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Controlling Wind Response with Innovative Damper Technology

 Controlling Wind Response with Innovative Damper Technology
Auteur(s): , , ,
Présenté pendant IABSE Conference: Elegance in structures, Nara, Japan, 13-15 May 2015, publié dans , pp. 492-493
DOI: 10.2749/222137815815775989
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A time of architectural aspirations to build super-tall towers has never been more pronounced than it is today. At present there are approximately 80 super-tall towers with heights in excess of 300...
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Auteur(s):



Médium: papier de conférence
Langue(s): anglais
Conférence: IABSE Conference: Elegance in structures, Nara, Japan, 13-15 May 2015
Publié dans:
Page(s): 492-493 Nombre total de pages (du PDF): 8
Page(s): 492-493
Nombre total de pages (du PDF): 8
Année: 2015
DOI: 10.2749/222137815815775989
Abstrait:

A time of architectural aspirations to build super-tall towers has never been more pronounced than it is today. At present there are approximately 80 super-tall towers with heights in excess of 300 m worldwide, this number has more than tripled over the last decade [1]. As design teams seek to push the heights of buildings even taller, engineers and architects are required to be innovative in material use, aerodynamic form finding and in the choice of methods to reducing excessive dynamic response. Three tall buildings have recently been studied in BMT Fluid Mechanics' large boundary layer wind tunnel; one in Tianjin - China (550 m), one in New York City - USA (400 m), and one in Bangkok - Thailand (200m) and a research and development study of a tower in Toronto

- Canada (200 m). Wind tunnel testing highlighted the potential for the highest occupied floors of the towers to experience levels of wind-induced motion that exceeded standard industry occupant comfort criteria. Various methods of controlling the tower motions were considered (aerodynamic optimization, tuned mass dampers (TMDs), and viscoelastic coupling dampers (VCDs)). Each of these solutions has its own merits and faults, the decision for each is typically formulated around space requirements, financial constraints and level of damping required. This technical paper will discuss how innovation was required in both the analysis methods and the damper designs in order to enable the architectural vision for each of these three towers to be achieved and for the research and development study tower.

Mots-clé:
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