• Title/Summary/Keyword: randomness testing

Search Result 23, Processing Time 0.019 seconds

Fatigue Life Prediction for Automotive Vibroisolating Rubber Component Using Tearing Energy (찢김에너지를 이용한 자동차용 방진 부품의 내구수명 예측)

  • Moon, Hyung-Il;Kim, Ho;Woo, Chang-Soo;Kim, Heon-Young
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Automotive Engineers
    • /
    • v.20 no.6
    • /
    • pp.100-106
    • /
    • 2012
  • Recently, the demand to acquire and improve durability performance has steadily risen in rubber components design. In design process of a rubber component, an analytical prediction is the most effective way to improve fatigue life. Existing methods of analytical estimation have mainly used an equation for fatigue life obtained from fatigue test data. However, such formula is rarely used due to costs and time required for fatigue testing, as well as randomness of rubber materials. In this paper, we describe fatigue life estimation of rubber component using only the results from a relatively simple tearing test. We estimated fatigue life of the Janggu type fatigue specimen and the automotive motor mount, and evaluated reliability of the proposed method by comparing the estimated values with actual test results.

Mixed-Signal Circuit Testing Using Digital Input and Frequency Analysis (디지털입력과 주파수 성분 분석을 통한 혼성신호 회로 테스트 방법)

  • 노정진
    • Journal of the Institute of Electronics Engineers of Korea SD
    • /
    • v.40 no.4
    • /
    • pp.34-41
    • /
    • 2003
  • A new technique for detecting parametric faults in mixed signal circuits is proposed Pseudo-random sequence from linear feedback shift register(LFSR) is fed to circuit-under-test (CUT) as stimulus and wavelets are used to compact the transient response under this stimulus into a small number of signature. Wavelet based scheme decomposes the transient response into a number of signal in different frequency bands. Each decomposed signal is compacted into a signature using digital integrator. The digital pulses from LFSR, owing to its pseudo-randomness property, are almost uniform in frequency domain, which generates multi-frequency response when passed through CUT. The effectiveness of this technique is demonstrated in our experimental results.

Material structure generation of concrete and its further usage in numerical simulations

  • Husek, Martin;Kala, Jiri
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
    • /
    • v.68 no.3
    • /
    • pp.335-344
    • /
    • 2018
  • The execution of an experiment is a complex affair. It includes the preparation of test specimens, the measurement process itself and also the evaluation of the experiment as such. Financial requirements can differ significantly. In contrast, the cost of numerical simulations can be negligible, but what is the credibility of a simulated experiment? Discussions frequently arise concerning the methodology used in simulations, and particularly over the geometric model used. Simplification, rounding or the complete omission of details are frequent reasons for differences that occur between simulation results and the results of executed experiments. However, the creation of a very complex geometry, perhaps all the way down to the resolution of the very structure of the material, can be complicated. The subject of the article is therefore a means of creating the material structure of concrete contained in a test specimen. Because a complex approach is taken right from the very start of the numerical simulation, maximum agreement with experimental results can be achieved. With regard to the automation of the process described, countless material structures can be generated and randomly produced samples simulated in this way. Subsequently, a certain degree of randomness can be observed in the results obtained, e.g., the shape of the failure - just as is the case with experiments. The first part of the article presents a description of a complex approach to the creation of a geometry representing real concrete test specimens. The second part presents a practical application in which the numerical simulation of the compressive testing of concrete is executed using the generated geometry.