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During an earthquake or a blast from an explosion, a building is subjected to cyclic loading in the form of repeated tensile and compressive forces. Buckling restrained braces (BRBs), also known as unbonded braces, are finding acceptance as structural elements that add reinforcement and energy dissipation to steel frame buildings to protect the buildings against large deformations induced by earthquakes or blasts from explosions. The brace is designed to yield in tension or compression while resisting buckling.
A prior art BRB employs a steel core and a steel casing. The steel core has a yielding segment, typically provided by a narrowed or necked region. The casing prevents buckling of the core. Concrete or mortar fills the space between the core and the casing. The core cannot bond to the casing, so an unbonding layer, such as a TEFLON layer, may be applied over the core.
The buckling restrained brace absorbs seismic energy while mitigating inter-story drift. Performance-based design of earthquake resistant buildings requires technologies that can simultaneously minimize inter-story drift and floor accelerations. While inter-story drift is always taken into account by design engineers, protection against floor accelerations is often overlooked. Inter-story drift causes damage to a building's framing, facade and windows. Floor acceleration causes damage to ceilings, electrical systems, elevators, and building contents in general. Viscous and hysteretic dampers are technologies which provide energy dissipation with the ability to greatly reduce inter-story drift, but with minimal impact on reducing floor accelerations. BRBs, on the other hand, provide both energy dissipation and added stiffness with the ability to deform plastically, thereby reducing both inter-story drift and floor accelerations. The more powerful the earthquake, the greater the inter-story drift—and thus the greater the brace displacement—that needs to be accommodated. The extent to which floor accelerations may be mitigated depends on the brace's yield strength.
Advantages of BRBs over conventional braced frames include smaller beam and foundation design, control of member stiffness, greater energy dissipation, and reduced post-earthquake maintenance. The added cost of BRBs (such as additional development, materials, and transportation) may therefore be offset by savings in foundation and overall frame design. Current market trends seem to be moving away from damping and toward higher stiffness and very high purchased BRB capacities, from 200 kips at the low end to greater than 1000 kips.
A buckling restrained brace (BRB) is provided with extremely high strain capability, and thus the ability to mitigate powerful earthquakes by accommodating and absorbing large inter-story drifts, and with the ability to tailor yield strength to a particular application. When compared to prior art steel BRBs, the present BRBs have demonstrated much higher drift performance and, through the use of an aluminum deforming core, superior acceleration performance. Methods of producing the BRBs are also provided.
One embodiment of a buckling restrained brace includes a deformable core, such as a solid rod or bar, contained within a casing. The ends of the core protrude from the casing, so that the brace can be connected to a frame or other structure. A length of the deformable core between its ends, referred to as the gauge or yielding section, is capable of deforming plastically during an earthquake or blast loading. The gauge section is rendered weaker than the ends so that the gauge section has a lower yield strength than the ends. This can be accomplished by differentially heat treating (softening or averaging) the gauge section while keeping the ends heat insulated or by differentially heat treating (age-hardening) the ends of the deformable core while keeping the gauge section heat insulated. Additionally, the cross-sectional area of the gauge section relative to the ends may be reduced. The stronger ends connected to a structure do not fail during an earthquake or blast, while the gauge section yields. The casing or shell, such as a one-piece cylinder that can slide over the deformable core, provides containment of the core to prevent buckling of the core. A metal foil interface or other unbonding layer between the deformable core and the outer casing is provided so that the deformable core does not bind to the outer shell, and thus does not transfer axial load to the outer shell, while still being sufficiently constrained to prevent buckling. A filler material may optionally be provided between the core and the casing if desired.
The invention will be more fully understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
The ends 14 of the core protrude from the casing, so that the brace can be connected to a frame or other structure 30, illustrated in
The unbonding layer 22 prevents interference between the outer protective casing 20 and the inner deformable core 12 while still allowing the core to be protected from buckling, barreling, or any other type of non-uniform deformation when subjected to compressive loading. In one embodiment, metal foil is rolled around the inner deformable core to form one or more layers between the core and the outer casing, thereby filling an appropriate fraction of the corresponding gap. Metal foil has been found to be more effective than grease or other materials used in the prior art for this purpose, particularly for its stability over time. In one exemplary embodiment, a layer of aluminum foil 12 mils thick was wrapped about the core. Other films or foils such as PTFE (such as TEFLON®) or other lubricant solid layered structures can also be used.
The core 12 may fill varying fractions of the overall volume within the casing 20. The core outer surface and/or edges may or may not extend to within the immediate proximity of the casing's inside wall. In another embodiment, the space 24 between the core and the casing may optionally be filled with a filler material such as concrete, grout, foam, or composite material. The filler material can allow a reduction in the thickness of the outer casing, resulting in a cost savings, as less casing material such as steel is used.
The gauge section 16 of the core 12 may have any desired cross sectional configuration, such as circular (
In another embodiment, a plurality of cores may be provided within a single casing.
In another embodiment, the composition of the inner deforming core may be structurally modified along its length to strengthen its ends more that its gauge section. For example, a functionally gradient structure with a core of varying material or alloy composition can be provided or a composite structure can be built with varying degrees of reinforcement along its length. Also, a hybrid metal core/composite casing BRB may be provided in which the buckling restraint casing is a filament wound composite, for example, glass fiber/vinyl ester composite shell. The space between the outer casing and the unbonding layer is filled with a castable composite material.
the corresponding diagonal deformation is:
ΔL=U cos θ=H δ cos θ
and the total diagonal strain:
Key design parameters for the brace include maximum force capacity and damper stroke (peak-to-peak in a load cycle). The higher the brace stroke capacity, the larger the inter-story drift that it is able to accommodate, and the more severe the earthquake which may be mitigated. When deformed past its yield strength, a brace returns stress-strain hysteresis curves such as the curves shown in
To produce the BRB, the core is differentially heat treated to provide strong end sections and a gauge section with a yield strength lower than a yield strength of the end sections. The increased strength of the end sections, which are mechanically connected to the structure, compensates for weakening due to the mechanical connections, allowing any subsequent deformation to concentrate in the gauge section.
The differential heat treatment provides a functionally graded material transition between the lower yield strength middle gauge section and the higher yield strength ends, in which the gauge section has a different microstructure than the ends. This functionally graded (also called functionally gradient) material results from the temperature gradient that exists inherently between hot and cold sections of the core during differential heat treatment and which creates a gradual microstructural transition between softened and hardened zones of the core. Having a gradual functionally graded transition allows increased brace performance by minimizing stress concentrations within the deforming material. A yield strength gradient is effectively achieved via microstructural changes within this region rather than via a physical reduction in cross-section. A gradual functionally graded transition also permits the deforming gauge length to be maximized.
For example, during heating of a metal alloy, a second phase goes into solution, and then precipitates out during cooling. The size of the resulting clusters of the second phase affects the yield strength of the resulting material. As is known in the art, heat treatment can be optimized to reach an optimum grain size or second phase cluster size for optimum mechanical properties. Continued heat treatment can thus overage the material, resulting in a drop in mechanical properties such as yield strength, as in the present invention.
Any heat-treatable metal alloy can be used for the core, such as a heat-treatable aluminum or steel. The heat treatment is determined based on the material of the core and the desired yield strength of the gauge sections and the ends. The particular heat treatment can be readily determined for a particular alloy by those of skill in the art, for example, using readily available published data.
In one embodiment, the gauge section is softened by an over-aging heat treatment while the ends are kept cool to preserve their high yield strength, suitable, for example, when using 2024 aluminum. The gauge section can be heated in any suitable manner, such as by application of a number of band heaters that wrap around the core or cylindrical or semi-cylindrical heaters that extend along a length of the core. The ends can be held at a cooler temperature, such as by immersion in water or with attached heat sinks.
In an alternative embodiment, the ends are age hardened by an appropriate temperature treatment while the gauge section is kept cooler to preserve a lower yield strength. This method is suitable, for example, when using 6061 aluminum. In this case, the ends can be heated by, for example, application of band heaters, while the gauge section is kept cooler by, for example, immersion in water.
Heat treatment of materials such as aluminum is generally not suitable for fatigue applications experiencing low amplitudes and a large number of cycles. Materials such as aluminum, with high stacking fault energies, have high dislocation mobility and cross-slip easily. Thus, such materials are cyclically “history independent,” in that they develop a dislocation structure and therefore a cyclic stress-strain curve that is independent of their initial strength and dislocation structure. Thus, the present invention is more advantageous for applications in which the number of cycles is limited and the strain amplitude is large, such as earthquakes and blasts from explosions.
A high capacity 2024 aluminum core, steel casing brace has been produced by differential heat treatment according to the invention. Using a core of 2024-T3 aluminum, the mid section was heated at 550 to 700° F. for 7 to 8 hours. The brace was tested in fully reversed tension-compression cycling. The testing sequence consisted of multiple cycles starting at low imposed displacements and increasing progressively to extremely high deformation (up to ±3.5% equivalent inter-story drift). See
A high capacity 6061 aluminum core, steel casing brace has been produced by differential heat treatment as in Example 1. The brace was tested in fully reversed tension-compression cycling to extremely high strains (up to ±3.5% equivalent inter-story drift) plus multiple additional cycles at ±2.5% equivalent inter-story drift before ultimate failure. See
In another example, a 6061 aluminum core brace was produced, in which the ends of the core were heated at ˜370° F. for approximately 7 hours. The gauge section was held at a cooler temperature. The brace was tested in fully reversed tension-compression cycling.
The energy dissipating brace of the present invention is readily amenable to retrofit applications for steel frame buildings, most suitably for buildings of modest to medium height (three to twenty stories).
The present invention is also advantageous, because no reduction in the cross-sectional area is necessary to concentrate all the deformation in the gauge section. Foregoing a machining step to reduce the cross-section results in a brace that is more readily manufactured at less expense. It will be appreciated, however, that a reduction in cross-sectional area of the gauge section can be used in combination with differential heat treatment to soften the gauge section relative to the ends if desired.
The invention is not to be limited by what has been particularly shown and described, except as indicated by the appended claims.
This invention was made under Department of the Army SBIR Contract #DACA42-02-C-0008. The government has certain rights in this invention.
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