TY - GEN
T1 - Dynamics of Viscoelastic Tethers for Planetary Aerobots using a Fractional Derivative Model
AU - Lesieutre, George A.
AU - Quadrelli, Marco B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by George A. Lesieutre.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Aerobots are expected to play a key role in future missions to explore the atmospheres of Venus and other planetary bodies. Proposed missions to Venus involve lowering instruments on tethers towards the inhospitable surface from balloons at altitudes on the order of 50 km. Accurately capturing the viscoelastic behavior of the tethers in system design models is essential for managing response and loads during dynamic events (deployment, gusts, flight control) and following long-term aging in extreme environments. The behavior of materials likely to be used in tethers, such as Kevlar, is well-described by a fractional-derivative viscoelastic model. One of the shortcomings of such models is the challenge of numerical time integration of the system equations of motion. In this work, fractional derivative behavior is approximated using a multi-ADF (augmenting displacement fields) model. The multi-ADF model augments the instantaneous displacement field with multiple discrete internal displacement fields that individually evolve following first-order relaxation processes. Notably, while the fractional derivative model is non-local in time, requiring the entire history for evaluation, the first-order version is local, essentially capturing the history in the present values of internal state variables. A multi-ADF finite element model of a tether with an instrument gondola is developed, and a Newmark time integration scheme is used to obtain the dynamic response of the system during a drop test. The multi-ADF model is shown to be very accurate for creep, dynamics, and gondola-drop simulations, and runs in a fraction of the time required for a direct fractional-derivative model.
AB - Aerobots are expected to play a key role in future missions to explore the atmospheres of Venus and other planetary bodies. Proposed missions to Venus involve lowering instruments on tethers towards the inhospitable surface from balloons at altitudes on the order of 50 km. Accurately capturing the viscoelastic behavior of the tethers in system design models is essential for managing response and loads during dynamic events (deployment, gusts, flight control) and following long-term aging in extreme environments. The behavior of materials likely to be used in tethers, such as Kevlar, is well-described by a fractional-derivative viscoelastic model. One of the shortcomings of such models is the challenge of numerical time integration of the system equations of motion. In this work, fractional derivative behavior is approximated using a multi-ADF (augmenting displacement fields) model. The multi-ADF model augments the instantaneous displacement field with multiple discrete internal displacement fields that individually evolve following first-order relaxation processes. Notably, while the fractional derivative model is non-local in time, requiring the entire history for evaluation, the first-order version is local, essentially capturing the history in the present values of internal state variables. A multi-ADF finite element model of a tether with an instrument gondola is developed, and a Newmark time integration scheme is used to obtain the dynamic response of the system during a drop test. The multi-ADF model is shown to be very accurate for creep, dynamics, and gondola-drop simulations, and runs in a fraction of the time required for a direct fractional-derivative model.
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U2 - 10.2514/6.2024-1438
DO - 10.2514/6.2024-1438
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85194029374
SN - 9781624107115
T3 - AIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2024
BT - AIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2024
PB - American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA
T2 - AIAA SciTech Forum and Exposition, 2024
Y2 - 8 January 2024 through 12 January 2024
ER -