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Article

Free Vibration Characteristics of Rectangular Membranes Assuming Rounded-Edges Boundary

College of Engineering, Mechanical & Industrial Engineering Department, Sultan Qaboos University, Al Khoudh, Muscat 123, Oman
Vibration 2019, 2(3), 265-270; https://doi.org/10.3390/vibration2030016
Submission received: 24 June 2019 / Revised: 12 July 2019 / Accepted: 22 July 2019 / Published: 23 July 2019

Abstract

:
This study examines the vibratory characteristics of rectangular membranes having an outer rounded-edges periphery. This class of membranes with rounded outer corners has a great advantage over membranes with a rectangular platform wave propagation at the boundary being greatly diffused. As a result, such membranes have a great potential for use in practical engineering applications, especially in waveguides-based structures. Based on an effective 2D Differential-Quadrature numerical method, the frequencies and respective modeshapes of a rectangular membrane with rounded-edges are computed. This method is shown to yield better versatility, efficiency and less computational execution than other discretization methods. The simulated results, showing complex mode exchanges occurring for the higher order modes, demonstrate advantageous use for such membrane patterns in the design of tunable waveguides.

1. Introduction

The vibrational properties of the membrane are essential in the design of drums, speakers, receivers, and more significantly acoustic and electromagnetic transverse mode (TM) waveguides. Such devices are basic structures confining and conveying microwaves. Such characteristics of membranes with classical boundary shapes edges, such as circle, ellipse, and rectangle, have been previously investigated using separation of variables methods [1,2]. For all other irregular boundary shapes, numerical or semi-numerical means are necessary. To this end, the present paper considers a rectangular membrane with rounded-edges type of boundaries. For both membranes and waveguides, such arrangement of the boundaries is easier to manufacture than rectangular shaped edges, and because of the rounding, energy losses are expected to be minimal [3].
Previous reports [4,5,6,7,8,9] on the Helmholtz equation governing the free vibrations of rectangular membranes assuming rounded-edges boundaries were somehow incomplete. Using finite elements, Lagasse and Van Bladel [4] considered three fundamental transverse magnetic modes with not a single reported numerical frequency. An improved finite element method was carried out by Ooi and Zhao [5]; however, only one fundamental frequency was reported. A dual-coordinate finite difference method was suggested by Fanti and Mazzarella [6] without reported numerical results. Eigenfunction expansion and boundary integral were suggested by Ruiz-Cruz and Rebollar [7] with one reported fundamental transverse magnetic frequency. A method for a two-region point match was used by Shen and Lu [8], also for one examined frequency. Notice that the rounded-edges boundary arrangement is somehow unsuitable for the boundary-fitting Ritz method, which was formerly applied successfully to rectangular and skew type of membranes in [9,10].
The aim of the present work is to propose the use of an accurate modal expansion methodology along with a point match technique to acquire the first lowest frequencies and modeshapes for a rectangular membrane assuming rounded-edges boundary. The results could be relevant as well for the analysis of the TM modes in membrane like waveguides.

2. Problem Formulation and Numerical Methodology

Figure 1a shows a membrane with rounded-edges boundaries. The membrane is composed of a rectangle of 2L by 2aL (a > 0) with semi-circular ends of radius L. The aspect ratio is thus equal to:
A R = 2 a L + 2 L 2 L = a + 1 .
Normalizing all the lengths by the membrane half width L and the frequency by L ρ / T where ρ is the mass per area and T is the tension, the membrane transverse vibration amplitude w is governed by the following Helmholtz equation [2]:
2 w + ω 2 w = 0 ,
where ω is the normalized frequency. The boundary conditions are initialized such that w is zero on the boundaries.
Next, let the Cartesian coordinates (x, y) be situated at the membrane centroid. Since the membrane shape has vertical and horizontal symmetries, there can only be four kinds of vibration modes as follows:
  • The SS modes: symmetrical in both x and y directions,
  • The SA modes: symmetrical in the x direction and anti-symmetrical in the y direction,
  • The AS modes: anti-symmetrical in the x direction but symmetrical in the y direction, and
  • The AA modes: anti-symmetrical in both x and y directions.
Considering the first quadrant shown in Figure 1b, assuming the displayed polar coordinates (r, θ) at the center of the semi-circle, the solution to Equation (1) can be written as a sum of the membrane eigenfunctions as follows:
{ w ( r , θ ) = i = 0 n 1 A i cos ( i θ ) J i ( ω r ) o r w ( r , θ ) = i = 1 n A i sin ( i θ ) J i ( ω r ) .
In the above expressions, A i are unknown coefficients, J i are the Bessel function of the first kind, and the infinite sum is truncated to n-terms.
The boundary conditions are fulfilled through an n equally-distributed points on the membrane frontier, consisting of the straight segments: AB, BC and the circular segment: CD. For the points on the segments BC and CD, w is set to zero for all examined modes.
  • For the SS mode, the cosine form in Equation (2) is selected, and, for the points on the segment AB, the normal derivative of w is set to zero, i.e.:
    w x = cos ( θ ) w r sin ( θ ) r w θ = 0 .
  • For the SA mode, the sine form in Equation (2) is chosen, and Equation (3) on AB holds.
  • For the AS mode, the cosine is selected and w is set to zero on AB.
  • For the AA mode, the sine is chosen and w is set zero on AB.
The free vibration differential equation (the Helmholtz equation), Equation (2), can be solved for its respective natural frequencies and modeshapes using some numerical descretization techniques such as: the Finite-Difference Method (FDM), the Galerkin Modal Expansion Technique resulting into a Reduced-Order Model (ROM)), the Differential-Quadrature method (DQM), the Rayleigh–Ritz Expansion, etc… In this work, the DQM will be used. The central motivation behind assuming DQM as a discretization technique is that the different order partial derivatives of a function at a given point can be approximated by a weighted sum of function values at all discrete points in the variable domain [11,12]. Therefore, the kth order derivative of a function at a given point in the space can be approximated within an acceptable error range with weighted linear sum of functional values at all discrete points in the assumed space [12]. It has been observed that DQM has few advantages over the other descretization techniques such as [13]:
  • there is no restriction required on the distribution and number of discrete grid points, and
  • the weighting coefficient can be determined using a simple recurrence relation instead of solving a set of linear algebraic equations.
The conditions on the discrete N points results into N linear algebraic equations. For non-trivial coefficients A i , the determinant of the coefficients is set to zero, yielding the frequency ω .
Let M be the number of points on segment AB. The total number of points is
N = I n t e g e r ( M ( 1 + a + π / 2 ) ) .

3. Results and Discussion

In this section, the results are presented and discussed. Table 1 shows the convergence rate as the considered points in the DQM method are increased. It is worth mentioning that the convergence is fairly fast. We used M = 5 with at least four-digit accuracy (error around 10−4).
Next, Table 2 shows a comparison with the few published results. It is worth noting that, although boundary collocation methods have been used a lot in several mechanics related problems [14], its convergence is not guaranteed. The effectiveness of the present method mainly relies on the centrally located polar coordinates and the evenly-spaced collocation points on the boundaries.
Having examined the accuracy of the numerical approach, we proceed next to study the vibrational properties of the rectangular membrane with rounded-edges. Table 3 lists the first lowest frequencies for various assumed aspect ratios and Figure 2 outlines the first vibrational modeshapes assuming three different aspect ratios. Note that, for the case of a = 0, the membrane is simply a circle, for which the exact solution can be written as:
w ( r , θ ) = cos ( i θ ) J i ( ω r )   or   w ( r , θ ) = sin ( i θ ) J i ( ω r )
and the frequency ω is the root of J i ( ω r ) = 0 . In addition, and due to polar symmetry, some circular SS modes and AA modes have the same frequency, and the eigenfunctions are the same when rotated a certain angle. Similarly, some AS modes are the same as the SA modes. We included both forms to illustrate the continuity of the modes.
Considering both Table 3 and Figure 2, one can realize that the normalized frequencies decrease with increasing the membrane aspect ratio. Furthermore, the fundamental (lowest) frequency is always the first SS mode, which has no interior nodal curves. The second lowest frequency denotes the AS mode, with a single nodal line through the centroid and perpendicular to the major axis. For a larger value of the aspect ratios, the modeshapes intersperse sequentially between SS and AS, almost perpendicular to the major axis. The SA mode is the 3rd mode for a low aspect ratio; nevertheless, it converts to the 4th mode for the cases of a = 1/2 and a = 3/4. It is then converting to the 5th mode for a = 3/2 and the 6th mode for a = 2. In general, SA mode and AA modes decrease in the order hierarchy with increased aspect ratio. Numerous mode changes occurred for several assumed cases, especially for higher modes, offering the possibility for such membranes to be used as waveguides of distinguishing frequency tunability characteristics.

4. Conclusions

In this work, a Differential-Quadrature Method was examined to obtain the frequencies and their respective modeshapes of a rectangular shaped membrane assuming rounded-edges boundaries. The examined method was shown to be numerically effective and accurate in comparison to other methods. The discussed results showed complex mode exchanges occurring for the higher order modes, demonstrating an opportunity of such rounded-edges membrane design to be used in frequency tunable based waveguides-based applications.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. (a) 2D schematic of the rectangular membrane with rounded-edges boundary and (b) the first quadrant illustrating the assumed polar coordinates.
Figure 1. (a) 2D schematic of the rectangular membrane with rounded-edges boundary and (b) the first quadrant illustrating the assumed polar coordinates.
Vibration 02 00016 g001
Figure 2. The first lowest modeshapes of the rectangular membrane with rounded-edges showing mode swapping between the 3rd and 4th modes, and also among the 5th and 7th modes.
Figure 2. The first lowest modeshapes of the rectangular membrane with rounded-edges showing mode swapping between the 3rd and 4th modes, and also among the 5th and 7th modes.
Vibration 02 00016 g002
Table 1. Convergence rate of frequency k for some typical cases.
Table 1. Convergence rate of frequency k for some typical cases.
Ma = 1
1st Mode-SS
a = 1/2
4th Mode-SS
a = 3/2
6th Mode-AA
a = 3/4
7th Mode-SA
a = 2
9th Mode-AS
21.78623.72043.45154.37623.6150
31.78603.72033.45084.45423.6153
41.78593.72093.45064.45463.6154
51.78593.752093.45064.45463.6154
Table 2. Comparison of the first (fundamental) frequency for the case of a = 1 (AR = 2) and assuming the SS case.
Table 2. Comparison of the first (fundamental) frequency for the case of a = 1 (AR = 2) and assuming the SS case.
ReferenceNumerical MethodFrequency
[4]Finite elements1.809
[6]Boundary integrals1.7858
[7]Two regions point match1.786
Current WorkDQM1.7858
Table 3. The lowest frequencies of the rectangular membrane with rounded edges assuming different aspect ratio cases. SS, AS, SA and AA denote the respective modeshape.
Table 3. The lowest frequencies of the rectangular membrane with rounded edges assuming different aspect ratio cases. SS, AS, SA and AA denote the respective modeshape.
a = 0a = 1/4a = 1/2a = 3/4a = 1a = 3/2a = 2
2.405
SS
2.118
SS
1.953
SS
1.852
SS
1.785
SS
1.707
SS
1.664
SS
3.832
AS
3.189
AS
2.778
AS
2.501
AS
2.306
AS
2.061
AS
1.918
AS
3.832
SA
3.546
SA
3.4036
SA
3.282
SS
2.962
SS
2.537
SS
2.277
SS
5.135
SS
4.335
SS
3.720
SS
3.324
SA
3.275
SA
3.073
AS
2.69
AS
5.135
AA
4.460
AA
4.056
AA
3.804
AA
3.640
AA
3.222
SA
3.146
SS
5.52
SS
5.071
SS
4.678
AS
4.102
AS
3.668
AS
3.45
AA
3.195
SA
6.38
AS
5.444
AS
4.879
SA
4.454
SA
4.159
SA
3.636
SS
3.35
AA
6.38
SA
5.5
SA
4.921
SS
4.832
SS
4.387
SS
3.794
SA
3.592
SA
7.015
AS
5.967
AS
5.493
AS
4.951
SS
4.761
AA
4.212
AS
3.615
AS
7.015
SA
6.521
SS
5.635
SS
5.177
AA
4.816
SS
4.218
AA
3.900
AA
7.588
SS
6.526
AA
5.745
AA
5.238
AS
5.044
AS
4.692
SA
4.0944
SS
7.588
AA
6.601
SA
6.270
SS
5.812
SS
5.4
SA
4.758
SS
4.257
SA

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MDPI and ACS Style

Ouakad, H.M. Free Vibration Characteristics of Rectangular Membranes Assuming Rounded-Edges Boundary. Vibration 2019, 2, 265-270. https://doi.org/10.3390/vibration2030016

AMA Style

Ouakad HM. Free Vibration Characteristics of Rectangular Membranes Assuming Rounded-Edges Boundary. Vibration. 2019; 2(3):265-270. https://doi.org/10.3390/vibration2030016

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ouakad, Hassen M. 2019. "Free Vibration Characteristics of Rectangular Membranes Assuming Rounded-Edges Boundary" Vibration 2, no. 3: 265-270. https://doi.org/10.3390/vibration2030016

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