Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing

Vibration issues of floor areas in relation to human comfort perception in an open working space are very common. This paper discusses the results of a human comfort assessment before and after strengthening of a a post-tensioned reinforced concrete flooring structure. All floors experience structur...

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Published in:International Journal of Sustainable Construction Engineering and Technology
Main Author: Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit UTHM 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85133141704&doi=10.30880%2fijscet.2022.13.02.025&partnerID=40&md5=b05d085bd51d85926b193f5381ae86eb
id 2-s2.0-85133141704
spelling 2-s2.0-85133141704
Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
2022
International Journal of Sustainable Construction Engineering and Technology
13
2
10.30880/ijscet.2022.13.02.025
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85133141704&doi=10.30880%2fijscet.2022.13.02.025&partnerID=40&md5=b05d085bd51d85926b193f5381ae86eb
Vibration issues of floor areas in relation to human comfort perception in an open working space are very common. This paper discusses the results of a human comfort assessment before and after strengthening of a a post-tensioned reinforced concrete flooring structure. All floors experience structural vibration, which arises from various sources inside and outside of the building. This paper investigated the vibration issue of a problematic flooring slab area on Level 3 of a four storey building, which vibrations induced by people walking through the working station area. Two types of tests were conducted, namely a (1) shaker test and a (2) walking test. Accelerometers were attached to the floor according to the sensor points and recorded all acceleration responses on the floor system. The highly sensitive KS 48C accelerometer was used in this study. The accelerometers were placed at the same locations for both shaker and walking tests. The floor slab which was initially reported as problematic structure on Level 3 was found that its peak acceleration exceeded the recommended human comfort limitation. A passive vibration isolation technique was used in order to tackle the vibration issue. A laminated elastomeric bearing was chosen as one of the methods in passive vibration isolation. The natural frequency for both results before and after strengthening remained as low-frequency floor classes. However, peak acceleration excitation was reduced after the strengthening work was completed. © Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia Publisher’s Office.
Penerbit UTHM
21803242
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
spellingShingle Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
author_facet Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
author_sort Ghafar N.H.A.; Rahimi M.I.; Goh L.D.
title Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
title_short Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
title_full Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
title_fullStr Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
title_full_unstemmed Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
title_sort Human Comfort Assessment of Vibration Behaviour of Office Floors: Before and After Strengthening Using the Laminated Elastomeric Bearing
publishDate 2022
container_title International Journal of Sustainable Construction Engineering and Technology
container_volume 13
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.30880/ijscet.2022.13.02.025
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85133141704&doi=10.30880%2fijscet.2022.13.02.025&partnerID=40&md5=b05d085bd51d85926b193f5381ae86eb
description Vibration issues of floor areas in relation to human comfort perception in an open working space are very common. This paper discusses the results of a human comfort assessment before and after strengthening of a a post-tensioned reinforced concrete flooring structure. All floors experience structural vibration, which arises from various sources inside and outside of the building. This paper investigated the vibration issue of a problematic flooring slab area on Level 3 of a four storey building, which vibrations induced by people walking through the working station area. Two types of tests were conducted, namely a (1) shaker test and a (2) walking test. Accelerometers were attached to the floor according to the sensor points and recorded all acceleration responses on the floor system. The highly sensitive KS 48C accelerometer was used in this study. The accelerometers were placed at the same locations for both shaker and walking tests. The floor slab which was initially reported as problematic structure on Level 3 was found that its peak acceleration exceeded the recommended human comfort limitation. A passive vibration isolation technique was used in order to tackle the vibration issue. A laminated elastomeric bearing was chosen as one of the methods in passive vibration isolation. The natural frequency for both results before and after strengthening remained as low-frequency floor classes. However, peak acceleration excitation was reduced after the strengthening work was completed. © Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia Publisher’s Office.
publisher Penerbit UTHM
issn 21803242
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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