Mass-spring-damper model

Concept in physics
mass connected to the ground with a spring and damper in parallel
Classic model used for deriving the equations of a mass spring damper model

The mass-spring-damper model consists of discrete mass nodes distributed throughout an object and interconnected via a network of springs and dampers. This model is well-suited for modelling object with complex material properties such as nonlinearity and viscoelasticity. Packages such as MATLAB may be used to run simulations of such models.[1] As well as engineering simulation, these systems have applications in computer graphics and computer animation.[2]

Derivation (Single Mass)

Deriving the equations of motion for this model is usually done by summing the forces on the mass (including any applied external forces F external ) {\displaystyle F_{\text{external}})} :

Σ F = k x c x ˙ + F external = m x ¨ {\displaystyle \Sigma F=-kx-c{\dot {x}}+F_{\text{external}}=m{\ddot {x}}}

By rearranging this equation, we can derive the standard form:

x ¨ + 2 ζ ω n x ˙ + ω n 2 x = u {\displaystyle {\ddot {x}}+2\zeta \omega _{n}{\dot {x}}+\omega _{n}^{2}x=u} where ω n = k m ; ζ = c 2 m ω n ; u = F external m {\displaystyle \omega _{n}={\sqrt {\frac {k}{m}}};\quad \zeta ={\frac {c}{2m\omega _{n}}};\quad u={\frac {F_{\text{external}}}{m}}}

ω n {\displaystyle \omega _{n}} is the undamped natural frequency and ζ {\displaystyle \zeta } is the damping ratio. The homogeneous equation for the mass spring system is:

x ¨ + 2 ζ ω n x ˙ + ω n 2 x = 0 {\displaystyle {\ddot {x}}+2\zeta \omega _{n}{\dot {x}}+\omega _{n}^{2}x=0}

This has the solution:

x = A e ω n t ( ζ + ζ 2 1 ) + B e ω n t ( ζ ζ 2 1 ) {\displaystyle x=Ae^{-\omega _{n}t\left(\zeta +{\sqrt {\zeta ^{2}-1}}\right)}+Be^{-\omega _{n}t\left(\zeta -{\sqrt {\zeta ^{2}-1}}\right)}}

If ζ < 1 {\displaystyle \zeta <1} then ζ 2 1 {\displaystyle \zeta ^{2}-1} is negative, meaning the square root will be negative and therefore the solution will have an oscillatory component.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Solving mass spring damper systems in MATLAB" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Fast Simulation of Mass-Spring Systems" (PDF).


  • v
  • t
  • e