Abstract

A suspended ceiling system (SCS) is one of the most fragile and non-structural elements during earthquakes. However, effective seismic protection technologies for enhancing the suspended ceiling system have not been developed other than the steel bracing system. An innovative passive vibration control system is proposed in this paper, which equipped a damper-employed pulley amplification mechanism into the indirect suspended ceiling system, named the pulley–damper ceiling system (PDCS). Theoretical formulation and the detailed information on the system were presented first. In addition, a new rotational damper composition consisting of a non-linear viscous damper was developed to follow the large wire-cable stroke. Six types of the full-scale ceiling specimens of a 15.6-square meter area with different configurations were constructed for the preliminary experiments to evaluate the seismic performance and feasibility of PDCS under simulated earthquake motions. The comparative results of the shake table test demonstrated that the application of PDCS is capable of controlling both displacement and acceleration of the ceiling panels. This study also presents the nonlinear time history analyses by modeling a wire-cable as an equivalent truss element to transmit the relative displacement of the ceiling system to the damper. The analytical model accurately simulated the dynamic behavior of PDCS.

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