Variations of the System Properties of a High-Rise Building Over 1 Year Using a Single Station 6c Approach.
Description:
We demonstrate that the dynamic response of an engineered structure, including modeshape identification, can be obtained from just a single measurement at one position - if rotation is recorded in combination with translation. Such a single-station approach can save significant time, effort and cost when compared with traditional structural characterization using horizontal arrays. In our contribution we will focus on the monitoring of a high-rise building by tracking its dynamic properties and their variations due to environmental (e.g. temperature) and operational (e.g. wind) conditions (EOCs) over a 1-year period. We present a real-case structural identification procedure on the Prime Tower in Zurich. This is a 36-story tower of 126 m height, with a poured-in-place-concrete core and floors and precast-concrete columns; this concrete core structure, surrounded by a triple-glazed facade, is the third highest building in Switzerland.
The building has been continuously monitored, by an accelerometer (EpiSensor), a co-located rotational sensor (BlueSeis) and a weather station located near the building center on the roof. Roof and vertical seismic arrays were deployed for short periods. The motion on the tower roof includes significant rotation as well as translation, which can be precisely captured by the monitoring station. More than 20 structural modes, including the first 6 primary modes, where translations are coupled with rotations, are tracked between 0.3 – 14 Hz. We will also show the variation of natural frequencies due to seasonal but also more short-term effects, in an effort to understand the effect of EOC variability on structural deformation and response. Additionally, an amplification of the modes, during strong winds and a couple of Mw 4.0 - 4.4 earthquakes at regional distance has been observed and analysed. The frequency band between 0.3 and 10 Hz is of key interest for earthquake excitation, making an investigation thereof essential. The work closes with a summary of the main benefits and potential in adopting collocated rotation and acceleration sensing for geo-infrastructure monitoring purposes.
Session: General Seismology
Type: Poster
Date: 4/18/2023
Presentation Time: 08:00 AM (local time)
Presenting Author: John Clinton
Student Presenter: No
Invited Presentation:
Authors
Yara Rossi Corresponding Author rossiy@geod.baug.ethz.ch ETH Zurich |
Konstantinos Tatsis tatsis@ibk.baug.ethz.ch ETH Zürich |
Yves Reuland reuland@ibk.baug.ethz.ch ETH Zürich |
John Clinton Presenting Author jclinton@sed.ethz.ch Swiss Seismological Service, ETH Zürich |
Eleni Chatzi chatzi@ibk.baug.ethz.ch ETH Zürich |
Markus Rothacher markus.rothacher@ethz.ch ETH Zürich |
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Variations of the System Properties of a High-Rise Building Over 1 Year Using a Single Station 6c Approach.
Category
General Session