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==See also==
==See also==
{{Commonscat|Structural control}}
{{Commonscat|Structural control}}
* [http://www.nhazca.it/?page_id=2745&lang=en Vibration monitoring by Terrestrial RADAR Interferometry]

* {{dmoz|Science/Technology/Structural_Engineering/Earthquake_Engineering/Control}}
* {{dmoz|Science/Technology/Structural_Engineering/Earthquake_Engineering/Control}}
*[[Earthquake engineering structures]]
*[[Earthquake engineering structures]]

Revision as of 11:33, 13 February 2012

In earthquake engineering, vibration control is a set of technical means aimed to mitigate seismic impacts in building and non-building structures.

All seismic vibration control devices may be classified as passive, active or hybrid [1] where:

Base isolator being tested at the UCSD Caltrans-SRMD facility
  • passive control devices have no feedback capability between them, structural elements and the ground;
  • active control devices incorporate real-time recording instrumentation on the ground integrated with earthquake input processing equipment and actuators within the structure;
  • hybrid control devices have combined features of active and passive control systems.[1]

When ground seismic waves reach up and start to penetrate a base of a building, their energy flow density, due to reflections, reduces dramatically: usually, up to 90%. However, the remaining portions of the incident waves during a major earthquake still bear a huge devastating potential.

After the seismic waves enter a superstructure, there is a number of ways to control them in order to sooth their damaging effect and improve the building's seismic performance, for instance:

  • to disperse the wave energy between a wider range of frequencies;
Base-isolated San Francisco City Hall after seismic retrofit

Devices of the last kind, abbreviated correspondingly as TMD for the tuned (passive), as AMD for the active, and as HMD for the hybrid mass dampers, have been studied and installed in high-rise buildings, predominantly in Japan, for a quarter of a century [3].

However, there is quite another approach: partial suppression of the seismic energy flow into the superstructure known as seismic or base isolation which has been implemented in a number of historical buildings all over the world and remains in the focus of earthquake engineering research for years.

For this, some pads are inserted into all major load-carrying elements in the base of the building which should substantially decouple a superstructure from its substructure resting on a shaking ground. It also requires creating a rigidity diaphragm and a moat around the building, as well as making provisions against overturning and P-delta effect.

See also

References

  1. ^ Chu, S.Y.; Soong, T.T.; Reinhorn, A.M. (2005). Active, Hybrid and Semi-Active Structural Control. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0470013524.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)