10-story Steel-Framed Building to be Put to the Test on UC San Diego Earthquake Simulator
one of the sponsors for this series of tests, dubbed CFS10, for cold-formed steel and 10 stories. It is part of NSF’s Natural Hazards Engineering Research Infrastructure network, or NHERI—eight experimental facilities supporting innovative research for mitigating damage caused by hazards such as earthquakes, tsunamis, landslides, wind storms, storm surge and flooding.
Cold-formed steel-framed building
The 10-story building’s skeleton is made from cold-formed sheets of construction-grade steel that are then shaped at room temperature to make individual structural components—studs and floor joists, for example. These are then fastened together to form walls and floors. Cold-formed steel is easy to manufacture, strong, light and made from recycled steel. The material has become more popular as a substitute for timber in the past four decades, partially because it can be shaped into components similar to those used in timber construction, such as two by fours. It also doesn’t burn when exposed to fire.
Currently, building codes in the United States only allow cold-formed steel-framed buildings up to 65 feet (20 meters), or about six stories tall. The research team from UC San Diego and Johns Hopkins University is evaluating how taller cold-formed steel-framed buildings, up to 100 feet (30 meters) or 10 stories, would fare during an earthquake.
“Through years of work, we’ve developed an understanding of how to model key components of new cold formed steel framing systems. We’ve used models and smaller-scale testing to determine if these systems can perform well in earthquakes, giving us confidence in our new solutions,” said Ben Schafer, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and the project’s other lead principal investigator. “Overall, if we can predict the precise performance of a new building system, we can share those predictions with engineers to improve building design and construction practices in the U.S.”
The building that will be tested in June is already constructed and sitting on the shake table. It was built using a variety of methods. The first level of the building is “stick-framed,” meaning it is assembled on-site with individual components—cold-formed steel track and studs in this case. Other floors are constructed of wall and floor panels: elements that have been pre-fabricated in a shop and shipped to the site. This project also explores how these panels can be put together into modules, similar to portable trailers, manufactured off site. These modules, very much like stacked Legos, are then assembled on site and lifted onto the building with a crane.
“These tests provide us a unique opportunity to document and compare the resilience of each construction method during an earthquake,” Hutchinson said.
Non-structural systems, fire tests and sensors
The building also includes what researchers call “non-structural” components, such as stairs, roof-top mechanical equipment and pressurized gas and fire sprinkler systems. The researchers will monitor the movement and accelerations in these elements to evaluate if the building would remain functional after a quake.
After the earthquake testing is over and all data has been gathered, the building will be put through a series of live fire tests to study how these components and the structure itself fare in a fire after an earthquake.
Researchers will gather data from earthquake and fire tests with thousands of sensors measuring everything from how much the building moves during a shake to the temperature distribution during fire tests.
“When we perform these large scale tests, it is important we capture response with high fidelity; in this case, we are using thousands of sensors, digital and analog, distributed throughout and around the building,” said Hutchinson. “That’s real data that allows us to explore and help improve design and construction methods, all of which will improve building codes.”
In addition to the NSF, the tests are sponsored by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the California Seismic Safety Commission, the California Office of Emergency Services and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
The tests also have garnered support from a significant number of industry organizations such as the American Iron and Steel Institute, the Steel Framing Industry Association and the American Institute of Steel Construction. Many companies have contributed to the design and construction effort, including ClarkDietrich, Clark Construction, Standard Drywall Inc., Mid-Rise Modular, Bapko Metal, Grabber Fastening and others. View a complete list of sponsors.
A critical shake table upgrade was completed in 2022, thanks to $17 million in NSF funding. The table is now able to reproduce the full 3D ground motions that occur during earthquakes, when the ground is moving in all six degrees of freedom—longitudinal, lateral, vertical, roll, pitch and yaw. This facility is part of the Englekirk Structural Engineering Center in the Department of Structural Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.
Ioana Patringenaru is Associate Media Relations Director, Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego. The article was originally posted to the web site of UC San Diego.