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Vibration Measurement and Analysis

This document discusses vibration measurement and frequency analysis. It explains the measurement chain including transducers, filters, and detectors. Frequency analysis is performed to identify vibration sources in the frequency domain. Data can be presented with linear or logarithmic scaling of frequency and amplitude depending on the application. Bandwidth and filter selection are important factors for frequency analysis. The uncertainty principle relates bandwidth and time.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views28 pages

Vibration Measurement and Analysis

This document discusses vibration measurement and frequency analysis. It explains the measurement chain including transducers, filters, and detectors. Frequency analysis is performed to identify vibration sources in the frequency domain. Data can be presented with linear or logarithmic scaling of frequency and amplitude depending on the application. Bandwidth and filter selection are important factors for frequency analysis. The uncertainty principle relates bandwidth and time.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 28

Vibration

Measurement
and
Analysis
l Why Frequency Analysis
l Spectrum or Overall Level
l Filters
l Linear vs. Log Scaling
l Amplitude Scales
l Vibration Parameters
l The Detector/Averager
l Signal vs. System analysis

BA 7676-12, 1
The Measurement Chain

Transducer Preamplifier Filter(s) Detector/


Output
Averager

BA 7676-12, 2
Why Make a Frequency Analysis

B C

Amplitude Amplitude
E
CD
B
A
A
Time

Frequency
E Vibration
D

BA 7676-12, 3
Frequency Analysis

Acc.
Level

Frequency

BA 7676-12, 4
Frequency Spectrum or Overall Level

Transducer Preamplifier Filter(s) Detector/ Output


Averager
Overall
Level

Frequency
Spectrum

BA 7676-12, 5
Frequency Spectrum or Overall Level
Frequency Spectrum Overall Level
5
Vibration 5 4
4 3
2
3 1
2
1

Fan

Frequency Date
Vibration 5
5 1 2 3 4
4
3
2
1

Gearbox
Frequency Date

BA 7676-12, 6
Presenting the Data

l Linear vs. Log Scaling


l Amplitude in dB?
l Linear and Logarithmic Frequency Scales
– Decades
– Octaves

BA 7676-12, 7
Linear vs Logarithmic Scales

0 1/2 1

Empty Full

0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1

0 1/10 1/5 1/2 1

Full

0.05 0.1 0.2 0.5 1

BA 7676-12, 8
Linear vs Logarithmic Scales

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Linear
0 0.1 0.5 1
0.01 1 Decade
1 Decade
1 2 5 10 20 50 100

1 2 5 10 25 50 1 2 5 10 20 50 100
Logarithmic
0.01 0.1 1 10 100
1 Decade 1 Decade 1 Decade 1 Decade

BA 7676-12, 9
Linear vs Logarithmic Frequency Scales
120 Hz 50 Hz
Vibration
Level

Linear
0 200 400 600 800 1K 1,2K 1,4K 1,6K 1,8K 2K Hz Frequency

Vibration
Level

Logarithmic
20 50 100 200 500 1K 2K 5K 10K 20K Frequency

BA 7676-12, 10
Bandpass Filters and Bandwidth
B
0

Ideal filter
Bandwidth = f2 – f1
Centre Frequency = f0

f1 f0 f2 Frequency
Area = Area
Ripple
0

- 3 dB
Real filter and Real filter and
definition of definition of
3 dB Bandwidth Noise Bandwidth

f1 f0 f2 Frequency f1 f0 f2 Frequency

BA 7676-12, 11
Filter Types
Constant Bandwidth Constant Percentage Bandwidth
or Relative Bandwidth
y × f0
B = x Hz B = y% =
100

Linear Logarithmic
0 20 40 60 80 Frequency 50 70 100 150 200 Frequency
B = 31,6 Hz B = 1 octave
B = 10 Hz B = 1/3 octave
B = 3,16 Hz B = 3%

BA 7676-12, 12
Constant Bandwidth Filtering
Bandwidth = 400 Hz

Linear
Frequency
Axis

0 1k 2k 3k 4k 5k 6k 7k 8k 9k 10k

Logarithmic
Frequency
Axis

1 2 5 10 20 50 100 200 500 1k 2k 5k 10k

BA 7676-12, 13
Constant Percentage Bandwidth Filters
Bandwidth = 1/1 octave = 70% of Centre Frequency

Linear
Frequency
Axis

0 1k 2k 3k 4k 5k 6k 7k 8k 9k 10k Frequency, Hz

Logarithmic
Frequency
Axis

1 2 5 10 20 50 100 200 500 1k 2k 5k 10k Frequency, Hz


125 8k

BA 7676-12, 14
Linear vs Logarithmic Frequency Scales
120 Hz 50 Hz
Vibration
Level

Linear
0 200 400 600 800 1K 1,2K 1,4K 1,6K 1,8K 2K Hz Frequency

Vibration
Level

Logarithmic
20 50 100 200 500 1K 2K 5K 10K 20K Frequency

BA 7676-12, 15
Selecting Bandwidth
Filter Frequency
width Spectrum
Vibration
Level

Frequency Frequency
Vibration
Level

Frequency Frequency

BA 7676-12, 16
Most important in Frequency Analysis

B = bandwidth
T = time

BT ≥ 1

(often called the Uncertainty Principle)

BA 7676-12, 17
Linear vs Logarithmic Amplitude Scales
Advantages of logarithmic amplitude scale
l Constant factor changes are equally displayed for all levels
l Optimal way of displaying a large dynamic range

1000 1000
Linear Logarithmic × 3.16
900 amplitude amplitude
316
800

Logarithmic scale
× 3.16
× 3.16
Linear scale

700 100
600 × 3.16
500 31.6
× 3.16
400
10
300 × 3.16 × 3.16
200 3.16
100 × 3.16
0 1
Frequency

BA 7676-12, 18
The dB Scale
Acceleration Acceleration
dB m/s2 æ a2 ö æ a ö
re. 10-6 m/s2 ç ÷
N(dB) = 10log10 ç 2 ÷ = 20log10 çç ÷÷
è aref ø è aref ø
60 1000

50 316
× 3.16 = 10 dB
40 100
Logarithmic amplitude
× 100
30 31.6 = 40 dB
× 3.16 = 10 dB
20 10

10 × 10
3.16
= 20 dB
× 3.16 = 10 dB
1 1
Frequency

BA 7676-12, 19
Transmission of Vibration

System
Input
Forces + Response = Vibration
(Mobility)

8 dB
8 dB
+ =
Frequency Frequency Frequency

Forces caused by Structural Vibration


l Imbalance Parameters: Parameters:
l Shock l Mass l Acceleration
l Friction l Stiffness l Velocity
l Acoustic l Damping l Displacement

BA 7676-12, 20 891875
“Real World” Vibration Levels

ms-2 dB

1 000 000 240

1000 180

1 120

0.001 60

0.000 001 0

BA 7676-12, 21
Vibration Parameters

Relative Amplitude

100 000 Acceleration


10 000
1000
100
10
1 Velocity
10
100
1000
10 000
Displacement
100 000
0.1 1 10 100 1k 10 kHz
Frequency

BA 7676-12, 22
Which Parameter to Choose

Measurement Measurement Measurement


A B C
Acc. Acc.
Acc.

Vel. Vel. Vel.

Disp.
Disp. Disp.

Choose Choose Choose


Displacement Velocity Acceleration

BA 7676-12, 23
The Detector/Averager

Vibration Vibration
Level Peak-Peak
Hold
Peak Peak-
RMS Peak Peak-Peak
Peak
Time
RMS
Time

BA 7676-12, 24
Averaging Time

Vibration Vibration
Level
(Peak) Averaging Time = 10 s

Averaging Time = 1 s

Time

Time

BA 7676-12, 25
Signal vs. System Analysis

Signal Analysis System Analysis

Vibration Excitation
signal (Input)

Vibration
Response
(Output)

BA 7676-12, 26
Conclusion

This lecture should provide you with sufficient


information to:

l Choose the right vibration parameters to measure


l Present the measured data in a suitable way
l Understand the basic filter and analysis parameters
and limitations
l Understand the difference between signal and
system analysis

BA 7676-12, 27
Literature for Further Reading

l Shock and Vibration Handbook (Harris and Crede, McGraw-Hill 1976)


l Frequency Analysis (Brüel & Kjær Handbook BT 0007-11)
l Structural Testing Part 1 and 2
(Brüel & Kjær Booklets BR 0458-12 and BR 0507-11)

l Brüel & Kjær Technical Review


– No.2 - 1996 (BV 0049-11)
– No.2 - 1995 (BV 0047-11)
– No.2 - 1994 (BV 0045-11)
– No.1 - 1994 (BV 0044-11)
– No.1 - 1988 (BV 0033-11)
– No.4 - 1987 (BV 0032-11)

BA 7676-12, 28

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