tdstructural
Structural
- Jun 12, 2010
- 29
I am designing an upgrade to an existing Boiler support frame. The boiler is approximately 65 feet tall and in plan view it is appx 20' x 17'. It is located in South America in a high seismic region.
The original lateral resisting system is Structural Steel Braced Frames. The load path goes thru the boiler walls into the buckstays, then short WF members are welded to the buckstays and they extend into a detail they call "Seismic Buffer". Those short members are fixed to the buckstay and free to move both vertically (boiler heat expansion) and laterally perpendicular to the brace frames. The only force that is transferred is parallel force to the brace frame.
They used some type of rubber pad between the horizontal WF and the brace frame. They alternate "rubber" like material appx 1-1/2" thick with 1/4" steel plate and use (4) "rubber" pads on each side of the horizontal WF beam. Please see the link for a picture to help clarify.
I think it might be to reduce vibration/noise. I see no other reason for this massive amount of material.
Where can I find specs for this type of product so I can design it for the correct compression forces? What is the name of this product? Am I right that they did this to reduce vibration between the boiler and the structural steel braced frames?
Any help would be appreciated.
The original lateral resisting system is Structural Steel Braced Frames. The load path goes thru the boiler walls into the buckstays, then short WF members are welded to the buckstays and they extend into a detail they call "Seismic Buffer". Those short members are fixed to the buckstay and free to move both vertically (boiler heat expansion) and laterally perpendicular to the brace frames. The only force that is transferred is parallel force to the brace frame.
They used some type of rubber pad between the horizontal WF and the brace frame. They alternate "rubber" like material appx 1-1/2" thick with 1/4" steel plate and use (4) "rubber" pads on each side of the horizontal WF beam. Please see the link for a picture to help clarify.
I think it might be to reduce vibration/noise. I see no other reason for this massive amount of material.
Where can I find specs for this type of product so I can design it for the correct compression forces? What is the name of this product? Am I right that they did this to reduce vibration between the boiler and the structural steel braced frames?
Any help would be appreciated.