The Duffing equation (or Duffing oscillator), named after Georg Duffing (1861–1944), is a non-linear second-order differential equation used to model certain damped and driven oscillators. The equation is given by

Duffing oscillator plot, containing phase plot, trajectory, strange attractor, Poincare section, and double well potential plot. The parameters are , , , , and .
A Poincaré section of the forced Duffing equation suggesting chaotic behaviour (, , , , and ).
The strange attractor of the Duffing oscillator, through 4 periods ( time). Coloration shows how the points flow. (, , , , . The animation has time offset so driving force is rather than .)
where the (unknown) function is the displacement at time t, is the first derivative of with respect to time, i.e. velocity, and is the second time-derivative of i.e. acceleration. The numbers and are given constants.

The equation describes the motion of a damped oscillator with a more complex potential than in simple harmonic motion (which corresponds to the case ); in physical terms, it models, for example, an elastic pendulum whose spring's stiffness does not exactly obey Hooke's law.

The Duffing equation is an example of a dynamical system that exhibits chaotic behavior. Moreover, the Duffing system presents in the frequency response the jump resonance phenomenon that is a sort of frequency hysteresis behaviour.

Parameters edit

The parameters in the above equation are:

  •   controls the amount of damping,
  •   controls the linear stiffness,
  •   controls the amount of non-linearity in the restoring force; if   the Duffing equation describes a damped and driven simple harmonic oscillator,
  •   is the amplitude of the periodic driving force; if   the system is without a driving force, and
  •   is the angular frequency of the periodic driving force.

The Duffing equation can be seen as describing the oscillations of a mass attached to a nonlinear spring and a linear damper. The restoring force provided by the nonlinear spring is then  

When   and   the spring is called a hardening spring. Conversely, for   it is a softening spring (still with  ). Consequently, the adjectives hardening and softening are used with respect to the Duffing equation in general, dependent on the values of   (and  ).[1]

The number of parameters in the Duffing equation can be reduced by two through scaling (in accord with the Buckingham π theorem), e.g. the excursion   and time   can be scaled as:[2]   and   assuming   is positive (other scalings are possible for different ranges of the parameters, or for different emphasis in the problem studied). Then:[3]

 
where
  •  
  •   and
  •  

The dots denote differentiation of   with respect to   This shows that the solutions to the forced and damped Duffing equation can be described in terms of the three parameters ( ,  , and  ) and two initial conditions (i.e. for   and  ).

Methods of solution edit

In general, the Duffing equation does not admit an exact symbolic solution. However, many approximate methods work well:

In the special case of the undamped ( ) and undriven ( ) Duffing equation, an exact solution can be obtained using Jacobi's elliptic functions.[6]

Boundedness of the solution for the unforced oscillator edit

Undamped oscillator edit

Multiplication of the undamped and unforced Duffing equation,   with   gives:[7]

 
with H a constant. The value of H is determined by the initial conditions   and  

The substitution   in H shows that the system is Hamiltonian:

 

When both   and   are positive, the solution is bounded:[7]

 
with the Hamiltonian H being positive.

Damped oscillator edit

Similarly, the damped oscillator converges globally, by Lyapunov function method[8]

 
since   for damping. Without forcing the damped Duffing oscillator will end up at (one of) its stable equilibrium point(s). The equilibrium points, stable and unstable, are at   If   the stable equilibrium is at   If   and   the stable equilibria are at   and  

Frequency response edit

The forced Duffing oscillator with cubic nonlinearity is described by the following ordinary differential equation:

 

The frequency response of this oscillator describes the amplitude   of steady state response of the equation (i.e.  ) at a given frequency of excitation   For a linear oscillator with   the frequency response is also linear. However, for a nonzero cubic coefficient  , the frequency response becomes nonlinear. Depending on the type of nonlinearity, the Duffing oscillator can show hardening, softening or mixed hardening–softening frequency response. Anyway, using the homotopy analysis method or harmonic balance, one can derive a frequency response equation in the following form:[9][5]

 

For the parameters of the Duffing equation, the above algebraic equation gives the steady state oscillation amplitude   at a given excitation frequency.

Derivation of the frequency response

Using the method of harmonic balance, an approximate solution to the Duffing equation is sought of the form:[9]

 
with   and  

Application in the Duffing equation leads to:

 

Neglecting the superharmonics at   the two terms preceding   and   have to be zero. As a result,

 

Squaring both equations and adding leads to the amplitude frequency response:

 
as stated above.

Graphically solving for frequency response edit

We may graphically solve for   as the intersection of two curves in the   plane:

 
For fixed  , the second curve is a fixed hyperbola in the first quadrant. The first curve is a parabola with shape  , and apex at location  . If we fix   and vary  , then the apex of the parabola moves along the line  .

Graphically, then, we see that if   is a large positive number, then as   varies, the parabola intersects the hyperbola at one point, then three points, then one point again. Similarly we can analyze the case when   is a large negative number.

Jumps edit

 
Jumps in the frequency response. The parameters are:  ,  , and  .[9]

For certain ranges of the parameters in the Duffing equation, the frequency response may no longer be a single-valued function of forcing frequency   For a hardening spring oscillator (  and large enough positive  ) the frequency response overhangs to the high-frequency side, and to the low-frequency side for the softening spring oscillator (  and  ). The lower overhanging side is unstable – i.e. the dashed-line parts in the figures of the frequency response – and cannot be realized for a sustained time. Consequently, the jump phenomenon shows up:

  • when the angular frequency   is slowly increased (with other parameters fixed), the response amplitude   drops at A suddenly to B,
  • if the frequency   is slowly decreased, then at C the amplitude jumps up to D, thereafter following the upper branch of the frequency response.

The jumps A–B and C–D do not coincide, so the system shows hysteresis depending on the frequency sweep direction.[9]

Transition to chaos edit

The above analysis assumed that the base frequency response dominates (necessary for performing harmonic balance), and higher frequency responses are negligible. This assumption fails to hold when the forcing is sufficiently strong. Higher order harmonics cannot be neglected, and the dynamics become chaotic. There are different possible transitions to chaos, most commonly by successive period doubling.[10]

Examples edit

Time traces and phase portraits
period-1 oscillation at  
period-2 oscillation at  
period-4 oscillation at  
period-5 oscillation at  
chaos at  
period-2 oscillation at  

Some typical examples of the time series and phase portraits of the Duffing equation, showing the appearance of subharmonics through period-doubling bifurcation – as well chaotic behavior – are shown in the figures below. The forcing amplitude increases from   to  . The other parameters have the values:  ,  ,   and  . The initial conditions are   and   The red dots in the phase portraits are at times   which are an integer multiple of the period  .[11]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Thompson, J. M. T.; Stewart, H. B. (2002). Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos. John Wiley & Sons. p. 66. ISBN 9780471876847.
  2. ^ Lifshitz, R.; Cross, M. C. (2008). "Nonlinear mechanics of nanomechanical and micromechanical resonators". In Schuster, H. G. (ed.). Reviews of Nonlinear Dynamics and Complexity. Wiley. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9783527407293. LCCN 2008459659.
  3. ^ a b Brennan, M. J.; Kovacic, I.; Carrella, A.; Waters, T. P. (2008). "On the jump-up and jump-down frequencies of the Duffing oscillator". Journal of Sound and Vibration. 318 (4–5): 1250–1261. Bibcode:2008JSV...318.1250B. doi:10.1016/j.jsv.2008.04.032.
  4. ^ Kovacic, I.; Brennan, M. J., eds. (2011), The Duffing Equation: Nonlinear Oscillators and their Behaviour, Wiley, pp. 123–127, ISBN 978-0-470-71549-9
  5. ^ a b Tajaddodianfar, F.; Yazdi, M. R. H.; Pishkenari, H. N. (2016). "Nonlinear dynamics of MEMS/NEMS resonators: analytical solution by the homotopy analysis method". Microsystem Technologies. 23 (6): 1913–1926. doi:10.1007/s00542-016-2947-7. S2CID 113216381.
  6. ^ Rand, R. H. (2012), Lecture notes on nonlinear vibrations (PDF), 53, Cornell University, pp. 13–17
  7. ^ a b Bender, C. M.; Orszag, S. A. (1999), Advanced Mathematical Methods for Scientists and Engineers I: Asymptotic Methods and Perturbation Theory, Springer, p. 546, Bibcode:1999amms.book.....B, ISBN 9780387989310
  8. ^ Takashi Kanamaru (ed.). "Duffing oscillator". Scholarpedia.
  9. ^ a b c d Jordan & Smith 2007, pp. 223–233
  10. ^ Ueda, Yoshisuke (January 1, 1991). "Survey of regular and chaotic phenomena in the forced Duffing oscillator". Chaos, Solitons & Fractals. 1 (3): 199–231. Bibcode:1991CSF.....1..199U. doi:10.1016/0960-0779(91)90032-5. ISSN 0960-0779.
  11. ^ Based on the examples shown in Jordan & Smith 2007, pp. 453–462.

Bibliography edit

  • Duffing, G. (1918), Erzwungene Schwingungen bei veränderlicher Eigenfrequenz und ihre technische Bedeutung [Forced oscillations with variable natural frequency and their technical relevance] (in German), vol. Heft 41/42, Braunschweig: Vieweg, vi+134 pp, OCLC 12003652
  • Addison, P. S. (1997), Fractals and Chaos: An illustrated course, CRC Press, pp. 147–148, ISBN 9780849384431
  • Jordan, D. W.; Smith, P. (2007), Nonlinear ordinary differential equations – An introduction for scientists and engineers (4th ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-920824-1

External links edit