jropert
Structural
- May 18, 2010
- 23
I am in the process of designing a concrete slab-on-grade for a diesel generator and have come across a design issue with regards to anchorage of this generator to the slab-on-grade.
This appeared to be a basic design in which typical gravity, wind and seismic loads were accounted for and the appropriate slab size and anchorage was designed for those forces. However, the scope of work for this project lists a requirement that I am not familiar with. Under the structural section of the RFP (Request for Proposal) document (this is a government job in which they have required my company to provide designs in accordance with applicable current building codes as well as their own additional requirements) it states, "As a minimum, the generator pad should be sized to be at least 3x the weight of the operating weight of the generator to mitigate the vibration effects, as recommended by most generator manufacturers."
Originally, I had thought this was the "usual" vibration effects that would occur under normal operation. There is a vibration isolation system that will be installed that is rated for seismic loads that I assumed would help "mitigate vibration effects". However, upon further investigation of the supposed reasoning behind this added pad requirement, our electrical engineer found that the user is planning for paralleling another generator to this new one in question in the future (possibly). By wiring the two generators together, there is a potential for an "out-of-phase" (i.e. the cycles of operation of each generator do not match, where 180 degrees is the worst case) reaction to occur in which the generator(s) can "jump" off the foundation causing severe damage to the generator and subsequently the surrounding areas. This is obviously dangerous and the electrical/mechanical engineers will have to consider this in the event of future installation.
I did a quick internet search for this occurrence and this appears to be a known phenomenon when paralleling two generators out-of-phase with each other. However, as far as structural engineering is concerned, I can't seem to find any guidance or documentation of what forces to design for in this specific event. My electrical engineer contacted our generator supplier and they don't seem to know about the design force that would be required. We did find (through another generator manufacturer) that the "3x the operating weight" is used to "hold down" the generator from "jumping" off the ground, but even if that were the case, wouldn't the anchorage of the generator to the isolation base as well as the base to concrete pad need to be designed for this force, whatever it may be? As a quick estimate, since the requirements of the pad is to be at least 3x the operating weight (in this case approximately 35,000 lbs operating weight) would I have to design the pad anchorage for 105,000 lbs uplift and shear (or some combination thereof)? Has anyone encountered this requirement before and what kind of forces are we talking about here?
I find it amusing that the requirement states that this is recommended by most generator manufacturers when the manufacturers that we have contacted basically have no idea about this force! I am going to repost this in the electrical/mechanical forums to get their input as well, but wanted any structural advise as that is the focus of this design question.
I apologize for the long explanation. Any help or advise would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Josh R
This appeared to be a basic design in which typical gravity, wind and seismic loads were accounted for and the appropriate slab size and anchorage was designed for those forces. However, the scope of work for this project lists a requirement that I am not familiar with. Under the structural section of the RFP (Request for Proposal) document (this is a government job in which they have required my company to provide designs in accordance with applicable current building codes as well as their own additional requirements) it states, "As a minimum, the generator pad should be sized to be at least 3x the weight of the operating weight of the generator to mitigate the vibration effects, as recommended by most generator manufacturers."
Originally, I had thought this was the "usual" vibration effects that would occur under normal operation. There is a vibration isolation system that will be installed that is rated for seismic loads that I assumed would help "mitigate vibration effects". However, upon further investigation of the supposed reasoning behind this added pad requirement, our electrical engineer found that the user is planning for paralleling another generator to this new one in question in the future (possibly). By wiring the two generators together, there is a potential for an "out-of-phase" (i.e. the cycles of operation of each generator do not match, where 180 degrees is the worst case) reaction to occur in which the generator(s) can "jump" off the foundation causing severe damage to the generator and subsequently the surrounding areas. This is obviously dangerous and the electrical/mechanical engineers will have to consider this in the event of future installation.
I did a quick internet search for this occurrence and this appears to be a known phenomenon when paralleling two generators out-of-phase with each other. However, as far as structural engineering is concerned, I can't seem to find any guidance or documentation of what forces to design for in this specific event. My electrical engineer contacted our generator supplier and they don't seem to know about the design force that would be required. We did find (through another generator manufacturer) that the "3x the operating weight" is used to "hold down" the generator from "jumping" off the ground, but even if that were the case, wouldn't the anchorage of the generator to the isolation base as well as the base to concrete pad need to be designed for this force, whatever it may be? As a quick estimate, since the requirements of the pad is to be at least 3x the operating weight (in this case approximately 35,000 lbs operating weight) would I have to design the pad anchorage for 105,000 lbs uplift and shear (or some combination thereof)? Has anyone encountered this requirement before and what kind of forces are we talking about here?
I find it amusing that the requirement states that this is recommended by most generator manufacturers when the manufacturers that we have contacted basically have no idea about this force! I am going to repost this in the electrical/mechanical forums to get their input as well, but wanted any structural advise as that is the focus of this design question.
I apologize for the long explanation. Any help or advise would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Josh R