Finn
Structural
- Mar 28, 2017
- 5
Hey everyone - I'm new to eng-tips so bear with me! I am an EIT, one year out of school.. Not a lot of experience around here w/ vibrations so please help me out.
I am currently tasked w/ strengthening and stiffening an existing mezzanine that is having vibration and flex (due to footstep) issues. The mezzanine is only 50 SF, has a deck w/ about 3" concrete, and has a fan pedestal bearing on a small portion of the mezz that is causing excessive vibration to the mezz. The mezz is not strong enough to make the span in the first place - no studs (from what I can tell from underneath) for composite action..
My initial plan was throw in additional support beams underneath, but I am worried that vibration will still occur as the overall weight will not be increased by much. I would throw these beams in the strong direction of the deck at around 12" oc, as desired for site construction. I checked this new natural frequency of the slab span, and it is much higher (over 3X) than the force frequency produced by the fan. Am I good, or is a weight increase still recommended? The existing slab natural frequency was near the actual force frequency.
Another safe and probably better idea is to tear up the mezz. and replace it w/ a 8" slab, which is the same as the adjacent mezz that primarily supports the fan and is currently performing well in vibration. We will most likely go with this option, but I am using this as a learning opportunity..
Would the support beams solve the problem, as it's natural frequency shows it's sufficient? Or is the lightweight nature of the mezz still a concern?
Thanks!
I am currently tasked w/ strengthening and stiffening an existing mezzanine that is having vibration and flex (due to footstep) issues. The mezzanine is only 50 SF, has a deck w/ about 3" concrete, and has a fan pedestal bearing on a small portion of the mezz that is causing excessive vibration to the mezz. The mezz is not strong enough to make the span in the first place - no studs (from what I can tell from underneath) for composite action..
My initial plan was throw in additional support beams underneath, but I am worried that vibration will still occur as the overall weight will not be increased by much. I would throw these beams in the strong direction of the deck at around 12" oc, as desired for site construction. I checked this new natural frequency of the slab span, and it is much higher (over 3X) than the force frequency produced by the fan. Am I good, or is a weight increase still recommended? The existing slab natural frequency was near the actual force frequency.
Another safe and probably better idea is to tear up the mezz. and replace it w/ a 8" slab, which is the same as the adjacent mezz that primarily supports the fan and is currently performing well in vibration. We will most likely go with this option, but I am using this as a learning opportunity..
Would the support beams solve the problem, as it's natural frequency shows it's sufficient? Or is the lightweight nature of the mezz still a concern?
Thanks!