Rigid sub structure damping system and method for protecting structures subjected to dynamic forces
10352058 ยท 2019-07-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16F9/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04B1/18
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04H9/0235
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04H9/0215
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F16F15/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F15/0275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04B1/98
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E04B1/18
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E02D27/34
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F16F15/027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F9/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A rigid substructure (12) tied to a restrained column (16) at different floors undergoes rigid body rotation due to lateral dynamic loading. Flexural members (18) that are connected to the substructure (12) and another anchor column (14) resist the rigid body rotation and undergo vertical deflections. Damped diagonals (20) connected to common nodes of the rigid substructure and flexural members, for one embodiment, receive amplified displacements and more effectively dissipate energy. Flexural members restore the structure to the unloaded position. The system does not require moment connections and can work with flexure induced in simply supported beams. The system is highly effective and may remain elastic under maximum considered earthquake ground motions.
Claims
1. A passively damped building structure comprising: a restrained column; an anchor column; at least a first and a second floor-beam where each floor-beam is connected from one side to the restrained column and from another side to the anchor column; a rigid two dimensional sub-structure, two corners of which are two connection points of the first and the second floor-beams with the restrained column, and a third corner of which is a nodal point C on the first, the second, or a third floor-beam, wherein the nodal point C is located between the restrained and the anchor column; a one dimensional damping element that connects the nodal point C to a connection point of the anchor column with a floor-beam on which the nodal point C does not lie; wherein the damping element absorbs an energy deposited by the lateral forces into the elastically deformed structure; and wherein the passively damped building structure only has two columns, the restrained column and the anchor column.
2. The building structure of claim 1, wherein the first floor-beam and the second floor-beam are not consecutive floor-beams and may span a few floors.
3. The building structure of claim 1, wherein the one dimensional damping element and the rigid substructure lie in two different planes that intersect.
4. The building structure of claim 1, wherein the rigid substructure is a concrete wall.
5. The building structure of claim 1, wherein the floor-beams are concrete slabs.
6. A damped-motion structure comprising: a first column; a second column; multiple floor-beams where each floor-beam is connected from one side to the first column and from another side to the second column; a two-dimensional multi-sided rigid substructure a side of which is a part of the first column and a corner of which, called nodal point, is over one of the floor-beams between the two columns; a one dimensional damping element that connects the nodal point to a connection point of the second column with a floor-beam on which the nodal point does not lie; wherein the damping element absorbs an energy deposited by the lateral forces into the elastically deformed structure; and wherein the damped-motion structure only has two columns, the first column and the second column.
7. The building structure of claim 6, wherein the one dimensional damping element and the rigid substructure lie in two different planes that intersect.
8. The building structure of claim 6, wherein the rigid substructure is a concrete wall.
9. The building structure of claim 6, wherein the floor-beams are concrete slabs.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) The accompanying figures illustrate exemplary embodiments of the concepts that explain principles and behavior of those embodiments, also includes a numerical example that indicates significance of the usage of the system.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) One aspect of this disclosure is directed to a rigid substructure damping system for protecting large structures subjected to dynamic forces, such as earthquakes. The structure includes at least one rigid substructure that incorporates a segment of one and only one column that is directly supported by a foundation therefore prevented against vertical movement, referred to as restrained column hereinafter. The rigid substructure and the restrained column extend between two floors that are not necessarily consecutive. The method for providing rigidity to the substructure is known and as an example, it can be obtained by using elements forming a truss which can be composed of one or more triangles or it can be obtained by using solid walls with or without openings. Since the rigid substructure is integrated with the restrained column at least at the two levels, when dynamic forces create different lateral displacement at the floor levels, the restrained segment of the column tilts and the rigid substructure undergoes rigid body rotation. Having more than one restrained column in a planar rigid substructure should be avoided as it would prevent the rigid substructure motion as a rigid body. Nodal points on the rigid substructure at a distance from the constrained column would effectively undergo vertical displacements. These nodes are called active nodes in this text.
(12) This system further includes another column which is different from the restrained column and is not directly connected to any node of the substructure, called an anchor column here that connects to floors at anchor nodes. Anchor nodes are connection points on anchor columns for other members of the system and would receive vertical and horizontal force components. Therefore when anchor nodes are at floor levels can transfer the horizontal force component to the floor slab. However it is possible to consider anchor nodes between floors and design the anchor column for the horizontal force component.
(13) This system further includes one or more flexural members such as beams and/or floor slabs, referred to as flexural members, each connected to at least one active node and to an anchor node. Each of such flexural members can be extended to the restrained column and/or from the anchor column to another vertical support. Connection types used at the ends of the flexural members can be hinged or can have fixity, capable of transferring moments. The requirement for the continuity and connection types of a flexural member is that, due to vertical displacement of any of its active nodes, the flexural member be bent, resisting the vertical displacement of the active node. Therefore, a flexural member opposes the drift in the structure and exerts an internal stabilizing force to the system as the vertical displacement of the active node is tied to the lateral drift.
(14) The system further includes one or more elongated damped diagonals each from the first end, operatively connected to an anchor node and from the second end connected to an active node of the system or any other node that moves in the vertical direction due to the deflection of a flexural member. Damped diagonals usually include a damper extension at least from one end to suit for installation or can be available as a Buckling Restrained Brace. The extensions and connections of the elongated damped diagonals are designed with adequate stiffness such that the damper or the energy dissipation segment receives a significant portion of the displacement between the two ends of the elongated damped diagonal for increased efficiency. Velocity-activated and/or displacement-activated dampers can be used.
(15) Lateral stability of a multi-story building using the rigid substructure damping system follows the principles of using conventional bracing and moment frame systems. Also, instability of the structural system can be captured by computer programs capable of analysis of structures with dampers. Therefore principles of combining units of rigid substructure damping system for stabilizing a multi-story structure are known and need not be included here. Hence only different embodiments that can stabilize two or more floors with respect to each other in a particular direction are described in this text. In addition the computer programs capture the amplification effects and deflection of the flexural members of the system, therefore manual calculations are not necessary.
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(25) In this disclosure the stiffness of the lateral load resisting system at every story is time-dependent and varies as a function of damper displacements (assuming displacement activated dampers). Therefore the stiffness at different levels varies with damper functionality. However, when all dampers are removed from the structure it is a relatively soft structural system and when dampers are present its stiffness is as high as a braced system. This system of stiffness variation as implemented in this disclosure leads to the elimination of the need for moment connections or conventional bracing in steel structures as well as mechanical amplification elements. In fact, the system provides lateral stiffness by bending in the flexural members with reduced spans as well as amplification of displacements in dampers that are achieved by usage of rigid substructures.
(26) The structural system described in this disclosure has been examined using different mathematical models subjected to different strong ground motions. All numerical results indicate a high level of energy absorption by dampers and improvement of performance indicators to the extent that achieving an elastic structural response seems to be feasible. It should be noted that the performance goal for most buildings is at Collapse Prevention level which means acceptance of nonlinear deformations, material degradation and some damage to structural and nonstructural elements. Therefore being able to design a building to behave elastically using this system is a major advancement.
(27) While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope, but rather as an exemplification of several embodiments thereof. Many other variations are possible. For example, one may utilize a three dimensional rigid substructure that includes more than one restrained column provided that the rigid substructure would be turn-able due to the structural drift with some active nodes that can be connected to one or more damped diagonals that are connected to more than one anchor columns and the flexural members may be connected to such three dimensional rigid substructure in any way that can restore the structure to its laterally unloaded position. Accordingly, the scope should be determined not by the embodiments illustrated but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.