| May
4, 2005
Structural Engineers Receive $7.5 Million
Contract To Test Bomb Blast Mitigation Technologies
By Denine Hagen
UCSD structural
engineers together with a team of industry and university partners
will develop and evaluate blast mitigation technologies to harden
buildings and bridges against terrorist bomb attacks through
a new $7.5 million federal contract. More than 40 tests will
be performed over the next two years in the new blast simulator
laboratory at the UCSD Jacobs School of Engineering’s
Englekirk Structural Research Center. Testing is expected to
begin in June, after the simulator has been commissioned.
|
UCSD
simulates car bomb blast of
1,100 pounds of TNT at curbside.
Click
here to watch real-time video of blast. 00:18
Click
here for slow-motion video (no audio). 00:55 |
The blast mitigation
program at UCSD is supported by the Technical Support Working
Group (TSWG), the federal interagency organization for combating
terrorism. In 2003 and 2004, TSWG awarded UCSD contracts totaling
$8.6 million to construct the blast simulator. The newest contract
brings cumulative support for the blast mitigation program to
$16.1 million.
Partners in the UCSD
blast mitigation testing program include Karagozian and Case
(K&C) and Science Applications International Corporation
(SAIC), who will aid in computational analysis required to design
the tests. K&C and SAIC will also develop predictive computer
tools based on testing results. MTS Systems Corporation, the
company which originally built the UCSD blast simulator, will
continue to enhance the equipment in preparation for the blast
load simulations. The Energetic Materials Research and Testing
Center at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
will oversee a series of explosive field tests which will help
validate UCSD’s laboratory results. Structural Group is
providing blast mitigation technologies for the test specimens.
The UCSD blast simulator
is the world’s first laboratory to simulate the effects
of bombs without the use of explosive materials. The project
is led by UCSD structural engineering professors Gil Hegemier
and Frieder Seible.
“Today, hardening
buildings and bridges against terrorist bomb attacks is more
of an art than a science,” said Seible, dean of the UCSD
Jacobs School of Engineering. “Now for the first time,
we will be able to create fully controlled and repeatable blast
simulations. We will use these results, together with explosive
field tests, to create computer tools to design and assess blast
mitigation strategies for important facilities such as federal
buildings and embassies, as well as critical long-span bridges.”
“Most people
think the fireball is the dangerous part of a bomb blast, but
in reality it is the blast impulse that is most dangerous to
the structure,” says Hegemier. “Blasts are like
earthquakes in the sense that they put a horizontal load on
structures. Blast impulses create shock waves that literally
push and pull structures to the point that key load bearing
elements can fail, and lead to the kind of progressive collapse
we saw in the Oklahoma City federal building bombing ten years
ago.”
The UCSD blast simulator
generates the speed and force of explosive blasts through a
servo-controlled hydraulic system that punches test specimens
at speeds of up to 26 meters per second during a 1-2 millisecond
pulse. In the accumulator bank, nitrogen charges hydraulic fluid
and builds up pressure. This pressure is released through velocity
generators which propel steel plates carrying elastomeric pads
precisely shaped to impart specific pressure distributions on
the test specimen.
UCSD structural engineers
will test a variety of building components, such as structural
columns, which are most vulnerable to blast loads, as well as
load-bearing and infill walls, and bridge elements such as towers.
They will simulate a range of blast scenarios including the
equivalent of 50 pounds of TNT detonated within a few feet of
a structure to 5,000 pounds of TNT detonated from more than
100 feet away.
Throughout the program,
the team will evaluate how the structural components perform
before and after retrofitting with blast mitigation technologies.
One candidate technology is fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) composite
overlays originally designed to protect structures from earthquakes.
Such material is as thin as a cotton shirt, stronger than steel,
and consists of carbon threads woven in a polymer matrix which
is bonded with resin. Composite overlays performed successfully
in full-scale explosive field tests in which unretrofitted building
columns suffered catastrophic damage, while columns wrapped
with the composite overlay were virtually undamaged. Such overlays
have been deployed on several federal buildings in the U.S.
and abroad.
“Technologies
such as overlays and steel jackets can mitigate damage to buildings
by confining and containing concrete in load-bearing elements
such as columns. We're actually strengthening concrete columns
so that they behave more like metal,” says Gil Hegemier.
“In addition, concrete is brittle and can fragment in
an explosion, but when we wrap it with these materials we can
contain the concrete for the short duration of the shock wave.”
Media Contact: Denine
Hagen (858) 534-2920
|