AndEI
Structural
- Oct 3, 2018
- 5
We’re working on an office building that is experiencing floor vibration problems due to walking (that is, people walking, not the building). The building is 20 years old, and we are told there have not been complaints in the past. The interior was redone in the last couple of months, so the occupancy went from a typical office to a more open/electronic office. The floor system is a non-composite 2.5” concrete slab on 1” metal deck (total floor depth = 3.5”). The floor is supported by 26” deep open web steel joists spaced at 28” on center (joist span = 35ft). The joists frame into a 28” deep joist girder (span = 30ft).
Our proposed retrofit of the joists is to weld a 12” castellated beam to the bottom chord of the open web steel joists, similar to Figure 8-1(b) in the new DG11. We’ll also stiffen up the connection between the girder and the slab, so we can use the full composite section of the girder.
I can’t quite wrap my head around why the floor needs to be jacked up. I know DG11 says, “Jacking is required to introduce strain into the added elements so that the retrofitted system is ‘tight’ and able to respond to the very small loads introduced by human activity.” And I know natural frequency depends on the uniformly distributed line mass, m, supported by the beam, and the new beam doesn’t support the existing loads.
But I would think that because (1) the strains between the new beam and the existing joist will be compatible (the strain would be discontinuous, but the welds won’t slip), and (2) the steel will remain linear, the built-up section will bend as a unit from any additional load, even the very small loads introduced by human activity. If this is the case, I would think the increased moment of inertia of the built-up section would still increase the joist stiffness enough to help reduce noticeable floor vibrations.
The client is hesitant to spend the money to retrofit the floor, so they’re going to try to just move a bunch of file cabinets into the areas with vibrations first. And if we do go through with the retrofit, we’ll remove the loading anyways so we can weld to the bottom chord of the joists in tension, but I would still like to feel more comfortable with the mechanics.
Thank you in advance for your time and help.
-Andy
Our proposed retrofit of the joists is to weld a 12” castellated beam to the bottom chord of the open web steel joists, similar to Figure 8-1(b) in the new DG11. We’ll also stiffen up the connection between the girder and the slab, so we can use the full composite section of the girder.
I can’t quite wrap my head around why the floor needs to be jacked up. I know DG11 says, “Jacking is required to introduce strain into the added elements so that the retrofitted system is ‘tight’ and able to respond to the very small loads introduced by human activity.” And I know natural frequency depends on the uniformly distributed line mass, m, supported by the beam, and the new beam doesn’t support the existing loads.
But I would think that because (1) the strains between the new beam and the existing joist will be compatible (the strain would be discontinuous, but the welds won’t slip), and (2) the steel will remain linear, the built-up section will bend as a unit from any additional load, even the very small loads introduced by human activity. If this is the case, I would think the increased moment of inertia of the built-up section would still increase the joist stiffness enough to help reduce noticeable floor vibrations.
The client is hesitant to spend the money to retrofit the floor, so they’re going to try to just move a bunch of file cabinets into the areas with vibrations first. And if we do go through with the retrofit, we’ll remove the loading anyways so we can weld to the bottom chord of the joists in tension, but I would still like to feel more comfortable with the mechanics.
Thank you in advance for your time and help.
-Andy