3/25/2013
Novel, passive energy management devices that researchers at the University of Illinois developed may effectively mitigate structural damage resulting from large-scale forces and ground motions such as those caused by explosions and earthquakes.
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Novel, passive energy management devices that researchers at the University of Illinois developed may effectively mitigate structural damage resulting from large-scale forces and ground motions such as those caused by explosions and earthquakes.
The Illinois scientists partnered with the University of Akron in a two-and-a-half-year, $2.1 million project that the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) sponsored
The principal investigators include Lawrence Bergman (aerospace engineering), Alexander Vakakis (mechanical science and engineering), Billie Spencer and Larry Fahnestock (civil and environmental engineering), and Dane Quinn, mechanical engineering at the University of Akron. Also contributing to the project are Michael McFarland and doctoral students Sean Hubbard, (aerospace engineering), and Nick Wierschem and Jie Luo (civil and environmental engineering).
According to Bergman, the project began in the fall of 2010, in response to a new DARPA program called “Structural Logic.” In the request for proposals, the agency asked for new materials and/or subsystems that, when placed within a structure, would simultaneously add significant levels of stiffness and energy dissipation over a broad range of frequencies and input amplitudes.
Responding with its TET technology in which strong nonlinearity is intentionally introduced into the structure at the design stage, the Illinois-Akron team was one of six groups invited to participate in the program, and was the only one university-led and composed entirely of academics. The other groups were led by companies – HRL, Inc. (formerly, Hughes Research Laboratories), Lockheed Martin, NextGen Aeronautics, Raytheon, and Teledyne – all of whom teamed with faculty from other universities.
The TET concept dates back to two fundamental papers published in 2001 by another collaborator, Prof. Oleg Gendelman, now at Technion, and Vakakis. Working from those early results and with further research and application experience the group had accumulated over a period of nearly 14 years, the Illinois-Akron team embarked upon an intensive program of dynamic analysis, simulation and experiments at various scales. This work culminated in the design and construction of a 9-story, 10-ton steel frame structure incorporating a total of six NES devices, three on each of the eighth and ninth floors, for proof of concept.
According to Vakakis, the use of intentional strong nonlinearity in structural design remains a contrarian view. Most designers seek to maintain linearity, viewing nonlinearities, particularly strong nonlinearities, as detrimental to their design objectives. However, it’s now been demonstrated that the Illinois-Akron system results in enhanced performance not attainable using conventional passive linear designs, and with no increase in weight.
Having proven the energy management and vibration mitigation concept, the challenge remains to broadly apply the TET technology to produce less expensive, lighter weight structures with equivalent or better performance than traditionally designed structures under extreme loading conditions. The team will shortly shift its focus to a new project in which structural logic concepts will be applied to a system of particular interest to DARPA. Further details can be found at http://www.darpa.mil/Our_Work/STO/Programs/Structural_Logic.aspx.
Watch a video about the invention here.
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Contact: Lawrence Bergman, Department of Aerospace Engineering, 217/333-4970.
Writer: Susan Mumm, editor, Department of Aerospace Engineering, 217/244-5382.
If you have any questions about the College of Engineering, or other story ideas, contact Rick Kubetz,editor, Engineering Communications Office, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 217/244-7716.