Effects of Corner Modification on the Wind-Induced Responses of High-Rise Buildings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experiment Setup
3. Aerodynamic Forces on the Building
3.1. Mean Base Overturning Moment
3.2. Standard Deviation of Fluctuating Base-Overturning Moment
3.3. Spectrum of Fluctuating Base Overturning Moment
4. Wind-Induced Response of the Building
4.1. Acceleration and Displacement
4.2. Wind-Induced Base Overturning Moments
5. Comparisons with the SPI Test
5.1. Experimental Setup of SPI
5.2. Comparison of the Results of the HFFB and SPI Test
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- For the mean values of the base moments in the along-wind direction, the RO10% model reveals the smallest value among the five models. The results show that the mean base bending moment on the building will not be symmetrical about the wind azimuth due to the interfering effect induced by the neighboring buildings;
- (2)
- The standard deviation of the base bending moment of the building in the cross-wind direction is much larger than that in the along wind direction, indicating that the cross-wind fluctuations originating from vortex shedding will be dominated provided a remarkable building height;
- (3)
- The peak values of the power spectrum of the base bending moment decrease significantly for the models with corner modifications compared with the unmodified model. The aerodynamic treatments of corner modifications have a considerable benefit of disrupting the regular shedding of vortices and causing the cross-wind accelerations and displacements of buildings to be appreciably smaller than that of the unmodified model;
- (4)
- For the wind-induced base bending moments, the model with a 10% roundness radius to width ratio has the best mitigation effect not only in the along wind direction but also in the cross-wind direction among the four corner modifications;
- (5)
- Furthermore, the mean and extreme base overturning moments obtained by the SPI and the HFFB tests are almost coincidental versus the wind azimuth with acceptable discrepancy. The discrepancy may be partially due to facts such as the integrating error of the SPI technique and model fabrications. However, the disparities are relatively small, indicating that the two types of tests can be verified with each other.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Corner Modification | Method | Parameters Involved | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pressure Coefficient | Base Force | Aerodynamic Spectrum | Wind-Induced Response | |||
Quan et al. [6] | CH, RE, RO | HFFB | √ | √ | ||
K.T. Tse et al. [7] | CH, RE | HFFB | √ | √ | ||
Zhang et al. [8,9] | CH, RO, RE | HFFB | √ | |||
Irwin et al. [10] | RE | SPI | √ | √ | ||
Xie et al. [11] | RE | SPI | √ | √ | √ | |
Li et al. [2] | CH, RO, RE | SPI | √ | √ | √ | |
Kawai [12] | CH, RE, RO | AE | √ | |||
Cao et al. [13] | CH, RE | AE | √ | |||
Wang et al. [14] | CH, RO, RE | AE | √ | |||
Liao et al. [15] | CH, RE | CFD | √ | √ | ||
Elshaer et al. [16] | RE | CFD | √ | √ | √ | |
Ding et al. [17] | RO, CH | CFD | √ | |||
Yang [18] | RO | CFD | √ | |||
Abdelaziz [19] | RE | CFD | √ | √ | √ |
Case1 | Case2 | Case3 | Case4 | Case5 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Section outline | |||||
Plan | Reference | 5% roundness | 10% roundness | 5% recession | 10% recession |
Abbreviation | Ref | RO5% | RO10% | RE5% | RE10% |
Model picture |
Case | Ref | RO 5% | RO 10% | RE 5% | RE 10% |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cross-wind (0°) | 8.88 | 7.51 | 4.39 | 6.12 | 5.17 |
Along-wind (270°) | 5.53 | 4.83 | 3.81 | 4.25 | 4.44 |
Height | Tap Number | Height | Tap Number | Height | Tap Number |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 m | 17 | 145 m | 28 | 255 m | 26 |
20 m | 17 | 160 m | 40 | 265 m | 37 |
50 m | 28 | 180 m | 28 | 280 m | 26 |
70 m | 28 | 200 m | 26 | 300 m | 44 |
95 m | 28 | 220 m | 26 | 310 m | 44 |
120 m | 28 | 240 m | 26 |
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Ke, Y.; Shen, G.; Yu, H.; Xie, J. Effects of Corner Modification on the Wind-Induced Responses of High-Rise Buildings. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 9739. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12199739
Ke Y, Shen G, Yu H, Xie J. Effects of Corner Modification on the Wind-Induced Responses of High-Rise Buildings. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(19):9739. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12199739
Chicago/Turabian StyleKe, Yanyu, Guohui Shen, Hangcong Yu, and Jiming Xie. 2022. "Effects of Corner Modification on the Wind-Induced Responses of High-Rise Buildings" Applied Sciences 12, no. 19: 9739. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12199739
APA StyleKe, Y., Shen, G., Yu, H., & Xie, J. (2022). Effects of Corner Modification on the Wind-Induced Responses of High-Rise Buildings. Applied Sciences, 12(19), 9739. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12199739