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Technical Paper

Development of Rumble Noise Analysis Method for Electric Powertrain

2023-04-11
2023-01-0459
In electric-powertrains, noise and vibration can be generated by components such as gears and motors. Often a noise phenomenon known as rumble or droning noise can occur due to low shaft order excitation at the spline. In this study, we identified the excitation source for spline induced rumble noise and developed a novel analysis method. First, a detailed spline model, believed to be the key factor for rumble noise, has been developed and verified by comparison with Finite Element Method(FEM) analysis. In order to identify an excitation source, a typical electric-powertrain assembly model including the developed spline model was constructed and simulated. Results according to changes of key factors including spline pitch errors and shaft alignment errors were analyzed. Spline radial force has been identified as an excitation source of spline induced rumble noise. This was verified through comparison with the forced vibration analysis result and time domain analysis result.
Journal Article

Robust Development of Electric Powertrain NVH for Compact Electric SUV

2020-09-30
2020-01-1503
Electric vehicles (EV’s) present new challenges to achieving the required noise, vibration & harshness performance (NVH) compared with conventional vehicles. Specifically, high-frequency noise and unexpected noise phenomenon, previously masked by the internal combustion engine can cause annoyance in an EV. Electric motor (E-motor) whine noise caused by electromagnetic excitation during E-motor operation is caused by torque ripple and radial excitation. Under high speed and high load operating conditions, the overall sound level may be low, however high frequency whine noise can impair the vehicle level NVH performance. An example of a previously masked unexpected noise phenomenon is a droning noise that can be caused by manufacturing quality variation of the spline coupling between the rotor shaft of the E-motor and the input shaft of the reducer. It is dominated by multiple higher orders of the E-motor rotation frequency.
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