Wind-induced Motion of Tall Buildings

Wind-induced Motion of Tall Buildings

Author: Kenny C. S. Kwok

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 66

ISBN-13: 9780784413852

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This state-of-the-art report describes various facets of the human response to wind-induced motion in tall buildings and identifies design strategies to mitigate the effects of such motion on building occupants.


Wind Tunnel Testing of High-Rise Buildings

Wind Tunnel Testing of High-Rise Buildings

Author: Peter Irwin

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-06-19

Total Pages: 144

ISBN-13: 1317999959

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Since the 1960s, wind tunnel testing has become a commonly used tool in the design of tall buildings. It was pioneered, in large part, during the design of the World Trade Center Towers in New York. Since those early days of wind engineering, wind tunnel testing techniques have developed in sophistication, but these techniques are not widely understood by the designers using the results. As a direct result, the CTBUH Wind Engineering Working Group was formed to develop a concise guide for the non-specialist. The primary goal of this guide is to provide an overview of the wind tunnel testing process for design professionals. This knowledge allows readers to ask the correct questions of their wind engineering consultants throughout the design process. This is not an in-depth guide to the technical intricacies of wind tunnel testing, it focusses instead on the information the design community needs, including: a unique methodology for the presentation of wind tunnel results to allow straightforward comparison of results from different wind tunnel laboratories. advice on when a tall building is likely to be sufficiently sensitive to wind effects to benefit from a wind tunnel test background for assessing whether design codes and standards are applicable details of the types of tests that are commonly conducted descriptions of the fundamentals of wind climate and the interaction of wind and tall buildings This unique book is an essential guide for all designers of tall buildings, and anyone else interested in the process of wind tunnel testing for tall buildings.


AEI 2015

AEI 2015

Author: Christopher H. Raebel

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 837

ISBN-13: 9780784479070

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Wind Effects on a Tall Building with Recessed Cavities

Wind Effects on a Tall Building with Recessed Cavities

Author: Sin-Yan Wong

Publisher: Open Dissertation Press

Published: 2017-01-26

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781361331958

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This dissertation, "Wind Effects on a Tall Building With Recessed Cavities" by Sin-yan, Wong, 黃倩欣, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: In Hong Kong and other Asian metropolitan cites, high-rise residential buildings become very common. They are highly wind-sensitive, subjected to enormous wind loads at high wind speeds and may exhibit aeroelastic behavior at normal wind speeds. Many residential buildings often have an irregular shape with apartments arranged as wing sections extending from a central core so that all apartments on the floor can enjoy views. Between adjacent building wings are deeply recessed cavities. Most wind loading codes and guidelines assume stagnant flow inside the recessed cavities and wind loads are calculated based on the simplified enveloping building shape. This research studies how the static and dynamic wind loads on a tall building are modified by the presence of recessed cavities. The H-section tall building, with square enveloping shape, is selected to represent a building with two recessed cavities. A number of these building models with a systematic variation of breadths and depths of the recessed cavities are tested in the wind tunnel. Fluctuating wind forces and moments on the building models are measured and the dynamic building responses are investigated by the HFFB technique. The results show significant reductions in across-wind load fluctuations on the H-section buildings at wind incidence normal to building face with a cavity. Greater reductions are found on the fluctuation levels and the spectral energies at the vortex excitation frequency when the width/depth of the recessed cavities becomes larger. A resonant across-wind response modification factor (RMF) is adopted to quantify the effect on wind-induced dynamic building responses. For the across-wind response at critical wind incidence, the presence of recessed cavities can lead the value of RMF to as low as 0.67, that is reduction of building responses by 33%. To understand the mechanism of wind load modification caused by the presence of recessed cavities, wind pressure on all faces of the H-section tall buildings including the cavity faces are measured. Correlations of across-wind forces contributed by different building faces are analyzed. A clear quasi-periodic fluctuating component is found on the forces from the two building side faces and they act in phase in the across-wind direction. The across-wind force contributions from side faces of the windward or leeward recessed cavity are generally out-of-phase. As a result, the overall excitation levels of the total across-wind force on the building are reduced due to the presence of recessed cavities. To complement the wind tunnel study, computational fluid dynamics modeling using large-eddy simulation (LES) is carried out to study the unsteady wind flow around and wind loads on the H-section tall building with the widest and deepest recessed cavities. Furthermore, the two-dimensional (2D) case of smooth flow past 2D H-section cylinders is investigated. Both the LES and 2D experimental results give consistent observations and mechanisms of the effects of recessed cavities on the modification of dynamic wind loads on the tall building as the wind tunnel results. The thesis also reports studies on the effects of upstream terrain types, building heights and building shapes on the wind effects of H-section tall buildings. DOI: 10.5353/th_b5153712 Subjects: Wind resistant design Buildings - Aerodynamics


Design of Buildings for Wind

Design of Buildings for Wind

Author: Emil Simiu

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2011-09-23

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13: 1118077377

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ASCE 7 is the US standard for identifying minimum design loads for buildings and other structures. ASCE 7 covers many load types, of which wind is one. The purpose of this book is to provide structural and architectural engineers with the practical state-of-the-art knowledge and tools needed for designing and retrofitting buildings for wind loads. The book will also cover wind-induced loss estimation. This new edition include a guide to the thoroughly revised, 2010 version of the ASCE 7 Standard provisions for wind loads; incorporate major advances achieved in recent years in the design of tall buildings for wind; present material on retrofitting and loss estimation; and improve the presentation of the material to increase its usefulness to structural engineers. Key features: New focus on tall buildings helps make the analysis and design guidance easier and less complex. Covers the new simplified design methods of ASCE 7-10, guiding designers to clearly understand the spirit and letter of the provisions and use the design methods with confidence and ease. Includes new coverage of retrofitting for wind load resistance and loss estimation from hurricane winds. Thoroughly revised and updated to conform with current practice and research.


Wind Effects on Structures

Wind Effects on Structures

Author: Emil Simiu

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2019-03-11

Total Pages: 533

ISBN-13: 1119375886

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Provides structural engineers with the knowledge and practical tools needed to perform structural designs for wind that incorporate major technological, conceptual, analytical and computational advances achieved in the last two decades. With clear explanations and documentation of the concepts, methods, algorithms, and software available for accounting for wind loads in structural design, it also describes the wind engineer's contributions in sufficient detail that they can be effectively scrutinized by the structural engineer in charge of the design. Wind Effects on Structures: Modern Structural Design for Wind, 4th Edition is organized in four sections. The first covers atmospheric flows, extreme wind speeds, and bluff body aerodynamics. The second examines the design of buildings, and includes chapters on aerodynamic loads; dynamic and effective wind-induced loads; wind effects with specified MRIs; low-rise buildings; tall buildings; and more. The third part is devoted to aeroelastic effects, and covers both fundamentals and applications. The last part considers other structures and special topics such as trussed frameworks; offshore structures; and tornado effects. Offering readers the knowledge and practical tools needed to develop structural designs for wind loadings, this book: Points out significant limitations in the design of buildings based on such techniques as the high-frequency force balance Discusses powerful algorithms, tools, and software needed for the effective design for wind, and provides numerous examples of application Discusses techniques applicable to structures other than buildings, including stacks and suspended-span bridges Features several appendices on Elements of Probability and Statistics; Peaks-over-Threshold Poisson-Process Procedure for Estimating Peaks; estimates of the WTC Towers’ Response to Wind and their shortcomings; and more Wind Effects on Structures: Modern Structural Design for Wind, 4th Edition is an excellent text for structural engineers, wind engineers, and structural engineering students and faculty.


High-Rise Buildings under Multi-Hazard Environment

High-Rise Buildings under Multi-Hazard Environment

Author: Mingfeng Huang

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-08-15

Total Pages: 251

ISBN-13: 9811017441

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This book discusses performance-based seismic and wind-resistant design for high-rise building structures, with a particular focus on establishing an integrated approach for performance-based wind engineering, which is currently less advanced than seismic engineering. This book also provides a state-of-the-art review of numerous methodologies, including computational fluid dynamics (CFD), extreme value analysis, structural optimization, vibration control, pushover analysis, response spectrum analysis, modal parameter identification for the assessment of the wind-resistant and seismic performance of tall buildings in the design stage and actual tall buildings in use. Several new structural optimization methods, including the augmented optimality criteria method, have been developed and employed in the context of performance-based design. This book is a valuable resource for students, researchers and engineers in the field of civil and structural engineering.