Vibration Isolation: J. M. Kelly, Earthquake-Resistant Design With Rubber © Springer-Verlag London Limited 1993
Vibration Isolation: J. M. Kelly, Earthquake-Resistant Design With Rubber © Springer-Verlag London Limited 1993
Vibration Isolation
Introduction
The theory of seismic isolation has many features in common with the better known
theory of vibration isolation, but there are some distinct differences between them;
these are mainly associated with the degree to which the vibrational disturbance is
known and the amplitude of the displacements in the support system.
The isolation of equipment from vibration via antivibration mounts is a well-
established technology and the theory and practice are covered in several books,
papers and reviews, of which the survey by Snowden [1] is an example. It is gener-
ally the isolated machine that is the source of the unwanted vibrations, but the pro-
cedure can be used to protect a sensitive piece of equipment or an entire building
from external sources of vibration. The use of vibration isolation for entire buildings
appears to have been started in the UK and is now well accepted in Europe. The first
building in the world to be isolated from low-frequency ground-borne vibration via
natural rubber was an apartment block over the underground railway at St. James's
Park in London. This building was completed in 1966. Since that time, an increasing
shortage of land in urban areas has led to the construction of hundreds of structures
on laminated rubber bearings all over the world. Details of this method of building
construction have been published, for example, by Grootenhuis [2] and by Crockett
[3].
The predominant disturbance to a building by rail traffic is a vertical ground
motion with frequencies that range from 25 Hz to 50 Hz, depending on the local soil
conditions and the source. To achieve a degree of attenuation which takes the dis-
turbance below the threshold of perception or below the level which will interfere
with the operation of delicate equipment, such as an electron microscope, the rubber
bearings are designed to provide a vertical natural frequency for the structure at
about one-third of the lowest frequency of the disturbance.
A recent example of the use of vibration isolation for buildings is the new concert
hall in Birmingham, UK, for the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. The
hall was officially opened on 12 April 1991. The entire 400000-tonne building is
mounted on rubber isolators to prevent the transmission of vibration from an adja-
cent main railway line. This technology for reducing ground-borne noise in build-
ings has not yet been accepted in the USA, but with the increasing use of land near
railway lines and the increasing number of light rail, subway systems, or other steel
rail transit systems in urban areas, it could become quite generally adopted in the
USA and might otTer a substantial new market for natural rubber.
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~~~~~~:?', FJgUI'e 2.1 Two equivalent forms of the vibration isolation system.