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Civil Engineering Applications of Vibration Control (Structural Control)

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Vibration control of civil structures is more recent as compared to machines ... ground motion is filtered out and the fundamental vibration period is lengthened. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Engineering Applications of Vibration Control (Structural Control)


1
Civil Engineering Applications of Vibration
Control (Structural Control)
  • Naresh K. Chandiramani, Associate Professor
  • Room 141, Dept. of Civil Engineering

2
Structural Control
  • Vibration control of civil structures is more
    recent as compared to machines aerospace
    vehicles.
  • Earthquakes and wind loads - main sources of
    structural vibrations.
  • Control vibrations by changing rigidity, mass,
    damping, shape, or applying passive or active
    control forces.
  • gt 20 full scale active control appl. in Japan
  • Passive base isolation used in USA.
  • Retrofitting reqd. if new seismic activity
    detected
  • High strength may result in high acceleration
    levels, so increasing strength alone wont always
    work.

3
Structural control versus Mechanical Aerospace
control
  • Environmental disturbances (wind, earthquake
    excitations) occur over wide range of frequency
    and amplitudes, i.e., they are uncertain, whereas
    mechanical loads are usually deterministic.
  • Civil structures (without control) are stable and
    may get destabilized with active control, whereas
    aerospace structures require active control for
    stabilization.
  • Performance specifications for civil structures
    are coarse (e.g., peak amplitude, time for motion
    to settle down).

4
Mathematical model of structure.
Fig. 1 (a) Mathematical model, (b) Schematic of
a building
  • In a simplified model, the masses correspond to
    slab masses and stiffnesses correspond to column
    stiffnesses (i.e, the force required per unit
    lateral displacement of column)

5
Passive control Base isolation
Fig. 2 (a) Schematic of base isolated building,
(b) Model, (c) Rubber bearing
6
Passive control Base isolation
  • Structure mounted on a suitably flexible base
    such that the high frequency component of ground
    motion is filtered out and the fundamental
    vibration period is lengthened. This results in
    deformation in the isolation system only, thus
    keeping the structure above almost rigid.
    However, if the earthquake excitation contains a
    major component of this fundamental period, there
    will be large sidesway (albeit almost rigid)
    motions.
  • San Fransisco city hall (retrofitted, 530 rubber
    bearings), International terminal at SF airport
    (267 Friction pendulum sliding bearings).
  • Not suitable for tall slender buildings (subject
    to high wind loads). For these auxiliary dampers
    (viscous, viscoleastic) are deployed (eg. WTC).

7
Passive control Tuned Mass Damper (vibration
absorber)
Fig. 3 (a) TMD schematic, (b) Response
8
Passive control Tuned Mass Damper (vibration
absorber)
  • TMD, usually having mass about 1 that of
    structure, fitted to top of building. It is tuned
    to reduce vibration for given frequency range.
  • Absorber mass takes up vibratory energy, leaving
    the main mass (building) almost static.
  • Not very useful for earthquake excitations which
    occur over wide frequency range.
  • Main system properties (stiffness-k1, mass-m1)
    known, absorber system properties (stiffness-k2,
    mass-m2) to be designed such that absorber
    frequency equals excitation frequency (w2w).
  • Examples John Hancock Tower (Boston), Citicorp
    Building (New York).

9
Passive control Untuned viscous absorber
Fig. 4 (a) Model of untuned viscous absorber,
(b) Response
10
Types of passive control devices
  • Metallic yield damper relies on the principle
    that the metallic device deforms plastically,
    thus dissipating vibratory energy. Used in
    earthquake applications.
  • Friction devices here friction between sliding
    faces is used to dissipate energy. When used in
    base isolation systems, the friction coefficient
    has conflicting requirements. It should not be
    too large otherwise shear forces from ground
    during a strong earthquake will transmit to the
    structure. Also it should not be too small or the
    entire structure will move due to small/medium
    wind/earthquake loads. These devices can also be
    fitted between two storeys to damp their relative
    motion. Used in earthquake applications.

11
Types of passive control devices
  • Viscous/ Viscoelastic devices Example is fluid
    in a cylinder with piston having an orifice.
    These can also be semi-active (eg., variable
    orifice, variable viscosity). Used in earthquake
    and wind applications.
  • Tuned mass dampers problems are size of the mass
    to be used and its displacement relative to the
    structure, in order that damping is effective.
  • Liquid sloshing dampers, Impact dampers.

12
Classification of Control Methods
  • Active/Feedback control
  • External source of power drives actuators (i.e.,
    provides input voltage) .
  • Voltages required are computed by controller
    using certain algorithms with inputs from
    sensors.
  • Sensors measure motion (strains, displ, vel,
    accl.)
  • Actuators apply forces to structure, thereby
    adding or dissipating energy.
  • Examples of sensors are acceleromters, strain
    gauges.
  • Examples of actuators are tendons, solenoids,
    piezoelectric stacks, active mass dampers (AMD).
  • Destabilization possible.
  • External power may not be available during
    earthquake.

13
Classification of Control Methods
  • Passive control
  • No external power required.
  • Passive control device (TMD, Base Isolator)
    imparts forces that are developed directly as a
    result of motion of structure (i.e., no actuator
    involved).
  • Total energy (structure passive device) cannot
    increase, hence inherently stable.
  • Relatively inexpensive.
  • Reliable during earthquake
  • Not as effective as active, hybrid, semi-active
    control.

14
Classification of Control Methods
  • Hybrid control
  • Uses active passive devices.
  • Advantages of both active and passive systems are
    present and their limitations are reduced.
  • Essentially an active control system
  • Examples viscous damping with AMD, base
    isolation with actuators, TMDAMD).

15
Classification of Control Methods
  • Semi-active control
  • Uses devices where input power requirements are
    orders of magnitude less than fully active
    devices. In fact in some cases battery power is
    sufficient.
  • These devices usually dont add energy to the
    system, hence stability ensured.
  • These devices can be viewed as controllable
    passive devices (eg., Magneto-Rheological Fluid
    damper where voltage input applied to change
    viscosity depending on motion measured by
    sensors, variable orifice damper, controllable
    friction devices, variable stiffness devices).

16
Active Control
  • The goal is to design a control system to keep
    stresses/strains/displ./accel. (called outputs)
    at certain locations below specified bounds
    (peak, rms) when disturbances (wind, earthquake)
    below specified bound are applied.
  • Designer decides choice of outputs based on
    comfort (e.g. accelerations) and safety (e.g.
    stresses).

17
Active Control
Fig. 5 Schematic of an active control system
18
Active control
Fig. 6 Implementation of control
19
Active control
The above provides a simple comparison between
active and passive control. In passive control,
the additional stiffness is chosen and fixed,
i.e., like a re-designed structure. In passive
control the actuator applies a force to the
original structure, the force being proportional
to the displacement measured by sensor (which is
proportional to the sensors output voltage) . In
active control the main task of design is
determining the proportionality constant
20
Active Control
  • Outline of Design Process
  • Develop mathematical model of the structure and
    the chosen sensors and actuators.
  • Adopt a mathematical model for the disturbances
    (i.e., wind, earthquake load).
  • Decide performance specifications (eg., peak
    accleration, time to settle down after
    disturbance applied, etc).
  • Choose type of control algorithm (i.e., how to
    obtain the proportionality constant and hence
    actuation voltages/forces from sensor voltages).
    Then design controller so that performance specs
    are met. Examples of control algorithms are
    proportional, integral, derivative, PI, PID,
    optimal control, robust control, etc.

21
Active control with TMD
Fig. 7 Schematic of AMD applied to building
22
Active control with TMD
Fig. 8 AMD on Kyobashi Seiwa building
23
Active control
  • First full scale application of active control to
    a building was done on Kyobashi Seiwa building
    (Japan) in 1989 (Fig. 7,8). Two AMDs were used.
    Primary one weighs 4t and damps transverse
    motion. Secondary one weighs 1t and damps
    torsional motion.
  • Can also use Magnetorheological fluid dampers
    (semi-active), active tendons, etc. (Fig. 9, 10,
    11)

24
Semi-Active control with MRD
Fig. 9 Control using MR dampers (a) two dampers
(b) single damper
25
Actuators MR Damper
Fig. 10 Magnetorheological damper
26
Active control with Tendons
Fig. 11 Active tendons used in control
27
Active Control with Tendons
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