A new earthquake-resistant
structural system for buildings, just successfully tested
in Japan, will not only help a multi-story building
hold itself together during a violent earthquake, but
also return it to standing up straight on its foundation
afterward, true and plumb, with damage confined to a
few easily replaceable parts.
The team that designed the system was led by researchers
at Stanford University and the University of Illinois.
During testing on a massive shake table, the system
survived simulated earthquakes in excess of magnitude
7, bigger than either the 1994 Northridge earthquake
or the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in California.
"This new structural system has the potential
to make buildings far more damage resistant and easier
to repair, so people could reoccupy buildings a lot
faster after a major earthquake than they can now,"
said Greg Deierlein, professor of civil and environmental
engineering at Stanford, who led the team that designed
the new system.
The system dissipates energy through the movement of
steel frames that are situated around the building's
core or along exterior walls. The frames can be part
of a building's initial design or could be incorporated
into an existing building undergoing seismic retrofitting.
They are economically feasible to build, as all the
materials employed are commonly used in construction
today and all the parts can be made using existing fabrication
methods.
"What is unique about these frames is that, unlike
conventional systems, they actually rock off their foundation
under large earthquakes," Deierlein said.
The rocking frames are steel braced-frames, the columns
of which are free to rock up and down within steel "shoes"
secured at their base. To control the rocking and return
the frame to vertical when the shaking stops, steel
tendons run down the center of the frame from top to
bottom. These tendons are made of high-strength steel
cable strands twisted together and designed to remain
elastic during shaking. When shaking is over, they rebound
to their normal length, pulling the building back into
proper alignment.
At the bottom of the frame sit steel "fuses"
designed keep the rest of the building from sustaining
damage.
"The idea of this structural system is that we
concentrate the damage in replaceable fuses," Deierlein
said. The fuses are built to flex and dissipate the
shaking energy induced by the earthquake, thereby confining
the damage. Like electrical fuses, the steel fuses are
easily replaced when they "blow out."
Deierlein and his colleagues conducted shake testing
of the new system in the last few weeks at the Hyogo
Earthquake Engineering Research Center in Miki City,
Japan. Using different types of fuses and various shaking
parameters, they conducted four major tests, the last
on Aug. 24. They had previously developed and tested
the individual components of the system and performed
computational analyses to simulate the system's performance
at laboratories at Stanford and the University of Illinois.
"We are really delighted," said Greg Deierlein,
who is the principal investigator on the project and
oversaw the testing in Japan. "This is the first
time we've put this whole system together to see how
it would respond dynamically in a building as if it
were subjected to an earthquake. It performs well under
extreme earthquake shaking."
Deierlein said that while various researchers have
been working for 10 or 15 years on some of the ideas
and techniques encompassed in the new system, this is
the first time anyone has put them all together to demonstrate
their performance.
How the tests were done
The tests of the new system were conducted using a
three-quarters size model of a standard modern three-story
office building with a footprint 120 by 180 feet. The
26-foot tall model sat on a massive vibrating shake
table – the largest in the world, measuring over
3,000 square feet in size – that is designed to
reproduce the shaking from different earthquakes.
For testing, Deierlein's group constructed a complete
three-story steel-braced frame that is sandwiched between
two concrete and steel structures in which they concentrated
all the mass that would normally be in a building that
size. Each of the three stories weighed 100 metric tons.
The researchers subjected their model to ground motions
recorded during the 1995 Kobe, Japan, earthquake, magnitude
6.9, and the 1994 Northridge earthquake, magnitude 6.7.
The U.S. Geological Survey characterizes the Northridge
temblor as the most costly in U.S. history, with losses
estimated at more than $40 billion. The Kobe earthquake
caused over 6,000 fatalities and economic losses are
estimated to have been three to five times greater than
Northridge.
System survived even extreme shaking
For some of the shake tests, Deierlein said his group
amplified the ground motion shaking from the actual
earthquake records to simulate the shaking that would
happen during the largest earthquake that each fault
is considered likely to generate.
"The rocking frame after that shaking is still
virtually undamaged, except that we have these fuses
in there that yield and deform, that absorb the energy,"
Deierlein said.
For the fourth and final test, the group used a motion
from the Northridge earthquake and scaled it up 1.75
times greater than the recorded motion, well in excess
of the Maximum Considered Earthquake. "The only
damage that occurred to the test frame was in the replaceable
fuses," said Deierlein. "This final test demonstrated
that the rocking frame is a reliable and effective system."
"Most buildings that we design today for large
earthquakes are designed such that when there is a large
earthquake, the building, in a sense, sacrifices itself
to save the occupants," Deierlein said. Buildings
that survive earthquakes often have to be torn down
because they are too deformed or damaged during the
shaking for it to be economical, or even physically
possible, to repair them.
"In this design, we are thinking ahead to minimizing
the damage that is going to be left in place after the
earthquake," Deierlein said. The elastic behavior
of the steel tendons, each of which consists of seven
steel wires similar to the wire used in modern suspension
bridges, is particularly critical to preventing residual
deformation of the building by pulling it back into
plumb when the shaking stops.
Other economic advantages and sustainability benefits
In addition to saving lives and minimizing repair costs,
widespread use of the new techniques could offer other
benefits.
"If more buildings are habitable right after an
earthquake, you will have less disruption to society,"
Deierlein said. That could greatly reduce how long economic
downturns and social disruptions linger after a major
earthquake. And there are potential environmental benefits.
"If you think of the sustainability issues, imagine
if you have a city where you have to end up tearing
down large numbers of buildings," he said. "In
terms of the environmental issues, there are tremendous
costs for disposing of construction materials in landfills,
coupled with the impacts of manufacturing the materials
used for rebuilding.
"We are trying to look at the embodied energy
of all of the materials that are used in the building,
the things that go into the concrete and steel making,
for example," Deierlein said. "By prolonging
the longevity of buildings, you have a really positive
sustainability impact."
A hoped-for ripple effect
Deierlein said the system he and his colleagues have
developed is applicable to steel-framed buildings up
to about 15 stories tall, but that the general approach
could be modified for other types of buildings.
"We hope that this concept implemented in this
braced-frame structure could have much broader applications
in terms of spurring the development of these same ideas,
but applied to alternate materials and alternate configurations,"
Deierlein said. "The concept of using this controlled
rocking with steel tendons that behave elastically and
these energy-dissipating fuses is a general concept
that could be applied in different materials and in
different forms."
Other Stanford researchers working with principal investigator
Deierlein on the project, all in the department of civil
and environmental engineering, include co-principal
investigator Associate Professor Sarah Billington, Professor
Emeritus Helmut Krawinkler and doctoral candidate Xiang
Ma.
The other co-principal investigator is Jerome Hajjar,
a professor of civil and environmental engineering at
the University of Illinois. The team also includes professional
structural engineers David Mar of Tipping Mar and Associates
of Berkeley, and Gregory Luth of Gregory P. Luth and
Associates of Santa Clara. International collaborators
include researchers from the Tokyo Institute of Technology
and Hokkaido University.
The shake testing was conducted using the Earthquake
Defense (E-Defense) shake table at the Hyogo Earthquake
Engineering Research Center in Miki City, Japan.
The research is funded by the National Science Foundation,
the National Research Institute for Earth Science and
Disaster Prevention in Japan, the American Institute
of Steel Construction and other industry groups.
For story and video feature: http://storybank.stanford.edu/stories/engineers-design-self-righting-buildings-survive-earthquake-test-style
Source: Stanford University
Story Bank, September 1, 2009
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