Located at the O.H. Hinsdale Wave Research
Laboratory, the strong floor - second largest structural testing floor
on the West Coast--allows researchers to simulate earthquakes and forces up
to one million pounds and frames up to two stories high. The floor, measuring
24 feet wide and 68 feet long, is steel-reinforced concrete five feet thick,
with massive bolts and anchors to which materials can be attached and their
strength tested.
"Structures are still the vanguard of civil and construction engineering,
and if you want to have a great program combining both research and teaching
in this area you need a facility such as this," said Chris
Higgins, an assistant professor in the College of Engineering. "Now we
can test, at full scale, new high performance materials, innovative connectors,
seismic energy dissipating devices, as well as different configurations of
traditional steel and concrete materials that might be used to provide more
efficient or economical structures." The new facility aids research on bridge
girders, bridge decks, beam column connections, shear walls and other structures
used in constructing buildings, bridges, and infrastructure. "Large steel
reaction frames attached to the strong floor allow us to apply forces to any
component we want to test," Higgins said. "For instance, we could apply 800,000
pounds of crushing force to a beam using just a few of the attachment points.
The facility we were using previously was much too small and limited the configurations
and size of tests we could do."
The Oregon Dept. of Transportation
(ODOT) awarded OSU Civil Engineering researchers almost $1.6 million to help
the state analyze the severity of cracks found in more than 500 of its bridges.
Researchers will develop modeling tools and data banks to forecast how the cracked
bridges will perform over time. The cracks, detected during routine ODOT inspections,
affect bridges on Oregon's interstate and state highways. "Without our new strong
floor laboratory, ODOT would have gone out of state to conduct this research,"
says Higgins, an international leader in this research area.
The strong floor cost approximately $160,000 to construct and is a good example
of how investing in engineering education ultimately helps the people of Oregon,
Higgins said. The ODOT grant, in conjunction with the strong floor, will allow
Higgins, a team of five graduate students and fellow OSU faculty members Solomon
Yim, Tom Miller
and Michael Scott
to test bridge components to the failure point by applying forces, or the
weight from vehicles moving across the bridge.
View images and
videos of experiments on the strong floor.