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Analytical investigation of steady-state stability and Hopf-bifurcations occurring in sliding friction oscillators with application to low-frequency disc brake noise

This article presents an analytical investigation on stability and local bifurcation behavior due to exponentially decaying friction characteristics in the sliding domain of a simple friction oscillator, which is commonly referred to as “mass-on-a-belt”-oscillator. Friction is described by a frictio...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Communications in nonlinear science & numerical simulation 2007-02, Vol.12 (1), p.83-99
Main Authors: Hetzler, H., Schwarzer, D., Seemann, W.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This article presents an analytical investigation on stability and local bifurcation behavior due to exponentially decaying friction characteristics in the sliding domain of a simple friction oscillator, which is commonly referred to as “mass-on-a-belt”-oscillator. Friction is described by a friction coefficient which in the sense of Stribeck depends on the relative velocity between the two tribological partners. For such a characteristic the stability and bifurcation behavior are discussed. It is shown, that the system can undergo a subcritical Hopf-bifurcation from an unstable steady-state fixed-point to an unstable limit cycle, which separates the basins of the stable steady-state fixed-point and the self-sustained stick-slip limit cycle. Therefore, only a local examination of the eigenvalues at the steady-state, as is the classical approach when investigating conditions for the onset of friction-induced vibrations, may not give the whole picture, since the stable region around the steady-state fixed-point may be rather small. Furthermore, the results of above considerations are applied to a brake-noise problem. It is found that, in contrast to squeal, a decaying friction characteristic may be a satisfying explanation for the onset low-frequency groan. The analytical results are compared with experimental measurements.
ISSN:1007-5704
1878-7274
DOI:10.1016/j.cnsns.2006.01.007