Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
Over recent years, in the automotive field, numerous
performance and aesthetic innovations have been produced thanks to
the development process of the manufacturing technologies gained
mainly in the aerospace industrial context. The automotive industry is
currently experiencing relevant technology changes in the design of
the engines, transmission and total drivetrain, induced by increasing
customer demand for fuel efficiency and more stringent government
requirements in emissions and safety. One of the problems relating to
environmental impact concerns the noise emitted by the vehicle, for
which various solutions have been experimented: new and more
resistant materials have been worked out in order to minimize noise
pollution and the environmental impact of the vehicle, even at the
end of the operating life of its components. Several research
programs are currently running or recently terminated worldwide to
explore the feasibility of smart materials. The increasingly dominant
role of lightweight materials in many technological sectors is
motivated by the multitude of benefits that they could offer like the
weight optimization and the reduction of the fuel burn and noise
levels. This research illustrates a solution as a response to those
requirements, as well as being a response to the targets of comfort: a
viscoelastic material, appointed to increase the damping of structures
involved in vibro-acoustic phenomena generated in a vehicle. The
performance of these innovative materials have been analyzed both
from a numerical standpoint that experimental. Static mechanical
properties and modal parameters carried out in the laboratory,
pertinent to each configuration were arranged into a rational database
for further studies on the vibro-acoustic behaviour of the coupled
cavity-structure system. The main goal of this research project has
been reached in the design, manufacturing and testing of an
innovative viscoelastic prototype got out by the best compromise of
structural and acoustic characteristics of pre-existing trim materials.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Automotive; Damping; Finite Element Model; Non-contact Measurement; Noise Vibration Harshness; Viscoelasticity.
Elenco autori:
Siano, Daniela
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