Vib Training-Hpc Cachar
Vib Training-Hpc Cachar
On
Vibration Analysis
1
What Is Vibration?
It is the response of a
system to an internal or
external force which causes
the system to oscillate.
2
What Is Vibration Analysis?
Vibration analysis
is a non-destructive
technique which
helps early
detection of machine
problems by
measuring vibration.
3
Detection By Vibration
Analysis
1. Unbalance(Static, Couple, Quasi-Static),
2. Misalignment(Angular, Parallel, Combination)
3. Eccentric Rotor, Bent Shaft
4. Mechanical Looseness, Structural Weakness, Soft Foot
5. Resonance, Beat Vibration
6. Mechanical Rubbing
7. Problems Of Belt Driven Machines
8. Journal Bearing Defects
9. Antifriction Bearing Defects
(Inner race, Outer race, Cage, Rolling Elements)
10.Problems of Hydrodynamic & Aerodynamic Machines
(Blade Or Vane, Flow turbulence, Cavitation)
11.Gear Problems (Tooth wear, Tooth load, Gear eccentricity,
Backlash, Gear misalignment, Cracked Or Broken Tooth)
12.Electrical Problems of AC & DC Motor ( Variable Air Gap,
Rotor Bar Defect, Problems of SCRs)
4
Basic Theory Of Vibration
Simple Spring Mass System
Max Acc
Mim Vel
Upper
Limit
Displacement
Max Vel
Neutral Mim Acc
Position
Lower
Position Max Acc
Mim Vel
5
Frequency & Amplitude
Frequency:
How many times oscillation is occurring
for a given time period?
Units: CPS(Hz), CPM
Amplitude:
It is the magnitude of vibration signal.
Units: Micron, MM/Sec, M/Sec2
6
Physical Significance Of
Vibration Characteristics
Frequency - What is vibrating?
Source of the vibration.
7
Frequency Measurement
60 RPM
= 1 Rev / s
= 1 Hz
8
Amplitude Measurement
1. Displacement :
Total distance traveled by the mass.
Unit : Microns
2. Velocity :
Rate of change of displacement. It is the
measure of the speed at which the mass is
vibrating during its oscillation.
Unit : MM/Sec, Inch/sec
3. Acceleration :
It is the rate of change of velocity. The
greater the rate of change of velocity the
greater the forces (P=mf) on the machines.
Unit : M/Sec2, Inch/sec2
9
A
B
C a
t
b
t
c
t
10
+
11
Physical Significance Of Vibration
Amplitude
12
When To Use Disp., Vel. & Acc.?
VIBRATION
SENSITIVITY DISPLACEMENT
10
VELOCITY
.1
.01
.001
ACCELERATION
13
What Is The Advantage Of Using
Velocity?
• Flat frequency range compared to
displacement & acceleration.
• Almost all machines generate fault
frequency between 600CPM to 60KCPM
• Velocity indicates fatigue.
• Velocity is the best indicator of
vibration severity.
14
Scales Of Amplitude
Peak
RMS
Peak to Peak
Av.
Peak - a
Peak to Peak - 2a
RMS - 0.707 a
Average - 0.637 a
15
FFT
Spectrum
Analysis
16
What Is FFT?
17
FFT mathematically converts overall complex
signal into individual amplitudes at component
frequencies
18
• Different machinery problems cause
vibration at different frequencies.
19
Pure sinus
t CPM
2 sine waves
t CPM
20
Pure sinus
0.900984
1.41421
x
i spec
j
-1.41421
0 i 100 1.06721e-008
trace 1 0 j 400
CPM
3 sine waves
1
x spec
i j
1.17033e-008
i 0 j 400 CPM
Complex motion
3.75895
14.1221
x
i spec
j
-14.7102
0 i 200
0.00679134
trace 1 0 j 400
CPM
21
Spectrum
Analysis
Techniques
22
Step - 1
Collect useful information
• History of machine.
• Control room data - speed, feed,
temperature, pressure etc.
• Name plate details - bearing no,
no of gear teeth etc.
• Design operating parameters,
critical speed.
23
Step - 2 : Identify the type of
measurement procedure:
1. Identify measurement type-Disp, Vel, Acc.
24
Conversion Of Spectrums
Displacement
Displacement-- Microns
Microns
Speed - 2889 RPM
Velocity - mm/s
Acceleration - m/s2
25
2. Measurement direction - Hori, Vert, Axial.
26
27
Step - 3
Analyze:
1. Evaluate overall vibration reading of the entire
machine.
(a) Identify 1x RPM peak.
(b) Locate highest amplitude.
(c) What is the direction of the highest amplitude?
(d) What is the frequency of the highest amplitude?
2. See the values of Shock pulse, HFD etc.
3. See the trend - in case of sudden increase the
problem severity increases.
4. Analyze the frequency for possible defects.
5. Analyze the phase readings for confirmation if
necessary.
28
Manual
Vibration
Analysis
29
Detection By Vibration Analysis
1. Unbalance(Static, Couple, Quasi-Static),
2. Misalignment(Angular, Parallel, Combination)
3. Eccentric Rotor, Bent Shaft
4. Mechanical Looseness, Structural Weakness, Soft Foot
5. Resonance, Beat Vibration
6. Mechanical Rubbing
7. Problems Of Belt Driven Machines
8. Journal Bearing Defects
9. Antifriction Bearing Defects
(Inner race, Outer race, Cage, Rolling Elements)
10.Hydrodynamic & Aerodynamic Forces
(Blade Or Vane, Flow turbulence, Cavitation)
11.Gear Problems (Tooth wear, Tooth load, Gear eccentricity,
Backlash, Gear misalignment, Cracked Or Broken Tooth)
12.Electrical Problems of AC & DC Motor ( Variable Air Gap,
Rotor Bar Defect, Problems of SCRs)
30
Unbalance
31
Causes Of Unbalance
• Uneven distribution of mass of rotor.
• Dirt accumulation on fan rotors.
• Rotor eccentricity
• Roller deflection, especially in paper machines
• Machining errors
• Uneven erosion and corrosion of pump impellers
• Missing balance weights
32
Types Of Unbalance
• Static Unbalance
• Couple Unbalance
• Overhang Rotor Unbalance
33
Static Unbalance
Detection:
• Highest horizontal vibration
• Amplitude increases as square of speed.
• Dominant frequency at 1x rpm
• Horizontal readings reflect in vertical direction
also.
34
Correction
35
Couple Unbalance
Detection:
• High horizontal & axial vibration
• Dominant frequency at 1x RPM
36
Correction
37
Overhung Rotor Unbalance
Detection:
• High horizontal & axial vibration
• Dominant frequency at 1x RPM
38
Correction
39
Misalignment
40
Causes Of Misalignment
•Machine vibrations.
•Soft foot.
•Poor workmanship.
41
Types Of Misalignment
1. Off set
2. Angular
3. Skew - Combination of
offset & angular
42
Diagnosis Of
Misalignment
43
1.Vibration Spectrum Analysis:
45
Bent Shaft
Diagnosis:
1. High 1X axial and high 1X radial if bent is near the center.
2. High 2X axial and high 2X radial if bent is near the coupling.
3. Amplitude of 1X & 2X rpm will be steady.
4. SPM readings also high.
5. High bearing temperature.
46
Eccentric Rotor
47
Resonance
48
Beat Vibration
49
Mechanical
Looseness
50
Causes
51
Types
52
1. Structural frame/base looseness (1X)
Caused by-
1. Structural looseness/weakness of machine feet,
base plate & concrete base.
2. Deteriorated grouting.
3. Deterioration of frame or base
4. Soft foot.
5. Loose holding down bolts.
53
Analysis
• Dominant freq 1X. Similar to
unbalance & misalignment.
54
2. Cracked structure/bearing pedestal (2X)
Caused by-
1. Crack in the structure or bearing pedestal.
2. Occasionally on some loose bearing housing bolts.
3. Loose bearing or improper component fit.
Analysis-
1. 2X RPM amplitude is > 150% of 1X RPM amplitude in
radial direction.
2. Amplitudes are somewhat erratic.
3. 2X RPM phase somewhat erratic.
55
3. Rotating looseness
Caused by-
1. Loose rotor.
2. Bearing loose in the housing.
3. Bearing loose in the shaft.
4. Excessive bearing internal clearance.
56
Analysis
57
Journal
Bearing
58
Oil Whirl
59
A symptom peculiar for journal bearings is oil whirl.
It shows up as a vibration of approx. 0.42-0.48 X RPM.
Oil whirl can be diagnosed by increasing the load which
will decrease the subsyncronous vibration.
0.45X
severe oil whirl will cause looseness
mm/s rms
1X
2X
frequency
60
Journal Looseness
(Rotating Looseness)
61
Rotor Rub
62
Rolling
Element
Bearing
63
Why Does Bearing Fail?
1. Improper lubrication
2. Contaminated lubrication
3. Heavier loading from unbalance,
misalignment, bent shaft etc.
4. Improper handling or installation.
5. Old age (Surface fatigue) .
64
Bearing Failure Detection
65
Bearing Failure Stages
Stage - 1
66
Stage - 2
67
Stage - 3
69
Rolling element bearings
1. d. . RPM
FTF 1 cos RPM = Shaft rotation
2 D
2 d = Rolling element diameter
D . d. . RPM
BSF 1 cos
2. d D D = Pitch diameter
= Contact angle
BPFI N. ( RPM - FTF)
70
Rolling element bearings
What do the bearing frequencies mean?
If:
FTF = 0.381 * RPM
BSF = 1.981 * RPM
BPFO = 3.047 * RPM
BPFI = 4.952 * RPM
71
Gear Box
72
Gear box
Z1
RPM1
RPM2
Z2
73
Gear Box Defects
• Tooth wear
• Gear eccentricity & backlash
• Gear misalignment
• Cracked or broken tooth
• Hunting tooth
74
Gear box
1/Rps
Z.Rps
Z.Rps-Rps Z.Rps+Rps
velocity
velocity
Z.Rps-2 Rps Z.Rps+2 Rps
frequency time
75
Normal Spectrum
77
Gear Eccentricity & Backlash
79
Cracked / Broken Tooth
80
Hunting Tooth
81
Hunting Tooth Frequency
It is the rate at which a tooth in one gear mates with a particular
tooth in the other gear.
Ex:
Z1 = 63, Z2 = 12
Z1 = 63 = 7.3.3
Z2 = 12 = 3.2.2
lowest common prime factor = 3
HTF = GMF. 3 / (63.12) = GMF / 252
82
Belt Drive
d D
83
Belt Drive Eccentric sheaves
force
84
Belt Drive Sheave misalignment
Off-set Angular
85
Fans
Fan Blade Pass Frequency = RPM x no. of fan blades
(FBPF)
86
Pumps
Vibration signature depends upon operating condition.
pressure, temperature, speed, cavitation….
Centrifugal pumps
at Vane Pass Frequency = RPM . no. of impeller vanes
and harmonics.
Gear pumps
at Gear Mesh Frequency and 1X sidebands
Screw pumps
at thread rate = RPM . number of threads and its
harmonics.
87
Electrical
Motors
88
AC Motors
Asyncronous AC motors
Running speed:
If no. of poles = 2.
The motor will have a sync. RPM of 3000
89
AC Motors
90
AC Motors
Coast Down Test
91
AC Motors
Faults possible to detect with vibration analysis:
Rotor thermal bow
Air gap eccentricity
Loose rotor
Eccentric rotor
Loose windings
Necessary data:
No. of stator slots (SPF)
No. of rotor bars (RBPF)
Line frequency (LF)
Slip frequency (SF)
92
AC Motors
Frequency analysis of input current
current clamp
94
Identification
For 3 phase rectified D.C. motors
95
Synchronous time averaging
-suppresses vibrations not synchronous with the measured object.
Roll 2
RPM Sampling always starts at
VIB
’tacho signal’ from roll 1.
Roll 1
3 3
2X 3X
1X
1X 2X 3X
0
0
One measurement Average of 10 measurements
96
Enveloping
Detects low amplitude high frequency repetitive
bearing or gear mesh defects.
97
ISO 2372
Class Class Class Class Class Class
Limits
1 Step
98
Case - 1 Pump Impeller Wear
Summary
This case documents a 100 hp monitored
over a period of 2 years (1500 rpm).
99
The pump has – 3 vanes on the impeller
and an internal inspection indicated
impeller wears.
10
Analysis
10
Theoretical Consideration:
Problems with blades and vanes are
usually characterized by high
vibration or near the harmonic
frequency corresponding to the
rotation speed X No. of blades. Blade
pass frequency usually exists in
normal operating machines, but
harmonics usually indicates problem.
10
Problem Diagnosis:
10
Results
Corrective Action:
The pump impeller was removed and
replaced.
Findings:
Overall vibration reading taken after repair
amplitudes significantly reduced.
10
Conclusions
10