigt viscoelastic constitutive relation. The
equation was non-dimensionalized and solved using finite element analysis.
Effects of different flow conditions on the natural frequencies of the
structure were also investigated and their implications analyzed. Results
reveal that, whereas, imaginary natural frequency decreases with
viscoelasticity, real natural frequency actually increases with
viscoelasticity. Critical velocity decreases with viscoelasticity for both
imaginary and real situations. Imaginary and real natural frequencies, though
had the same value initially, later increase with mass ratio. Real natural
frequency increases with material damping but imaginary part has a reverse case.
Keywords: vibration, visco-elastic, natural frequencies, incompressible fluid
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Published
Monday, July 23, 2018
Issue
2018 Special Issue 1
Article Section
GENERAL
The contents of the articles are the sole opinion of the author(s) and not of UJET.
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