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Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of

the art
GEORGE GAZETAS

Rensselaer Polytechnic lnstitute, Troy, New York, USA

The paper reviews the state-of-the-art of analysing the dynamic response of foundations subjected
to machine-type loadings. Following a brief outline of the historical developments in the field, the
concepts associated with the definition, physical interpretation and use of the dynamic impedance
functions of foundations are elucidated and the available analytical/numerical methods for their
evaluation are discussed. Groups of crucial dimensionless problem parameters related to the soil
prot~ile and the foundation geometry are identified and their effects on the response are studied.
Results are presented in the form of simple formulae and dimensionless graphs for both the static
and dynamic parts of impedances, pertaining to surface and embedded foundations having circular,
strip, rectangular or arbitrary plan shape and supported by three types of idealized soil profdes: the
halfspace, the stratum-over-bedrock and the layer-over-halfspace. Consideration is given to the effects
of inhomogeneity, anisotropy and non-linearity of soil. The various results are synthesized in a case
study referring to the response of two rigid massive foundations, and practical recommendations are
made on how to inexpensively predict the response of foundations supported by actual soil deposits.

INTRODUCTION the establishment of the soil profile and evaluation of


critical soil properties. Great progress has also been made in
The basic goal in the design of a machine foundation is to
current years in developing/n situ and laboratory testing
limit its motion to amplitudes which will neither endanger
procedures to obtain representative values of dynamic soil
the satisfactory operation of the machine nor will they
parameters; a comprehensive review of the available experi-
disturb the people working in the immediate vicinity. Thus,
mental methods has been presented by Woods, 3 while
a key ingredient to a successful machine foundation design
Ozaydin et al., 4 Woods s and Richart 6 have summarized
is the careful engineering analysis of the foundation response
the present knowledge on the factors influencing the
to the dynamic loads from the anticipated operation of the
dynamic soil parameters. These developments in determin-
machine. Furthermore, when excessive motions of an
ing material properties complement the advances in
existing foundation obstruct the operation of the sup-
analysing foundation vibrations, and provide considerable
ported machinery, analysis is necessary in order to under-
justification for the use of sophisticated numerical formula-
stand the causes of the problem and hence to guide tions in the design of machine foundations.
appropriate remedial action.
On the other hand, little if any progress has been made
The theory of analysing the forced vibrations of shallow
in reliably estimating dynamic machine loads and improving
and deep foundations has advanced remarkably in the last
(through calibration with field data) the available perform-
15 years and has currently reached a mature state of
ance criteria. The state-of-the-art in these two areas has
development. A number of formulations and computer
remained essentially unchanged during the last decade;
programs have been developed to determine in a rational
reference is made to McNeil 2 and Richart, Woods and Hall 7
way the dynamic response in each specific case. Numerous
for comprehensive reviews of these subjects.
studies have been published exploring the nature of associ-
An additional and often overlooked step in machine
ated phenomena and shedding light on the role of several
foundation design is the post-construction observation of
key parameters influencing the response. Solutions are also
the foundation performance and its comparison with the
presently available in the form of dimensionless graphs and
predicted foundation behavior. Such comparisons are
simple mathematical expressions from which one can
needed to calibrate new analysis procedures - a n essential
readily estimate the response of surface, embedded and pile
task in view of the simplifying assumptions on which even
foundations of various shapes and rigidities, supported by
deep or shallow layered soil deposits. Clearly, the current sophisticated formulations are based.
In the final analysis, confidence in the advantages pro-
state-of-the.art of analysing machine foundation vibrations
has progressed substantially beyond the state of the art of vided by the use of advanced methods of analysis can only
the late 1960s which had been reviewed by Whitman and be gained if these are shown to have the capability to pre-
Richart in 19671 and by McNeil in 1969. 2 dict the field performance of actual machine foundations.
Unfortunately, only a limited number of case histories has
In addition to the selection and application of analysis
so far been published evaluating state-of-the-art methods of
procedures to predict the response, the design of a machine
analysis through detailed field observations.
foundation involves (1) the establishment of performance
The objective of this paper is to review the present state-
criteria, (2) the determination of dynamic loads, and (3)
of-the-art of determining the dynamic response of founda-
tions subjected to machine-type loadings. The outline of
* Presented at the International Conference on Soil Dynamics and the paper follows the chronology of historical develop-
Earthquake Engineering, held at the University of Southampton, ments: from the dynamics of circular footings resting on
England, 13-15 July 1982. the surface of an elastic halfspace to the behavior of cir-

0261-7277/83/010002-41 $2.00
2 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 © 1983 CML Publications
Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

cular and non-circular foundations embedded in a layered by the sensitivity of this 'mass' to the foundation weight,
soil deposit and, finally, to the response of piles. Particular mode of vibration, type of exciting force, contact area, and
emphasis is accorded to the effects of dimensionless groups nature of the underlying soil. Apparently, there is absolutely
of geometric and material parameters on the dynamic no value in this concept and its use in practice may very
stiffness functions and on the response of massive founda- well mislead the designer.
tions. Normalized graphs and simple formulas are presented Tschebotarioff's 'reduced natural frequency' method,
for a variety of idealized soil profiles and foundation geo- based on the results of a few case histories, went a step
metries. The use of such data to estimate to translational beyond the original 'in-phase mass' methods) The 'reduced
and rotational motions of actual foundations in practice natural frequency' was defined as the 'natural frequency'
is clearly demonstrated and the various results are syn- multiplied by the square.root of the average vertical contact
thesized by means of a ease study. Practical recommenda- pressure and was given graphically as a function of the type
tions are then made on how to approximately obtain of soft and of the contact area. Although this method was
dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients for actual not without merit, it was often interpreted to mean that
foundations, accounting only for the most crucial para- 'the single most important factor in machine-foundation
meters of the problem. design was the soft bearing pressure'. 2 Thus, in more than
Since the limiting motion for satisfactory performance one occasion, the design was based on soil bearing capacity
of a machine foundation usually involves displacement values taken from local building codes!
amplitudes of a few thousandths or even ten-thousandths of In addition to the aforementioned drawbacks, these old
an inch, soil deformations are quasi-elastic, involving negli- rules were only concerned with the resonant frequency,
gible nonlinearity and no permanent deformations. Thus, providing no information about vibration amplitudes that
most of the solutions reported herein assume linear iso- are primarily needed for design purposes. As a consequence,
tropic viscoelastic soft behavior, with a hysteretic soil such rules are now obsolete and will not be further
damping to model energy losses at those small strain addressed in this paper. Reference is made to Richart et al. 7
amplitudes. However, some consideration is also given to for more details on the subject.
the effects of soft nonlinearity on the vibration of strip
footings under strong horizontal and rocking excitation. Dynamic Winkler model
Moreover, the importance of soil anisotropy and soil This model was introduced as an extension of the well
inhomogeneity are also considered. known 'Winkler' or 'elastic subgrade reaction' hypothesis,
which is still rather successfully employed in some static
soil-foundation interaction problems. 9 In order to simulate
OLDER METHODS OF ANALYSIS
the stiffness characteristics of the actual system, the model
In the past, machine foundations were frequently designed replaces the supporting soil by a bed of independent elastic
by rules-of-thumb without any analysis of the expected springs resting on a rigid base. Plate bearing tests, con-
vibration amplitudes. For instance, one such design rule ducted in the field, form the basis for evaluating the spring
called for a massive concrete foundation of a total weight constants (often called 'coefficients of subgrade reaction').
equal to at least three to five times the weight of the sup- On the basis of field measurements in the USSR, Barkan 1°
ported machine(s). Although such a proposition may at has presented tables and empirical formulae with which one
first glance seem logical, it is in fact an obsolete one since can readily estimate design values of the coefficient for
it ignores the effect on the motion of all the other variables several types of soft, for each possible mode of vibration
of the problem (e.g. type of excitation, nature of support- (translational or rotational). He has also shown that, in each
ing soil, and so on). For one thing, increasing the mass of case, the dynamic coefficient is approximately equal to the
a foundation decreases the resonant frequency of the ratio of applied pressure increment to the resulting displace-
system and, perhaps more importantly, reduces its effective ment during static repeated loading tests. In these tests
damping. 7 Obviously, this is not what those applying the static loads 'similar' to the combined dead and live load of
rule had in mind. the actual foundation are first imposed, followed by
Following the pioneering experimental studies carried repeated slow loading, at frequencies of the order of 0.001
out by the German Degebo in the early 1930s, a number of cps, i.e. much slower than those expected in reality.
empirical analysis procedures were developed and used It is evident that this model can at least give some
extensively at least until the 1950s. These methods focused reasonable information on the low-frequency (near-static)
on determining only the 'natural frequency' of a founda- response of a foundation. But since no radiation damping is
tion. To this end, the concepts of 'in-phase mass' and included, the amplitude of motion at frequencies near
'reduced natural frequency' were developed. The former resonance cannot be realistically estimated. It has been
assumes that a certain mass of soil immediately below the argued that by neglecting damping one obtains conservative
footing moves as a rigid body, in-phase with the foundation. estimates of the response and very good estimates of
The latter postulates that the 'natural frequency' is solely natural frequencies. In fact, this is the procedure currently
a function of the contact area, the soil bearing pressure and incorporated into the 1970 'Indian Standard Code of Prac-
the type of soil. tice for Design of Machine Foundations'. H There is little
Physical reality contradicts the concept of an 'in-phase merit in this argument, however. For instance, the high
mass'. No soil mass moves as a rigid body with the founda- damping values present in the translational modes of vibra-
tion. Instead, shear and dilational waves emanate from the tion (of the order of 50% of critical) do affect the
footing-soil interface into the soil, causing oscillating 'resonant' frequencies, in addition to drastically reducing
deformations at the surface and carrying away some of the amplitudes. Moreover, avoiding 'resonance' (by a safety
input energy. The factors that have an influence on these factor of 2) in such cases is an unfortunate design recom-
phenomena cannot be possibly accommodated through mendation which may lead to an overly conservative solu-
such an artificial concept. Indeed, the early attempts to tion. In other eases, especially when the rotational modes
obtain specific values of the 'in-phase mass' were frustrated are of main concern, an unsafe design is quite possible since

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 3


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

the actual foundation stiffness at high frequencies may very bution of contact stresses was assumed for mathematical
well be appreciably smaller than the static stiffness used in simplification. Nonetheless, Reissner's theory offered a
the analysis (see, for example, Fig. 5). major contribution by revealing the existence of radiation
An improved version of the dynamic Winkler model d a m p i n g - a phenomenon previously unsuspected but
(called 'Winkler-Voigt' model) places a set of independent today clearly understood. Every time a foundation moves
viscous dampers in parallel with the independent elastic against the soil, stress waves originate at the contact surface
springs to provide the 'dynamic subgrade reaction'. Accord- and propagate outward in the form of body and surface
ing to Barken and Ilyichev, 12 this model forms the basis of waves. These waves carry away some of the energy trans-
the 1971 USSR machine-foundation code. Again, however, mitted by the foundation on to the soil, a phenomenon
the model itself provides no information on its spring and reminiscent of the absorption of energy by a viscous
dashpot coefficients. These are instead backfigured from damper (hence the name).
dynamic plate-load tests conducted in the field. Both the For many massive foundations the assumption of a
observed amplitude and frequency at resonance are utilized uniform contact stress distribution is an unrealistic one, for
to backfigure the two coefficients. Analyzing the results of it yields a non-uniform pattern of displacements at the soil-
numerous field tests, Barkan and his co-workers found a footing interface. To closer approximate the rigid body
discrepancy between the spring constants backfigured from motion of such foundations, a number of authors in the
resonance plate tests and from static repeated loading tests middle 1950s assumed contact stress distributions which
(described previously). They, thus, resorted to the 'in-phase produce uniform or linear displacements at the interface,
soil mass' concept to essentially match the model constants under statically applied force or moment loadings, respec-
obtained from the two types of tests. This added soil mass tively. Thus, Sung Is and Quinlan ~6 presented results for
was found to depend on the size and embedment of the vertically oscillating circular and rectangular foundations
foundation and on the nature and properties of the soil while Arnold et al. 17 and Bycroft aa studied both horizontal
deposit, for a given mode of vibration. and moment loading of a circular foundation. These solu-
It therefore appears that the 'Winkler-Voigt' model is tions are only approximate: in reality the pressure distribu-
a purely empirical one, requiring field static and dynamic tions required to maintain uniform or linear displacements
plate-load tests for each particular situation. Such tests are not constant but vary with the frequency of vibration.
are not only very expensive and difficult to successfully The first 'rigorous' solutions appeared about ten years
conduct, but, moreover, they yield results which cannot be later when the vibrating soil-foundation system was
readily interpreted and extrapolated to prototype condi- analysed as a mixed boundary-value problem, with pre-
tions. If I may slightly rephrase Gibson: 13 scribed patterns of displacements under the rigid footing
and vanishing stresses over the remaining portion of the
'The model conspicuously lacks what all models
surface. Introducing some simplifying assumptions regard-
should possess- predictive power.'
ing the secondary contact stresses ('relaxed' boundary),
The only possible explanation for the present-day use of Awojobi et al. 19 studied all possible modes of oscillation of
dynamic Winkler models in machine-foundation analysis is rigid circular and strip footings on a halfspace, by recourse
the accumulation in some countries of a wealth of pertinent to integral transform techniques. On the other hand,
field data. Such data, often available in the form of tables, ~2 Lysmer2° obtained a solution for the vertical axisymmetric
can be directly utilized in practice, thus avoiding the vibration by discretizing the contact surface into concentric
burden of performing plate-load tests. Again, one should be rings of uniform but frequency-dependent vertical stresses
very careful in picking up values for the coefficients from consistent with the boundary conditions. A conceptually
published field data. For it is practically impossible to similar approach was fonowed by Elorduy et al. 21 for ver-
ensure a similarity in all the crucial physical and geometric tically loaded rectangular foundations.
response parameters of the new prototype and of the old Perhaps equally important with the aforementioned
model foundation schemes. theoretical developments of this period was the discovery
by Hsieh 22 and by Lysmer2° that the dynamic behavior of a
vertically loaded massive foundation can be represented by
FUNDAMENTALS OF CURRENT METHODS OF a single-degree-of-freedom 'mass-spring-dashpot' oscillator
VIBRATION ANALYSIS with frequency-dependent stiffness and damping coeffi-
Historical perspective cients. Lysmer2° went a step farther by suggesting the use
Modern methods of analysis of foundation oscillations of the following frequency-independent coefficients to
attempt to rationally account for the dynamic interaction approximate the response in the low and medium frequency
between the foundation and the supporting soil deposit. range:
Cornerstone of the developed methods is the theory of 4GR 3.4R 2
wave propagation in an elastic or viscoelastic solid (con- Kv = ; Cv = ~ X/~ (1)
1--v 1--~
tinuum). This theory has seen a remarkable growth since
1904, when Lamb published his study on the vibration of in which: Kv = spring constant (stiffness), Cv = dashpot
an elastic semi-infinite solid (half-space) caused by a constant (damping), R = radius of the circular rigid loading
concentrated load ('dynamic Boussinesq' problem). Numer- area, G and v = shear modulus and Poisson's ratio of the
ous applications, primarily in the fields of seismology and homogeneous halfspace (soil), and p = mass density of soil.
applied mechanics, have given a great impetus in the Note that the expression for Kv in equation (1) is identical
development of the 'elastodynamic' theory. Reissner in with the expression for the static stiffness of a vertically
193614 attempted what is considered to be the first engin- loaded rigid circular disk on a halfspace.
eering application; his publication on the response of a The success of Lysrner's approximation (often called
vertically loaded cylindrical disk on an elastic halfspace 'Lysmer's Analog') in reproducing with very good accuracy
marked the beginning of modern soil dynamics. The solu- the actual response of the system had a profound effect on
tion was only an approximate one since a uniform distil- the further development and engineering applications of the

4 SoilDynamicsandEarthquakeEngineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

'halfspace' theories. Richart and Whitman 23 extended Table I. Equivalent lumped parameters for analysis o f circular
Lysmer's Analog by demonstrating that all modes of foundations on elastic haifspace*
vibration can be studied by means of lumped-parameter Mode Vertical Horizontal Rocking Torsion
mass-spring.dashpot systems having properly selected
frequency-independent parameters. The axisymmetric (ver- 4GR 8GR 8GR 3 16GR 3
Stiffness:
tical and torsional) oscillations of a cylindrical foundation 1--v 2--v 3(l--v) 3
can be represented by a 1-degree-of-freedom (1-dof)
system described by: m(1--v) m(2--~) 31x(1--v) Iz
Mass ratio r~:
4pR 3 8pR 3 8pR s pR s
m £ + CYc + K x = V ( t ) (2)
0.425 0.29 0.15 0.50
in which x, ~ and £ = the displacement, velocity and Damping ratio:
th 112 th 1/2 (1 + rh) th I'~ l+2t~
acceleration, respectively, of the vertically oscillating mass;
P ( t ) = the external dynamic force arising from the opera- FictRious added 0.27m 0.095m 0.24Ix 0.241 z
tion of the machine(s). The lumped parameters are the mass: & ~ ~
equivalent mass, m, the effective damping, C, and the
effective stiffness K. (For torsional oscillations m should be Ix, I z = mass m o m e n t s o f inertia around a horizontal, vertical axis,
respectively; damping ratio=C/Ccr where Ccr=2(£m) t/2 or
replaced by Iz, the effective mass polar moment of inertia Ccr = 2(KI) "2 for translational or rotational modes of vibration,
and x should be interpreted as the angle of rotation around with I = I x or 1z for rocking or torsion, respectively.
the vertical axis of symmetry.) On the other hand, the two
antisymmetric modes of oscillation (horizontal translation
and rocking) of a cylindrical foundation are coupled and
can be represented by a 2-dof system characterized by the
effective mass and mass moment of inertia, the two pressions, suitable for direct use in practical applications.
effective values of damping (for swaying and rocking), and It is worth mentioning some of the most important contri-
the two effective values of the stiffness (for swaying and butions to the current state of the art.
rocking). Newly developed (mid-1960s) mathematical techniques
Different values of the inertia, stiffness and damping to solve mixed boundary-value elastodynamic problems
parameters are needed for each one of these four modes of were utilized by Luco e t al. 2s and Karasudhi et al. 26 to
excitation. Whitman and Richart 23 suggested the choice of obtain 'exact' numerical solutions for all modes of vibration
stiffnesses appropriate for low frequencies, and of average of strip footings on a halfspace, and by Luco et al. 27 and
damping values over the range of frequencies at which Veletsos et al. 2~29 to extend the available halfspaee solu-
resonance usually occurs. In order to obtain a good agree- tions for circular foundations to the high frequency range
ment between the resonant frequencies of the lumped- and, also, to a viscoelastic material with linear hysteretic
parameter and the actual system, they recommended that damping. The development of dynamic finite-element
a fictitious mass (or mass moment of inertia) be added to formulations with energy absorbing ('viscous' and 'consist-
the actual foundation mass (or mass moment of inertia). ent') lateral boundaries prompted the study of the response
The need for such a recommendation stemmed not from of surface and embedded foundations supported by a
the existence of any identifiable soil mass moving in-phase layered soil stratum. 3°-34 Only plane-strain and axisym-
with the foundation, but rather from the fact that in metric geometries could be handled with these finite
reality the stiffnesses decrease with increasing frequency element formulations, however, and the presence at a
(see Figs. 5 and 7), instead of remaining constant and equal relatively shallow depth of a non-compliant rock-like
to the static stiffnesses, as the model assumes. In other material underlying the stratum was an unavoidable require-
words, instead of decreasing K, the lumped-parameter ment regardless of whether such rock did actually exist.
model increases m to keep the resonant frequency, cor, On the other hand, Luco 3s and Gazetas ~ presented
unchanged. Recall that cor is proportional to the square- analytical solutions for circular, strip and rectangular
root of (K/m). foundations on the surface of a layered halfspace or a
Whitman and Richart 23 and later Richart, Woods and layered stratum (i.e. with or without a rigid rock as the
Hall 7 and Whitman ~ presented expressions for these para- last layer, respectively). Utilizing these formulations they
meters for all four vibration modes. Table 1 displays these offered results 37-39 which bridged the gap between the two
expressions, which have enjoyed a significant popularity previously studied extreme profiles-the halfspace and the
over the last decade. stratum-on-rigid-base. At about the same time, Novak4°
Primarily because of its simplicity, the lumped-para- obtained approximate analytical solutions for circular
meter approximation had a great impact on the application foundations embedded in a halfspace, by deriving closed-
of the 'half-space' theory. It demonstrated that this rational form expressions for the dynamic stiffness and damping
theory can be cast into a tractable, simple engineering form, coefficients along the vertical sides of the foundation.
which can be used by the profession with hardly any Later on this method was easily adapted to study the
greater difficulty than the older empirical procedures. dynamic response of piles. 4~-43
Motivated to a large extent by the need to understand In more recent years research efforts have been pri-
the phenomena associated with seismic soil-structure inter- marily directed to determining solutions: (a) for rigid
action, the analysis of the dynamic response of foundations foundations of rectangular and arbitrary shapes;44-4s (b) for
has been a subject of considerable interest throughout the foundations of Finite flexural rigidity;49-sl (c) for founda-
1970s. A significant amount of related research has led to tions on inhomogeneous and on anisotrepic soils; s2-ss and
the development of new formulations and computer (d) for foundations on nonlinear (Ramberg-Osgood)
programs, while numerous publications have studied the soils, s6 Furthermore, a very substantial amount of research
importance of critical foundation, soil and loading para- work has been devoted to the dynamic behavior of single
meters and have presented graphs, tables and simple ex- (floating and end-bearing) piles embedded in homogeneous,

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. 1 5


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

inhomogeneous or layered soft deposits, and the first usually negligibly small in case of surface and very shallow
attempts have already been made to obtain solutions for foundations, but their effect may become appreciable for
dynamic loaded pile groups. For comprehensive lists of greater depths of embedment.
related references, see Dobry et at., s7 Kagawa et al., ss and Referring to equation (3), it is interesting to note that
Novak. s9 dynamic force and displacement are generally out of phase.
In fact, any dynamic displacement can be resolved into two
Impedance and compliance functions: definition and components: one in phase and one 90 ° out of phase with
physical interpretation the imposed harmonic load. It is convenient then to intro-
An important step in current methods of dynamic duce complex notation to represent forces and displace-
analysis of rigid massive machine foundations is the deter- ments. As a consequence, impedances may also be written
mination (using analytical or numerical methods) of the in the form :*
dynamic impedance functions, K(~),* of an 'associated' Ka(w ) = Ka](~o ) + iKa2(w ) (4)
rigid but massless foundation, as a function of the excita-
tion frequency, ~o. As shown in Fig. 1 the 'associated' a = v, h, r, hr, t; i = x/=l
foundation-soft system is identical (in both material prop- The real and imaginary components are both functions
erties and geometry) with the actual system, except that of the vibrational frequency to. The real component reflects
the foundation mass is taken equal to zero. It will be the stiffness and inertia of the supporting soil; its depen-
explained in the following section how, once the harmonic dence on frequency is attributed solely to the influence
response of such a massless foundation has been deter- which frequency has on inertia, since soil properties are
mined, the steady-state response of the massive foundation, essentially frequency independent. The imaginary com-
or of any structure supported on it, may be evaluated ponent reflects the radiation and material damping of the
using standard procedures. In addition, the transient system. The former, being the result of energy dissipation
response to non-harmonic machine forces can also be by waves propagating away from the foundation, is fre-
evaluated by recourse to Fourier analysis and synthesis quency dependent; the latter, arising chiefly from the
techniques. hysteretic cyclic behavior of soil, is practically frequency
For each particular harmonic excitation with frequency independent.
~o, the dynamic impedance is defined as the ratio between A very instructive analogy between the dynamic response
the steady-state force (or moment) and the resulting dis- of a simple 1-dof oscillator and of a three-dimensional
placement (or rotation) at the base of the massless founda- massless foundation.soft system has been drawn by Roesset.6°
tion. For example, the vertical impedance of a foundation Assuming a harmonic excitation P ( t ) = Poexp(iwt), the
whose plan has a center of symmetry is defined by:* steady-state response x(t) = Xo exp (i~t) of the 1-dof oscil-
R~(t) lator may be obtained by substitution into equation (2);
xo = - - (3)
V(t) P(t)
( K - - m ~ : ) + iC~ = (5)
in which R~(t) = R v exp (i6ot) is the harmonic vertical force x(t)
applied at the base of the disk, and v(t) = v exp (i~ot) is the Contrasting equations (5) and (3) prompts the definition
uniform harmonic settlement of the soil-foundation inter- of a dynamic impedance function for the 1-dof mass-
face. It is evident that R~ is the total soft reaction against spring-dashpot system:
the foundation; it is made up of the normal stresses against K = ( K - - m ~ 2) + iCco (6)
the hasemat plus, in case of embedded foundations, the
shear stresses along the vertical side walls, as illustrated in and, by comparison with equation (4):
Fig. 1. K1 = K - - m w 2 (7)
Similarly one may defme the torsional impedance, Kt,
from the torsional moment and rotation; the horizontal K2 = C~o (8)
impedances, K a, from the horizontal forces and displace- In other words, the dynamic impedance of our familiar
ments along the principal axes of the base; and the rocking 1-dof oscillator is indeed a complex number with a fre-
impedances, Kr, from the moments and rotations around quency dependent real part representing the stiffness and
the same horizontal principal axes. However, since hori- inertia characteristics of the system, and a frequency
zontal forces along the principal axes produce rotations in dependent imaginary part expressing the energy loss in the
addition to horizontal displacements, cross-horizontal- system. Therefore, it is quite natural to express the dynamic
rotational impedances Krh may also be defined; they are impedance of soft-footing systems in a complex form, as
done in equation (4).
rigid, massless Having, thus, established the analogy between 1-dof and
foundation
massless footing-soft systems, let equation (6) for the

L 1- dof be rewritten as:

K = K. {(1 -- ~---2]+ i2~ ¢° } (9a)

D 0 0 0
B
~ O 0 0

0 . . . . . • . . o..- or
0 0 0 0 0 ~ 0 g B 0

K = K . {k + i w c s} (9b)
Figure 1. Machine foundation and the associated rigid
massless foundation in which the critical viscous damping ratio is:
* Bold letters are used in the text for impedances, compliancesand C C
some stiffness and damping coefficients (equation (17)); in the . . . . (10)
figures, calligraphic characters are used for these quantities. Ccr 2K/~on

6 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

to support the mass Of the simple oscillator. This damper


is described through a hysteretic damping ratio, ~. During
each cycle of motion it dissipates an amount of energy
proportional to the maximum strain energy, I¢, of the
system:
! ! AWh = 4n~W (14)
in which W = (½)Kx~. On the other hand, during a cycle
~I~ n ~ ~/~n----.~-
I i I I of motion the viscous damper has consumed an amount
li~ I 0,5 1 of energy equal to:
Figure 2. Dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients o f AW~ = ~C~,~o2
a I-dofsimple oscillator
{D
= 4~13 -- W (15)
60 n

the natural frequency ~n = (K/m) 1/2, k = ( 1 - ~2/con2) and so that the total dissipated energy, AW = AWh + AWv, as
c s = C/K. Equation (9b) implies that the dynamic imped- a function of W is:
ance of a 1-dof simple oscillator may be expressed as a
product of the spring constant K, which happens to be the
static stiffness of the system, times a complex number
'AI¢"W= 4"tr('8~ +~) (16)
k +i¢oc s, which encompasses the dynamic characteristics
of the system (inertia and viscous damping) and is here- This expression suggests that the simple addition rule,
after called 'dynamic part' of the impedance. At zero + ~%o/wn, may be used to obtain the 'effective' damping
frequency the dynamic part becomes a real number, equal ratio of a system possessing both viscous, 13,and hysteretic,
to 1, and the impedance coincides with the static stiffness ~, damping. A w~orating foundation-on-soil is one such
K of the simple system, k and cs are named respectively system, with its radiation damping being of a viscous nature
stiffness and damping coefficients and their variation with while the material damping is of the hysteretic type.
frequency for the 1-dof's is plotted in Fig. 2. Notice that The presence of material damping in the soil affects both
k decreases as a second degree parabola with increasing the stiffness and damping coefficients, k and c. In an
t~, whereas c s remains constant. attempt to isolate the effects of hysteretic material damp-
It should not surprise the reader that the actual varia- ing, an alternative expression to equation (12) is often
tion with t~ of the stiffness and damping coefficients, kv used for the dynamic impedance:
and csv, of a vertically vibrating circular disk on an elastic K = K(k + iaoc).(1 + 2i~) (17)
halfspace is indeed very similar to the variation of the
k and c s of the 1-dof system! (To see this similarity just Recalling the so-called 'correspondence principle, 6~ one
compare Fig. 2 to Fig. 5(a).) However, in general, k and c s may anticipate that the new coefficients, k and c, are
of a foundation-soil system may vary in a rather compli- independent of material damping. If this were true, it
cated manner with co, depending primarily on the mode would then be sufficient to obtain solutions for a purely
of vibration, the geometry, rigidity and embedment of the elastic soil and then extrapolate the results to soils with
foundation, and, t'mally, the profile and properties of the any hysteretic damping ratio by multiplying the undamped
supporting soil deposit. Figures 5, 8, 9, 10 and 20 may be impedances by 1 + 2i~. Indeed, for very deep soil deposits
previewed to conf'Lrm this statement. Nonetheless, in all which can be modeled as a halfspace the above 'principle'
cases, the dynamic impedance functions can be expressed is reasonably accurate and has been repeatedly utilized to
as products of a static and a dynamic part, as described obtain solutions for damped soils. 29'62,6a However, in the
by equation (9b). Alternatively, a dimensionless frequency case of a shallow stratum on rigid rock both k and c are
factor is often introduced: fairly sensitive to the assumed material damping ratio (see
Fig. 9, for example); this discredits to a large extent the
'correspondence principle', as Kausel 3a had first noticed.
ao = -- (11) None the less, it is convenient to express the impedance
Vs
functions in the form of equation (17), and this practice is
in which: B = a critical foundation dimension like, e.g., frequently followed in the sequel. Alternatively, however,
the radius of a circular foundation or half the width of a equation (12) is also used in some cases.
strip or a rectangular foundation; and Vs = a characteristic
shear wave velocity of the soil. Combining equations (9b) Dynamic compliance functions
and (11) allows the impedance to be case in the form: Also given the names dynamic 'displacement' functions
K = K(k + iaoc) (12) and dynamic 'flexibility' functions, they are essentially the
ratios between dynamic displacements (or rotations) and
with the dynamic reactive forces (or moments) at the base of a
foundation. They were first introduced by Reissner. ~4
Vs Following the previous discussion, it is convenient to
C=Cs -B- (13)
express each compliance using complex notation:
Since both ao and c are dimensionless quantities, equation F a = Fal(¢o) + iFa2(co ) (lg)
(12) is strongly preferred to equation (9b) in presenting the
results of dynamic analyses. a = v, h, r, hr, t
Let it now be assumed that a 'hysteretic damper' is The real and imaginary parts represent the displacement
added in-parallel with the spring and the 'viscous damper' components which are in-phase and 90°-out.of-phase with

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 7


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

the reactive force, respectively, and they both are functions 'Continuum' methods. Starting point of all the devel-
of frequency, as discussed in detail previously. For a oped formulations is the analytical solution of the pertinent
foundation which in plan has a center of symmetry, the wave equations governing the imposed deformations in each
vertical and torsional compliances are simply the inverse uniform soil layer or halfspace. However, the boundary
of the vertical and torsional impedances: conditions at the soil-footing interface are handled differ-
ently by the various methods. In that respect, one may very
1
Fb=-- ; b=v,t (19a) broadly classify the available continuum formulations into
Kt, analytical and semi-analytical solutions.
However, due to the coupling between rocking and The known analytical solutions simplify the mechanical
swaying motions, the corresponding compliances should behavior of the soil-footing contact surface by assuming a
be obtained by inverting the matrix of impedances: 'relaxed' boundary. That is, no frictional shear tractions can
develop during vertical and rocking vibrations, while for
horizontal vibrations the normal tractions at the interface
are assumed to be zero. This assumption has been necessary
to avoid the more complex mixed boundary conditions
The following alternative form to equation (18) is also resulting from the consideration either of a perfect attach-
frequently used in presenting compliance functions: ment between foundation and soil ('rough' foundation) or
1 of a contact obeying Coulomb's friction law (an even more
Fo = ~ [f.l(~o) + if.2(~o)] (20) realistic idealization).
By recourse to integral transform techniques (involv-
where K a is the corresponding static stiffness. ing Hankel or Fourier transforms for axisymmetric or
plane-strain geometries, respectively) the relaxed boundary
Computational procedures for determining conditions yield sets of dual integral equations for each
impedance/unctions mode of vibration. Each set is then reduced to a Fredholm
Several alternative computational procedures are pre- integral equation which is finally solved numerically.
sently available to obtain dynamic impedance functions for Such analytical solutions have so far been published for
each specific machine-foundation problem. The choice surface circular and strip foundations of infinite flexular
among these methods depends to a large extent on the rigidity supported by an elastic or viscoelastic halfspace ;26-29
required accuracy, which in turn is primarily dictated by for circular foundations on a layered elastic or viscoelastic
the size and importance of the particular project. Further- soil deposit; 3s'~ for circular foundations of finite flexurat
more, the method to be selected must reflect the key rigidity supported on a halfspace;49 for circular foundations
characteristics of the foundation and the supporting soil. on a cross-anisotropic halfspace;67 and even for vertically
Specifically, one may broadly classify soil-foundation loaded rigid rectangular foundations on a halfspace. 4s
systems according to the following material and geometry The semi-analytical type solutions are based on the
characteristics: determination of the displacements at any point within the
footing-soil interface, caused by a unit normal or shear
1. The shape of the foundation (circular, strip, rect-
time-harmonic force applied at another point of the same
angular, arbitrary).
interface. Then, by properly discretizing the contact sur-
2. The type of soil profile (deep uniform deposit, deep
face, the matrix of dynamic influence or Green's functions
layered deposit, shallow layered stratum on rock).
is assembled and the problem is solved after imposing the
3. The amount of embedment (surface foundation,
rigid-body motion boundary conditions. Several different
embedded foundation, deep foundation).
techniques (in essence different integration procedures)
4. The flexural rigidity of the foundation (rigid founda-
have been formulated to carry out these steps of the
tion, flexible foundation).
analysis. For example, Elorduy et al. 21 and Whittaker
Two computationally different approaches have been et al. s° utilized Lamb's solution for a point loaded half-
followed over the years to obtain the dynamic impedances space; Luco et alfl 7 obtained pairs of Cauchy type integral
of foundations with various characteristics: a 'continuum' equations which they numerically solved after reducing to
approach, which led to the development of analytical and coupled Fredholm equations; Gazetas 36 and Gazetas et al. 3a
semi.analytical formulations, and a 'discrete' approach, utilized a fast Fourier transform algorithm; Wong 68 and
which resulted in the development of finite-difference and, Wong et al. 44 used the solution for a uniformly loaded
primarily, finite-element models. In the past (mid-1970s), rectangle; and so on.
considerable controversy was held about the relative For the purpose of this discussion, one may list as a
merits and deficiencies of each approach and some extreme semi-analytical solution the formulation of Dominguez and
and unjustified positions were advocated. Today, it is quite Roesset, a7 who applied the so-called 'boundary integral
clear that both procedures, if correctly understood and equation' or, more simply, 'boundary element' method
implemented, are very useful tools in analysing the behavior to obtain dynamic impedance functions of rectangular
of dynamically loaded foundations. Moreover, they yield foundations at the surface of, or embedded in a halfspace.
very similar results if they are appropriately used to solve To this end, they utilized the closed-form solution to the
the same problem. Hadjian et al. 64 and Jakub et al. 6s have 'dynamic Kelvin' problem of a concentrated load in an
presented excellent discussions and comparative studies on infinite medium, 69 and discretized either only the contact
this subject. The following paragraphs intend to rather surface, in the case of surface footings with 'relaxed'
briefly introduce the most important analytical, semi- boundaries, or both the contact and the surrounding soil
analytical and numerical procedures which are currently surfaces, in the cases of embedded footings and of surface
available to the machine-foundation analyst. The list is by footings 'adhesively' attached to the soil.
no means exhaustive, and the emphasis is on discussing the So far rigorous semi-analytical solutions have been pub-
strong and weak points of each method. lished for rigid strip foundations on the surface of a layered

8 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1 983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

halfspace or stratum-on-rock; as' 38,~9,7o for rlgid rectangular dimensional (3D) geometries, in cartesian coordinates.
foundations on a halfspace; 21' 36'44' 46-4a' ~,6s,6a, 71 for rect- Thus, to solve 3D problems a fmite-element model must
angular foundations of finite flexural rigidity; s°' sl for rigid resort to 'viscous' or elementary boundaries placed far
rectangular foundations embedded in a halfspace;47 and, away from the loaded area. In this way the fictitiously
f'mally, for rigid foundations of arbitrary shape. 44 reflected waves are dissipated through hysteresis and fric-
Note that approximate semi-analytical procedures have tion (material damping) in the soil before they return to
already been developed to obtain the impedances of cylin- the foundation region. However, the cost of such analyses
drical embedded foundations and circular piles, a°-43,sT'Tz is prohibitive and truly 3D solutions are very rarely used
These procedures assume that only horizontally propa- in practice. An attempt has been made to modify a 2D
gating waves generate at the vertical foundation-soil inter- computer program by adding viscous dashpots to the
face, and they neglect the coupling between forces and lateral faces of its plane-strain elements, in order to simu-
displacements at various points. Instead, they only compute late the radiation damping of 3D situations, ss Notwith-
the displacement at the point of application of the load. standing the popularity enjoyed by this pseudo-3D model,
Thus, in effect, the soil is modeled as a Winlder medium, its only difference from the 2D model is that it introduces
the spring and dashpot characteristics of which are esti- an artificial increase in damping, which cannot possibly
mated from realistic, albeit simplified, wave propagation reproduce all aspects of the true 3D behavior. In fact, in
analyses. some cases the actual 3D radiation damping in rocking is
Finally, several similar approximate analytical formula- over-estimated rather than under-estimated by a 2D model; ~
tions have been developed, again for deeply embedded thus by adding viscous dashpots the situation may worsen
cylindrical foundations and end-bearing piles in soil instead of improving, s6,es
strata. 73-7s These procedures attempt to analytically solve Consequently, today, two types of finite-element models
the governing wave equations for the stratum, by neglecting are practically available: plane-strain 2D models appropriate
the secondary component of displacement (i.e. the vertical for strip footings or elongated rectangular structures; 34,s4,s7
component for lateral vibrations or the radial one for and 3D axisymmetric.geometry models appropriate for
vertical vibrations). The boundary conditions at the soil- cylindrical foundations and nearly square structures. 31' 33,ss
pile interface are analytically enforced b y expanding the It is noted that embedded foundations and layered soil
contact pressure distribution to an infinite series in terms of strata can be routinely handled with all the f'mite-element
the natural modes of vibration of the soil layer. formulations. On the other hand, the presence of a fixed
'Discrete' models. Dynamic finite difference and finite bottom boundary is required by most of the available
element models have been developed for problems of codes. This is hardly a drawback if a stiff, rock-like stratum
complicated geometry which are not easily amenable to does exist at a relatively shallow depth. Otherwise, when
analysis with continuum type, analytical or semi-analytical the supporting soil deposit is very deep, the cost of a
formulations. Today, finite difference formulations such realistic finite-element analysis may become substantial
as those proposed by Anget al., 79 Agabein et al., s° Krizek Conclusion. With the available analytical, semi-analytical
et al., sl and Tseng et al., s2 fred very little if any application and f'mite-element computer programs the foundation vibra-
in solving foundation vibration problems, and, therefore, tion analyst may obtain solutions for foundations of various
will not be further addressed in this paper. On the other shapes, surface or embedded, supported by deep or shallow
hand, several f'mite element formulations and computer soft deposits. In selecting the most appropriate code for
programs are presently widely available and frequently each specific situation, attention should first focus on the
used in analysing foundation oscillations. depth of embedment and the nature of the underlying soft.
The use of finite elements in dynamic foundation prob- When dealing with very shallow footings on deep deposits
lems is different from other applications of finite elements which can be well reproduced by a small number of layers
in statics and dynamics in that soil strata of infinite extent with different properties, continuum type analytical or
in the horizontal and even in the vertical direction must be semi-analytical formulations are clearly more advantageous;
represented by a model of a finite size. Such a finite model the choice of the most appropriate among them will be
creates a fictitious 'box' effect, trapping the energy of the mainly dictated by the shape of the footing (strip, circular,
system and distorting its dynamic characteristics. To avoid rectangular, arbitrary) and the desired degree of accuracy.
this problem, wave absorbing lateral boundaries are intro- On the other hand, for embedded foundations in a shallow
duced to account for the radiation of energy into the outer stratum or whenever a large number of layers with sharply
region not included in the model. Two main types of such different properties exists below the footing, finite element
boundaries are available. The approximate 'viscous' boun- models are particularly appropriate.
dary proposed by Lysmer etal. s3 and extended by Valliappan Furthermore, attention should be accorded to the opera-
et al. ~ must be placed at some distance from the founda- tional frequencies of the machine and the inertia character-
tion. The alternative 'consistent' boundary developed by istics of the foundation. At very high frequencies of vibra-
Waas at and extended by Kause133 is very effective in accur- tion, f, discrete models may become very costly; because,
ately reproducing the physical behavior of the system, and in order to transmit high frequencies, a large number of
it also results in considerable economy by being placed sufficiently small, sized elements must be used. For instance,
directly at the edge of the foundation. This 'consistent' it is usually recommended that the maximum dimension of
boundary provides a dynamic stiffness matrix for the an element should not exceed X/8, where ~, = V/f is the
medium surrounding the plane or cylindrical vertical cavity wavelength in a particular soil layer having shear wave
which is assumed to occupy the central region under the velocity V. Therefore, with high frequencies, analytical
strip or circular foundation. This matrix corresponds models may become advantageous. Notice, though, that the
exactly to the boundary stiffness matrix that would be computer costs of semi-analytical formulations may also be
obtained from a continuum type formulation. adversely affected by a large increase in the operational
Unfortunately, 'consistent' boundaries have been devel- frequency, since they, too, discretize the contact area or
oped only for plane-strain and axisymmetric (cylindrical) the whole uppermost surface.
geometries. No such boundary is available for truly three- Regarding the inertia characteristics of the foundation,

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake En#neering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 9


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

the author and Roesset 39 have demonstrated that for heavy F


foundations (i.e. with high mass ratios) small errors in
modeling the different soil layers are unimportant and one
can safely base the design on available halfspace solutions CROSS-SECTION

or on the results of analytical type computer programs.


On the other hand, relatively light foundations are quite vT---
sensitive to the existence of competent rock at a shallow
depth and of different soil layers beneath the footing, thus
requiring a good soil exploration followed by finite-element
l / l / l / I l l
--i-;;--t !
analyses. These conclusions are further illustrated and /
generalized in a later section of this paper.
In addition to the existing computer programs numerous
solutions have been published in the literature in the form
of dimensionless graphs, tables and simple formulae for
impedance and compliance functions of foundations with
several different geometries, depths of embedment and PLAN
stiffness characteristics, supported by various idealized soil
profiles (halfspace, stratum, etc.). These solutions can give I. I
very satisfactory results in many practical cases and are •
I
especially valuable in conducting preliminary analyses and
parameter sensitivity studies. One of the goals of this state-
I I/'
of-the-art paper is to present and discuss the most signi-
ficant of these available solutions. Before doing this, /-k
however, it is expedient to illustrate how the impedance I ,
functions may be utilized to obtain the dynamic response
of rigid massive foundations. i h
Figure 3. Definition o f deformation variables
Use o f impedance functions: response o f massive machine
foundan'ons rocking exciting forces and moments, acting at the center
The first step in analysing the response of a massive of gravity and resulting from the operation of the machine.
machine foundation is to evaluate the pertinent dynamic As already mentioned, only the steady-state response
impedances at the anticipated frequency, or range of fre- due to a harmonic excitation is of interest here. Not only
quencies, of the machine. This is done either by utilizing because most machines usually produce unbalanced forces
existing discrete or continuum type formulations, or by which indeed vary harmonically with time (rotary or recip-
resorting to published solutions available in the soil dyn- rocating engines), but also because non-harmonic forces
amics literature. The use of dynamic impedance to obtain (such as those, for example produced by punch presses and
the response is illustrated herein. forging hammers) can be decomposed into a large number
Figure 3 portrays a massive, rigid foundation having equal of sinusoids through Fourier analysis. Therefore, the excita-
depth of embedment along all the sides and possessing two tions may be written as:
orthogonal vertical planes of symmetry, the intersection of
which defines a vertical axis of symmetry. The foundation Qa = Qa exp [i(~ot + Ca)] a = v, h (25)
plan, having two axes of symmetry, may be of any axi- M a = M a exp [i(wt + Ca)] a = z, r (26)
symmetric or orthogonal shape, including the infinitely
in which the amplitudes Qa and M a are either constants or
long strip (2D geometry). For such foundations, vertical
(more frequently) proportional to the square of the opera-
and torsional oscillations are uncoupled, while horizontal
tional frequency ~ = 2rrf; ~a are the phase angles of the
forces and moments along and around the principal axes
four excitations, v, h, r and z.
produce displacements and rotations only along and around
With the excitation forces described by equations (25)-
the same axes. Thus, with the notation of Fig. 3, the equa-
(26), the steady-state motions may be cast in the form:
tions of motion in vertical translation v(t), torsional rota-
tion O(t), and coupled horizontal translation h(t) and v(t) = v .exp(icot); v = vl + iv2 (27)
rocking r(t), all referred to the center of gravity of the O(t) = 0. exp(i6ot); 0 = 01 + i02 (28)
machine-foundation system, are respectively:
It(t) = h. exp (iwt); h = h~ + ih2 (29)
m . ~)(t) + R , ( t ) = Q~(t) (21)
r(t) = r .exp(i~t); r = rl + Jr2 (30)
Iz" O(t) + Tz(t ) = Mz(t ) (22)
in which: v, 0, h and r are complex, frequency-dependent
m. h(t) + R n (t) = Qh (t) (23)
displacement and rotation amplitudes at the center of
Iox. E(t) + Tr(t)--Rh(t) . z e = Mr(t ) (24) gravity. Note that equations (27)-(30) do not by any
in which: m = total foundation mass; Iox = mass moment means imply that the four components of motion are all
of inertia about a principal horizontal axis passing through in phase, nor that the phase-angles between the corre-
the center of gravity; I z = mass moment of inertia around sponding excitations and motions are equal to Ca (equations
the vertical axis of symmetry;R n, Tz, R n and T r = vertical, (25)-(30)). Instead, the true phase angles Ca are 'hidden'
torsional, horizontal and rocking reactions of the soil acting in the complex form of each displacement component. For
at the center of the foundation base (remember Fig. lb); instance, the vertical motion will exhibit:
Qn, Mz, Qh and Mr = vertical, torsional, horizontal and ¢Ja = arctan (v2/vO (31)

10 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

in which 7)1 and v2 axe the real and imaginary parts of v (a)
(equation (27)), while its amplitude is of a magnitude:
Ivl = (v 2 + v2) '/2 (32)
Also, since Qa and M a in equations (25)-(26) are real quan-
tities, the phase lags between excitations and motions will
be simply equal to Ca -- ~ka-
Using similar arguments with regard to the soil reactions, I
one may, without loss of generality, set: "i. :~, ' ." o° ..-'. °°. '. °' ~ °° .

R a = R a • exp (loot) a = v, h (33) H • ' G1 :. :'~....


:':.'~ ,-:-... :-. :.'.:!:'.
°.

T a = T a • exp (it~t) a = z, r (34)


whereby the complex amplitudes R a and T a are related to N~N
bedrock %%N
the complex displacement and rotation amplitudes through %• f- N N
the corresponding dynamic impedances Ka, a = v, h, r, hr,
t (see equations (3)-(4)). Recalling that the latter are
referred to the center of the foundation base, one can (b)
promptly write:
~,X
R v = Ko. v (35)
T m
Tz = Kt" 0 (36) I
Rh = Kh " (h --Zer ) + Khr" r (37)
2L
T r = K r . r +Khr. (h - - z e r ) (38)
Substituting equations (25)-(30) and (33)-(38) into the
governing equations of motion (21)-(24) and solving the
resulting system of four algebraic equations yields the
F
d
wm
l __d
2B 2B
following complex-valued displacement and rotation
amplitudes at the center of gravity: Figure 4. (a) The three soil profiles studied; (b ) definition
Qv" exp (i~v) o f geometric parameters
v= (39)
Xt,(¢o) - m ~ 2
M z .exp (i~z) for the dynamic impedances (or compliances) of massless
0 = (40) foundations, pertaining to all poss~le (translational and
Kt(co ) --Iz602 rotational) modes of w~oration. These results can be directly
h = { K ~ . Q h exp(i~h) - - K ~ r . M r e x p ( i ~ r ) } . N (41) used in equations (40)-(43) to make satisfactory and inex-
pensive predictions of the dynamic behavior of machine
r = ( X t "Mr exp (i~r)-K~rQh exp (i~h)}-N (42) foundations in many practical cases, without the need to
in which the following substitutions have been performed: resort to costly computer programs for evaluating the
impedances; this should be of especially great value in
Xt = Xh(~)--m~ z (43) preliminary design calculations.
K~r = Khr(co)--Kh(CO) Zc (44) A second, equally important objective of the presenta-
tion is to assess the significance of various phenomena and
K* = Kr(co)--IoxcO 2 + Kh(t~ ) Z2c- 2Khr(co) z c (45) to illustrate the role of key dimensionless geometric and
and, finally, material parameters on the response. It is thus hoped that
N = (XtK*--K~h2) -' (46) the reader can gain a valuable insight into the mechanics
of foundation vibrations.
Notice that, for a particular frequency w, determination of Results are presented for three categories of idealized
the motions from equations (39)-(42) is a straightforward soil profiles (Fig. 4): the halfspaee, the uniform stratum
operation once the dynamic impedances are known. Of on rigid base and the layer on top of a halfspace. These
course, the computations are somewhat tedious if per- models represent a wide spectrum of actually encountered
formed by hand, since complex numbers are involved; but soil profiles and are simple enough for their geometry to be
even with small microcomputers the calculations can be described in terms of a single quantity, namely, the thick.
done routinely, at a minimal cost• hess H of the uppermost layer. (For the halfspace H-~**.)
Therefore, the author proposes that this procedure For most problems considered, the following groups of
(equations (39)-(42), in connection with an appropriate dimensionless parameters which appreciably influence the
evaluation of impedances at the frequency(ies) of interest, dynamic impedances have been identified:
should be used in machine foundation analysis in place of
the currently popular 'equivalent lumped frequency- (a) the ratio H / B of the top layer thickness,/4, over a
independent-parameter' approach. critical foundation-plan dimension, B; the latter
may be interpreted as the radius, R, of a circular
PRESENTATION OF RESULTS FOR SURFACE AND foundation or half the width of a rectangular or a
EMBEDDED FOUNDATIONS strip foundation
(b) the embedment ratio D/B, where D is the depth
The subsequent four sections of the paper present a com- from the surface to the horizontal soil-footing inter-
prehensive compilation of characteristic numerical results face

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 198.3, VoL 2, No. I 11


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

(c) the shape of the foundation plan: circular, strip, torsional response is totally independent of v at all fre-
rectangular, circular ring; in the last two cases the quencies. It thus appears that the importance of Poisson's
plan geometry may be def'med in terms of the ratio increases when the relative contribution of generated
length-to-width or 'aspect' ratio, L/B, or the internal- dilational (P) waves increases. Indeed, in the vertical and
to-external radii ratio, Ri/R , respectively rocking modes P waves are significant; in the horizontal
(d) the frequency factor ao = coB/Vs, where Vs is a mode P waves are of secondary importance; and in the
characteristic shear wave velocity of the soil deposit torsional mode only SH waves are generated and P waves
(e) the ratio G~/G2 of the shear moduli corresponding play no role in the response.
to the upper soil layer and the underlying halfspace, 2. The coefficients kh, Ch and c v are essentially inde-
respectively; this ratio may attain values ranging pendent of frequency and can be considered constant
from 0, in case of a uniform stratum on rigid base, without any appreciable error. On the other hand, kv, kr,
to 1, in case of a uniform halfspace c r and c t exhibit a strong sensitivity to variations in the
(f) the Poisson's ratio(s) v of the soil layer(s) frequency parameter, while k t shows an intermediate
(g) the hysteretic critical damping ratio(s) ~ of the soil behavior. Of particular interest is the rapid decrease of the
layer(s) vertical and rocking stiffness coefficients ke and k r with
(h) the factors n and r~ which express the 'degree' of increasing a0, for values of Poisson's ratio close to 0.5*
anisotropy and the 'rate' of inhomogeneity, respec- (typical for saturated clays). In fact, k¢ and k r become
tively; n = EH/Ev, where EH and E V are the hori- negative for values of ao greater than 2.5 and 5, respec-
zontal and vertical Young's moduli of a cross- tively. Some years ago it appeared that use of 'added
anisotropic soil; while ~ , for a certain type of masses' could adequately account for the decrease with
inhomogeneity, describes the change of shear ao of the stiffness coefficients, in the range of low fre-
modulus from the surface to a depth equal to B quencies. Such 'masses' would in effect produce dynamic
(i) the relative flexural rigidity factor R F = (EflEs) stiffness coefficients of the form k - - m ~ 2 - a reasonable
(1--9}). (t/B) 3 where El, vy and t are, respectively, approximation indeed for low frequencies, which formed
the Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio and thickness the basis of the 'lumped-parameter' model, described in
of the foundation raft; R F ranges from ~, for a a preceding section of the paper. Unfortunately, as is
perfectly rigid foundation, to 0, for an ideally evident from Fig. 5, this approximation may lead to sub-
flexible mat. stantial errors for larger frequencies. Moreover, the concept
of 'added mass' has all too often been confused with the
RIGID SURFACE FOUNDATIONS ON HOMOGENEOUS physically incorrect notion of an 'in-phase soil mass', which
HALFSPACE at much earlier times had found considerable use in the
design practice.
Rigid c~cular foundation 3. While the damping coefficients of the translational
When dealing with a deep and relatively uniform soil modes, c~ and Ch, attain large and nearly constant values
deposit, it makes engineering sense to model it as a homo- throughout the frequency range 0 < ao ~< 8, the coefficients
geneous halfspace. This idealization, primarily because of c r and c t of the two rotational modes are very sensitive to
its simplicity, has been widely employed to determine variations in frequency in the low range of ao, tending to
stresses and deformations in soils, and its use in soil zero as ao approaches zero. At larger frequencies (ao greater
dynamics has led to results in qualitative agreement with than about 3) c r and c t are essentially frequency-indepen-
observations. From a practical point of view, perhaps the dent, but their values both equal to about 0.30, are
greatest value of the model has been in explaining impor- significantly smaller than the corresponding values of
tant features associated with foundation vibrations. c v ~ 0.95 and Ch ~--0.60. These differences imply that a
The dynamic impedance functions for a rigid cir- smaller radiation of wave energy takes place during rocking
cular foundation on the surface of a homogeneous half- and torsional than during vertical and horizontal oscilla-
space have been tabulated by Veletsos et al. 2a and Luco tions. It seems that the dynamic stress and strain fields
et al.; 27'2a'62 Fig. 5 presents their results in the form of induced in the soil by the two types of rotational loadings
equation (17), with zero hysteretic damping ratio. (Obvi- are of limited extent, with the generated waves decaying
ously, in this case, k = k and c = c.) The values of k and c very rapidly away from the loading area due to 'construc-
corresponding to non-zero values of internal damping are, tive interference'. These phenomena will become more
for all practical purposes, very similar to those plotted in evident in connection with the behavior of footings on
Fig. 5, in accord with the correspondence principle. Refer- layered or inhomogeneous soil deposits.
ence is made to Veletsos e t al., 29 t u c o 66 and Lysmer 63 for In any case, the practical implication of the existence of
a more detailed discussion on this subject. Notice that only only a small amount of radiation damping in the rocking
the diagonal elements of the impedance matrix are s h o w n and torsional modes of oscillation is that a realistic estimate
in the figure, as the cross swaying-rocking impedance is of the response may be obtained by incorporating the
essentially zero. effects of material (hysteretic) damping in the soil. On the
It is evident from Fig. 5 that the normalized impedances contrary, material damping is insignificant for horizontal
Ka/GR and Kb/GR 3, where a refers to the translational and, especially, vertical oscillations and, with little loss in
modes v and h and b to the rotational modes r and t, accuracy, it may be neglected in the presence of the much
depend only on the Poisson's ratio v of the halfspace and higher radiation damping.
the frequency factor ao. The following trends are worthy
of note in Fig. 5. * It is noted that although for saturated soft clays under static un-
1. The vertical and rocking stiffness, K, and dynamic drained loading one should use v = 0.50, with dynamic loading
stiffness coefficients, k, are the most sensitive to variations v = 0.50 leads to infinite dilatational wave velocity, which is not
in Poisson's ratio. On the other hand, the horizontal imped- observed in the laboratory; instead the Biot-Ishihara theory for
poroelastic media yields a maximum value of ~ slightly less than
ance function has a small dependence on v, while the 0.50.

12 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

1/2
1/3
I I -- .~ "
./'-" ~ ~"

.~ • .~'/

0 I I \l I t t I I 0 I I I I I I I I
\
1 ~ ..--.. 1 -
_ ~.___.. -~

: ~;~_~.j
01" I I I I I I I 1 1O- I I I I I I I I

F \\.
o'
F l , , ' ~x' ' '°I' ' ' i J I i i

k, ct
- @ -
-

0 I t I I I I t I I I I I I
2 4 6 8 0 2 4 6 8
a0 ao
Figure 3. Impedance functions of rigid circular footings on homogeneous halflspace27'2s'62

,Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. 1 13


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

Clearly, soil deposits having a constant G and extending is reasonably uniform along the longitudinal direction,
to practically infinite depths, as the homogeneous halfspace plane.strain conditions prevail throughout and 2D analyses
model assumes, do not abound in nature. In addition, are sufficient to obtain the response.
circular foundations are rather rarely constructed. Nonethe- Figure 6 displays the dynamic impedance of a rigid strip
less, the results of Fig. 5 for a circular foundation on a half- foundation on the surface of a homogeneous halfspace.
space are of great value in understanding the phenomena These results were obtained by the semi-analytical pro-
associated with foundation vibrations. From a practical cedure of Gazetas 36 and Gazetas and Roesset 38 and are in
point of view, however, the shape and trends of these agreement with the results of Karasudhi et al. 26 It is noted
impedance functions are more important than their exact that in this case the impedance functions are presented in
values. the form described by equation (4), and not in one of the
most usual forms of equations (12) or (17). The necessity
Rigid strip foundation for this change stemmed from the fact that the static ver-
When dealing with long and narrow foundations, the tical and horizontal stiffnesses of an infinite strip on a
length of which is larger than their width by a factor of 5 halfspace are zero, in agreement with the classical theory of
or greater, it is a common practice to idealize their shape as elasticity. This is at variance with the behavior of circular
an infinitely long strip. If, moreover, the dynamic loading foundations, whose (nonzero) static stiffnesses can be

P
1/2
. . . . . 1/3 ~=o

8 8

4 - j./

• . o

_L.
0
\

3 - .J
3

2
(...9
OJ

0 I I I I _ _.l . . . . ,L i

O4
m 2
(.9
.n.G B 2 CJ
E
g
I I I I J J " ~ ~ l i 1 I
0 0.5 1 1.5 0 0.5 1 1.5
a0 ao
Figure 6. Impedance functions of rigid strip footings on homogeneous halfspace

14 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

found from the expressions included in Fig. 5. The infinite is the width of the smallest side of the foundation. Results
displacement of a strip-loaded halfspaee arise from the large for the static stiffnesses are presented first.
depths of the corresponding 'zones of influence'. In other It has been known for some time that the static stiffness
words, the static stresses induced by the strip surface loads of a typical rectangular foundation can be approximated
decay slowly with depth and, thus, cause appreciable with reasonable accuracy by the corresponding stiffness of
straining of even remote soft elements; accumulation of "equivalent" circular foundations. For the translational
these strains yields infinite displacements. modes in the three principal directions (x, y and z) the
On the other hand, the stress and strain fields induced radius Ro of the 'equivalent' circular foundation is obtained
by moment loading are confined to the near surface soil by equating the areas of the contact surfaces; hence:
only; thereby producing small surface displacements and
non-zero static stiffnesses. For a rigid strip foundation, an (2B.2L) '/2
expression for the static rocking stiffness is included in Ro = x rr / (47)
Fig. 6.
A few other trends are worthy of note in Fig. 6. First, For the rotational modes around the three principal axes,
one should notice that there are only three possible modes the 'equivalent' circular foundations have the same area
of vibration of a strip (vertical, horizontal and rocking) as moments of inertia around x, y arid "z, respectively, with
compared to the four modes of a circular footing. Appar- those of the actual foundation. Thus, the equivalent radii
ently, torsional oscillations involve out-of-plane motions are:

and hence are impossible with strip footings. Rox = (16L. Ba/31r)TM (48)
In general, the dependence of the dynamic impedances
on the Poisson's ratio of soil is very similar for strip and for rocking around the x-axis;
circular foundations. Thus, the discussion of the preceding
section on the sensitivity of circular impedance functions
Roy = (16B.La/3rr) v4 (49)
to v, is also applicable to the present case. for rocking around the y-axis; and
Regarding the variation of impedances with frequency,
on the other hand, there are some differences between Roz = [16B'L (B2+L2)]d (50)
circular and strip footings, although clearly the general
trends are similar. Thus, in the very low frequency range,
the real parts Ktt and Khl of the two translational modes for torsion around the z-axis.
increase with increasing ao and they attain peak values of The results of recent parametric studies have confirmed
ao ranging from about 0.25 to about 1.0, depending pri- the similar static behavior of rectangular and equivalent
marily on the Poisson's ratio and the type of oscillation. circular foundations. Table 2 is a synthesis of the results of
This implies that 'constructive interference' of various P several such investigations. It presents theoretically 'exact'
and S waves originating at the soil-foundation interface formulae for all the translational and rotational static stiff-
reduces the depth of the 'zone of influence'; this results nesses of rigid rectangular foundations having a wide range
into finite displacements and non-zero dynamic stiffnesses. of aspect ratios. These formulae are cast in the form:
Beyond their peak values, Kvl and Khl behave much like
their circular counterparts. Notice, however, that at
K = Ko(Ro).d(L/b) (51)
Poisson's ratios close to 0.50 the vertical strip stiffness in which: K = the actual static stiffness; Ko (R o) = the corre-
becomes negative at ao values greater than 1.3, as compared sponding stiffness of the equivalent circular foundation,
with the corresponding value of 2.5 which was observed obtained from Fig. 5; Ro = the radius of the 'equivalent'
for circular footings in Fig. 5. circle; and J(L/B) = a 'correction' factor, function of the
The imaginary parts K~2 and Kh2 of the vertical and aspect ratio, LIB. If J(L/B) were equal to 1 for all aspect
horizontal modes increase almost linearly with ao, thus ratios, the static equivalence between the two types of
indicating qualitatively similar radiation damping character- footings would have been perfect. Conversely, the larger the
istics of strip and circular foundations. (Notice that the difference is between J(L/B) and 1, the less accurate it
damping coefficients c in the latter case are proportional would be the approximate a rectangular with a circular
to the slopes of the imaginary component of impedance- footing.
versus-ao curves; hence a constant c implies a linearly It may first be noted that only small discrepancies exist
varying K2.) in the values of the 'correction' functions computed from
Finally, the rocking stiffness and damping terms of both the results of several authors. These discrepancies are due
strip and circular foundations exhibit essentially identical to either the assumed soil.footing interface behavior
trends. Evidently, rocking induced static or dynamic ('smooth' versus 'adhesive' contact), or the employed
stresses influence only the near-surface soil under both different numerical solution schemes. In practice, however,
plane-strain and axisymmetric loading conditions. in view of the small magnitude of these differences, one
may safely use for J(L/B) the average of the values pre-
Rigid rectangularfoundation sented in Table 2, for each particular aspect ratio.
Results are now available for the complete dynamic The following conclusions are evident from this Table.
impedance matrix of rigid rectangular foundations with 1. Even for aspect ratios, L/B, as high as 8, the 'equi-
varying aspect ratios L/B, over the low and medium fre- valent' circular foundations yield stiffnesses which are
quency range. 47 For the vertical, horizontal and rocking within 30% of the corresponding stiffness of the actual
modes, in particular, results are available even for moder- rectangular foundation. This is by no means a large error,
ately high values ofao. ~,46,*a in view, for example, of the uncertainty in estimating the
Again, in presenting the variation with frequency and soil modulus in practice.
aspect ratio of impedances it is convenient to express them 2. For aspect ratios, L[B, less than 4 the 'equivalent'
in the form of equation (17), with a0 = coB/F, where 2B stiffnesses are in very good agreement with the actual

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. 1 15


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

Table 2. Static stiffnesses for rectangular rigid foundation zontal displacement in the y direction (Ky). For LIB = 4,
1. Vertical s t i f f n e s s the error in K t is about 17% and in Ky about 22%. It is
worthy o f note that whereas for a circular foundation
4GR o Kxo = Kyo = 8 G R o / ( 2 - - v ) , where Ro is given by equation
Kz =-Kv =--~-v--v "Jv(L/B) (47), a rectangular foundation with the larger side 2L
normal to they-axis (Fig. 4) is characterized by:
'Correction' factor Jv

L
Gorbunov-
Posadov
(1961)
Baxkan
(1962)
Savidis
(1977)
Dominguez etal. (1978)
'Adhesive' 'Smooth'
(L0
Ky ~ , r x + ½GB B -- (52)

for typical values of Poisson's ratio.


1 1.023 0.953 0.944 1.052 1.081
2 1.025 0.975 0.973 1.063 1.130 Variation with ao. Figure 7 portrays the dependence of
4 1.108 1.077 1.072 1.107 1.196 the dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients, k and c, on
6 1.197 1.152 - - -
8 1.266 1.196 1.200 - - the frequency factor ao and the aspect ratio LIB. These
10 1.313 1.250 - - - results were obtained with the Boundary Element Method
20 1.572 . . . . by Dominguez and Roesset, 47 for a single value of Poisson's
ratio, v = 13. Only the coefficients of the six diagonal
2. Horizontal stiffnesses components o f the impedance matrix are shown, they
correspond to the translational modes of vibration (x, y
8GR o 8GR o and z) along each of the three principal axes, and to the
Kx = -2-~--v "Jx(L/B) Ky = "2-~--v "Jy(t/B) rotational modes (r x, ry and rz) around each of the same
three principal axes. The two cross.swaying-rocking (coup-
'Correction' factor Jx 'Correction' factor Jy ling) impedances, corresponding to the Xry and y r x modes,
Dominguez Dominguez are neglig~ly small for surface foundations, and are thus
L Barkan et al. Barkan et al. omitted from this presentation. Also shown in Fig. 7 as
(1962) (1978) (1962) (1978) circles are the predictions of the 'equivalent' circular
foundations, computed from Fig. 5 in conjunction with
1 0.993 1.035 0.993 1.035
2 0.983 1.044 1.008 1.105 equations (47)-(50). One may notice the following trends
4 1.000 1.085 - 1.221 in Fig. 7.
6 1.055 - - - 1. The terms k x and c x of the impedance against motion
8 1.132 - - - normal to the smaller side 2B are insensitive to variations in
10 1.191 - - - ao. Moreover, k x is essentially independent of the aspect
ratio, L/B, while c x increases almost in proportion to the
3. Rocking stiffnesses square-root of LIB. Recall that c x must be multiplied by
ao = ~B[Vs to obtain the imaginary component of the
8GR~ "Jrx(L/B) Kry 8GR3°Y Jry(L/B ) dynamic part of the impedance (equations (12) or (17)),
Krx = 3(1 -- v-''~ - 3(1 -- v----) in which 2B is the width of the smallest side of the footing.
On the other hand, the frequency factor ao0 o f the 'equi-
'Correction' factor Jrx 'Correction' factor Jry
valent' footing equals ~Ro/Vs, with:
Gorbunov- Gorbunov- 2 / L ~ 1/2
L Posadov Dominguez Posadov Dominguez
"B etai. (1961) etal. (1978) etaL (1961) etal. (1978) Ro : - ~ n B ~ B ) (47a)

1 0.991 0.965 0.991 0.965 i.e. aoo is proportional to the square-root of LIB. Hence,
2 1.034 1.039 1.035 1.031
4 1.0488 1.117 1.072 1.140 plotted in Fig. 7, both stiffness and damping coefficients
8 1.178 - 1.226 - o f the 'equivalent' footing are in excellent agreement with
I0 1.281 - 1.319 - the corresponding coefficients of the actual rectangular
footing, for all aspect ratios studied (L/B = 1--4), at least
in the frequency range, 0 < ao ~< 1.5.
4. Torsional stiffness
2. The variation of the vertical stiffness and damping
coefficients, kv and Co, has a similar shape with the varia-
Krz -~ Kt = a~ GRa°z "Jt(L/B) tion of k x and c x. In this case, however, the two coeffi-
cients are more sensitive to variations in ao and LIB and
'Correction' factor Jt the damping term cv is always larger than c x. Moreover, the
L agreement between actual and 'equivalent' coefficients is
Dominguez et al. (1978) Roesset et al. (1977)
reasonably good, for all practical purposes.
1 0.950 1.0332 3. The coefficients ky and Cy, for a motion parallel to
2 1.000 - the maaller side 2B, show a greater sensitivity to both a0
3 1.016 - and LIB. Furthermore, the discrepancies between 'equi-
4 1.166 -
valent' and actual values for these coefficients are appreci-
able, increasing with the aspect ratio. In fact, footings
with a large LIB ratio (e.g. >/4) tend to behave more like
ones. Typically, the error is within 10% and, hence, it is strip rather than circular footings, as a comparison between
insignificant for all practical purposes. Figs. 5, 6 and 7 indicates.
3. The greatest differences are observed between actual 4. The stiffness coefficient krx for rocking around the
and 'equivalent' stiffnesses for torsion (Kt) and for hori- longest axis, x, exhibits no sensitivity to the aspect ratio,

16 $oil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

L/B; moreover, its variation as a function of ao is nearly fourth-root of LIB at high frequencies. Recalling that the
identical with the variation of the corresponding stiffness frequency factor of the 'equivalent' circular footing is
coefficient of both the 'equivalent' circular footing and a proportional to:
strip footing with the same width B (Fig. 6). The damping
coefficient crx attains negligible values in the low frequency
Rox - (37r)1/4
range and increases approximately in proportion to the

1 •

L/B ....... 3® 2 ~" . . . . "-"e--,,-........ e


.°~..~.- ~°°
4 • ®
~°~°~

0z 0
0

._.__.__.e--
v
®

kz .5

I I I I I
0 0
1 1
...... e"---"-U ..... "~
.......... e . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . .
-_ . . . . . . c2 o _<1

all L/B ratios

~X .5

I I I I I I
0 0
I 1

~"°" ~ . ° ~ o

i Oy e'~.. • •
-

| **~ ,.~- "~ ~ ~


__ .Q. . . . . _0 "" "-0-"

all L/B r a t i o s

.5

I I I ,,, I I I
0
.5 1 0 .5 1
ao ao
Figure 7. Dynamic coefficients o f rigid rectangular footings on homogeneous halfspace;47 (circles obtained by this author
for 'equivalent" circular footings)

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2,No. 1 17


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

Figure 7 - continued

%
I I l
0 I 0 I

• •

0 0..I ... o..... . . . .

/ . ,/ "¢" >O,,""" _

I I I
0 I 0

I °, _. ........ ,

, , , ,/./.iy'.-

0 .5 1 0 .5 1
ao a0

whereas the term crx is multiplied simply by ao = ~B/Vs in In conclusion, with the help of the formulae of Table 2
equations (12) or (17), one can directly unveil the very and the graphs of Fig. 7, the dynamic behavior of rect-
close proximity between the actual and 'equivalent' damp- angular foundations with essentially any aspect ratio can be
ing coefficients. obtained. Furthermore, the 'equivalent' circular footings
5. The stiffness coefficients kr~ and k t for rocking described through equations (47)-(50), yield reasonably
around the shortest axis and torsion, respectively, show a good estimates of the response for values of LIB less than
somewhat similar dependence on LIB and exhibit some about 4 and frequency factors at least up to 1.5. For larger
fluctuations with ao as L/B increases. The two coefficients values of LIB, the static stiffnesses of Table 2 can be
are predicted only with small accuracy by the 'equivalent' utilized in conjunction with the dynamic coefficients of
circular footings. On the other hand, the two damping an equal-width strip foundation (Fig. 6). More parametric
coefficients crr and ct grow rapidly with both frequency studies are, however, necessary to obtain results in the high
and aspect ratio. In this regard, it is interesting to notice frequency range (1.5 < a o < 8).
that, for instance, the frequency factor for the ry mode is
proportional to:
RIGID SURFACE FOUNDATIONS ON A
2 (Lt3/" HOMOGENEOUS SOIL STRATUM
Roy - (3n)~/------
q B \~i (49a)
Natural soil deposits very rarely have uniform properties
which reveals a much stronger increase of Cry with LIB, as within large depths from the loaded surface. More typical
compared with the corresponding increase of crx (a power is the presence of a stiffer material or even bedrock at a
of ~ for Cry versus a4 for crx ). Again, the values of the two relatively shallow depth. The response of a foundation on
coefficients may be reasonably well predicted by the a soil stratum underlain by such a stiffer medium can be
'equivalent' circular foundation. substantially different from the response of an identical

18 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2,31o. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

foundation resting on a uniform halfspace. It is, thus, An indication of the causes of this different behavior of
imperative to study the dynamics of massless foundations a circular footing to the four different types of loading can
on such soil deposits. Specifically two types of idealized be obtained by observing the depths of the 'zone of influ-
soil profiles are considered in this section: ence' (known as 'pressure bulb' ever since Terzaghi) in each
case. Thus, from Gerrand and Harrison, 92 in a homogeneous
(a) a homogeneous soil stratum over a rigid base, and halfspaee, the vertical normal stress, oz, along the centerline
(b) a homogeneous soft stratum over a homogeneous of a vertically loaded rigid circular disk becomes less than
half space. 10% of the average applied pressure at depths greater than
Results for non-homogeneous soft strata, with moduli zv-~ 4R; the horizontal shear stress, rzr, becomes less than
continuously increasing or decreasing with depth, will be 10% of the average applied shear traction at depth greater
presented in a subsequent section of the paper. than z h ~ 2R. From Gazetas,9a the horizontal shear stresses
In addition to the four dimensionless parameters which rzO and rr0 due to linearly distributed torsional surface
control the behavior of rigid footings on a halfspace, stresses become less than 10% of the maximum applied
namely, ao, v, ~ and L/B, the ratio H/B (or H/R) is of shear traction at z > z t =~ 0.75R. Finally, moment loading
crucial importance in the response of footings on a homo- with a linear distribution of normal tractions varying from
geneous stratum. Its effect is, thus, studied throughout this 0 to p yields z r - 1.25R, below which oz is less than
section. Furthermore, the moduli ratio GI/G2 is of interest O.lOp.
whenever the soft stratum is underlain by a non-rigid base
(halfspace). Variation with ao, H/R and ~. The variation of the
dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients with frequency
reveals an equally strong dependence on H/B. On a stratum,
Orcular foundation on stratum over a rigid base
both k and c are not as smooth functions as on a halfspace,
Results for the dynamic impedance functions of a rigid but exh~it undulations (peaks and valleys) associated with
circular disk at the surface of a stratum-on-rigid-base are the natural frequencies (in shear and dilation) of the soil
presented in Table 3 and in Figs. 8 and 9. Specifically, layer. In other words, the observed fluctuations are the
Table 3 offers simple and quite accurate formulae for the outcome of resonance phenomena: waves emanating from
determination of the static stiffnesses; Fig. 8 studies the the oscillating foundation reflect at the soft-bedrock inter-
effect of the H[B ratio on the dynamic stiffness and damp- face and return back to their source at the surface. As a
ing coefficients, k and e, for a single value of hysteretic result, the amplitude of foundation motion may signi-
damping ratio, ~ = 0.05; and Fig. 9 shows the sensitivity ficantly increase at specific frequencies of vibration, which,
of k and c to variations in ~, for a single value of the as shown subsequently, are close to the natural frequencies
ratio, H / B = 2 . These results have been derived by of the deposit. Thus, the stiffness coefficients exhibit
Kausel aa and Kausel et al. ag' 9o and have been discussed by valleys which are very steep when the hysteretic damping in
Roesset.60, 9~ Several significant conclusions may be drawn the soft is small (in fact, in certain cases, k would be exactly
from this data. zero if the soil were ideally elastic); on the other hand, with
large amounts of hysteretic damping (~ = 0.10--0.20) the
Static stiffnesses. It is evident from the formulae of valleys become less pronounced (Fig. 9). They also become
Table 3 that the existence of rigid bedrock at a relatively less pronounced as the relative thickness of the layer, H]R,
shallow depth may drastically increase the static stiffnesses increases (Fig. 8).
of a rigid surface foundation. The four expressions reduce Another important phenomenon is revealed through the
to the corresponding halfspace stiffnesses when H/R tends variation with ao of the damping coefficients. At low fie-
to infinity, but their values increase with decreasing H/R. quencies, below the first resonant frequency, radiation
Vertical stiffnesses are particularly sensitive to variations damping is zero. This is due to the fact that no surface
in the depth to bedrock (notice the 1.28 factor). Hori- waves can be physically created in a soil stratum at such
zontal stiffnesses are also appreciably affected by H]R frequencies and, since the bedrock prevents waves from
(factor of 0.5) while the rotational stiffnesses (rocking propagating downward, geometrical spreading of wave
and torsion) are the least affected. In fact, for H/R > 1.5 energy is negligible. The small values of the damping in this
the response to torsional loads is practically independent range (Fig. 9) just reflect the energy loss through hysteretic
of the layer thickness. damping; for a purely elastic soft c would be zero.

Table 3. Static sn'ffnesses of rigid circularfoundation on a stratum-over-rigid-base*


Type of loading Static stiffness Range of validity~ Soil profile
4oRI R
Vertical: K v =-~_v[1 + 1.28 H/R > 2

Horizontal:
tl 1R )
Kh = 2-~--v~ +2--H HIR > 1 .?
I[111111
' . '
I IIll
. '
Illllllll
.

H." G,v "


Rocking:
8GR'( IR)
Kr = 3(l--v) 1 +~'-~ 4 ~H/R > 1
/I//)/ / / / i f/J///////// )

Torsion: Kt = 16 GR 3 H/R > 1.25

* Adapted from KauseP and Kausel et al. "°


H/R < 2 or 1 these expressions would still provide reasonable estimates of the actual static stiffnesses
~f For

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 19


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

.1 - ..,...,- ........ ....

ev
~V .5
0 L7 I -'J~l " "1"~~1

1 1 n

~'h .5 0h
0 [ I I 1 [~ I I I

~r .5 Or
0 I

.5 - I I ~ I L.',~E I I 1
0 2 4 6 0 2 4 6

ao ao
Figure 8. Dynamic coefficients of rigid circular footing on stratum-over-bedrock; effect of H/R ratio (v = 1/3,
t: = O. 05) 33, 88, 90

The phenomena described in the two preceding para- space curves as the layer thickness increases beyond 3R.
graphs are observed to a larger or lesser degree in all four Thus, H[R exerts only a small influence on the variation of
modes of vibration. However, there exist marked differ- these two coefficients. On the other hand, for vertical and
ences among the dynamic coefficients of vertical, swaying, horizontal translation, k and c display some very pro-
rocking and torsional oscillations. Specifically: nounced fluctuations with ao. Both the location and the
1. For rocking and torsion, k and c are relatively smooth shape of the resonant valleys are quite sensitive to varia-
functions of ao, rapidly approaching the corresponding half- tions in H/R, and only for H/R values larger than 8 do

20 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Voi. 2, No. I


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G.Gazetas

• -. 10 ~%
20

...~~ . "...."..

~V
.5 ev
0

.5 0h

0 I I I I

.5 Cr

0 I I I f~i~~~~l I
I

/=t
~:'""'__~.., .........•..........
~i Ct.3

I
0 2 4 6 0 2 4 6

ao ao
F/gure 9. Dynamic coefficients of rigid circular footing on stratum-over-bedrock; effect o f ~ (v = 1/3, H/R = 2) 33,90

k(ao) and C(ao) approach the corresponding halfspace frequencies of the stratum. As an example, the funda-
curves, ff ~ = 0.05. These results are consistent with the mental frequency of the stratum in vertical shear waves,
conclusions derived previously regarding the depth of the fs, 1, equals Va/4H and, thus:
'pressure bulb' or 'influence zone' of a statically loaded ~rR
foundation. Under dynamic loads, 'constructive interfer- aos, l 2 H (53)
ence' of downward propagating waves leads to a shallow
dynamic 'pressure bulb' in both rocking and torsion. which is equal to n/4, for H/R = 2. As seen in Fig. 9,
2. The resonant frequencies of horizontal (swaying) this value of ao essentially coincides with the first resonant
oscillations are in remarkable agreement with the natural frequency in swaying. It is not difficult to explain how the

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 21


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

simple one-dimensional wave propagation theory can so this parameter, because of its influence on Vp and fv, n
successfully predict the first resonant frequency of a three- as previously explained (equation (54)). Thus, vertical and
dimensional problem: at values of ao below resonance rocking coefficients are highly sensitive to v, especially
essentially only shear waves exist in the stratum, propa- with shallow layers; but swaying and torsional coefficients
gating vertically between foundation and bedrock. There- are practically independent of v.
fore, when this first resonance occurs we have a none-
dimensional 'standing' wave and, in addition, little damp-
Strip foundation on stratum over a rigid base
ing and thus high response. Of course, as it may be inferred
from Figs. 8-9, the situation becomes a little more involved Table 4 and Figs. 10 and l l present the results for
at higher resonant frequencies. Thus, the second 'reson- vertical, horizontal and rocking oscillations of a massless
ance' occurs at about the fundamental natural frequency rigid strip footing which rests on the surface of a homo-
of the stratum in dilational waves, and the third 'resonance' geneous soil layer overlying bedrock. These results were
at about the second natural frequency in shear waves. In obtained with the formulation of Gazetas and Roesset 3s' 39
both cases, however, some non-vertical waves also partici- and are in excellent agreement with the results of Chang-
pate in the motion, as evidenced by the existence of non- Liang. s7 Additional numerical studies can be found in
Jakub et al. s6, 6s and Gazetas. s4
zero radiation damping. Due to multiple wave reflections,
P, S and Rayleigh waves are also generated and, hence, the
one-dimensional theory predicts with smaller accuracy the Static behavior. Simple expressions of sufficient accuracy
pertinent swaying resonant frequencies of the soft-founda- for practical purposes have been derived for the three static
tion system. stiffnesses and these are listed in Table 4. Evidently, the
On the other hand, vertical and rocking foundation presence of (infinitely rigid) bedrock at shallow relative
oscillations induce mainly P but also S waves in the stratum. depths has a dramatic effect on the static behavior of strip
The relative importance of each type of wave depends to foundations. Vertical and horizontal stiffnesses, being no
some extent on the Poisson's ratio of the soil. Recall that longer zero as in the case of a halfspace, are strongly in-
the ratio between the two wave velocities and between the creasing functions of B/H. Rocking stiffness also increases
corresponding natural frequencies of the stratum is given by: with B/H. Two noteworthy conclusions may be drawn by
contrasting the expressions of Table 4 to those of Table 3:
W=fv, n = [ 2 ( 1 - v ) ] v2 1. The effect of Poisson's ratio on the static stiffnesses
Vs fs, n / 1----~-v J n = 1, 2, 3 . . . . (54) is the same for both strip and circular rigid foundations.
The effect is greatest for vertical and rocking loading
which, for v = ] yields a ratio of 2. Figures 8-9 clearly [factor ( l - - v ) ] and smallest for horizontal loading [factor
show that the first resonant frequencies for both vertical (2--v)].
and rocking oscillations are reasonably close to the funda- 2. Layer depth is substantially more important for strip
mental frequency of the stratum in vertical P-waves than for circular foundations, especially with the two trans-
(aop, 1 = lr/2 for H/R = 2). Higher resonances, however, can lational modes (factors of 3.5 and 2 in the vertical and
hardly be predicted by the simple one-dimensional wave rocking expressions for a strip, as compared with 1.28 and
propagation theory since, apparently, they involve a mix- 0.5 in the corresponding expressions for a circle). This is a
ture of P., S- and Rayleigh (R) waves. natural consequence of the much deeper 'pressure bulb' in
Referring to Fig. 9, it is observed that k and e are quite a continuum subjected to plane-strain rather than axi-
sensitive to variations in material damping, especially at symmetric surface loading, as it has already been illustrated
frequencies near resonance. This is contrary to the so-called in preceding sections.
'correspondence principle' which assumes that the imped- 3. Vertical stiffness is far more sensitive to variations in
ances derived for an undamped but otherwise identical B[H (factor of 3.5) than horizontal and rocking stiffnesses
medium by a simple multiplication with the factor are (factors of 2 and 0.20, respectively). The explanation
1+2i~. Remember, however, that this 'principle' works lies again in the much greater 'depth of influence' of the
reasonably well for a homogeneous halfspace. vertical loads. On the other hand, moment loading induces
The effect of Poisson's ratio is not studied in detail stresses which decay very rapidly with depth; because on
herein and reference is made to Kausel et al. s9 for a any horizontal plane, small normal stresses at large
rigorous assessment of its importance in swaying and distances from the centerline contribute much to equi-
rocking. Note, nonetheless, that the variation of the dyn- librating the applied moment. Thus, rocking stiffnesses
amic coefficients with frequency may be sensitive to exhibit about the same small sensitivity to layer depth for

Table 4. Static stiffnesses of rigid strip foundation on a stratum-over-rigid.base


Static stiffness
Type of loading (per unit length) Range of validity* Soft prof'fle

Vertical: 1.23%+35B)
Kv = 1--v ~ . -~ 1< H/B <10

Horizontal: Kh = ~'-~__v[1+ H I<H[B<8 H,.,.:..:ZB,:.:..:


rrGBa I 1B )
Rocking: K r =~)[1 +~'-ff 1 < H/B < 3

* Outside this range the proposed expressions would still provide re~aonable estimates of the actual static stiffnesses

22 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

both strip and circular footings (factors oi~' 1/5 and 1/6, response of strip footings, although some differences are
respectively). also obvious.
One f'wst notices in Figs. 10-11 that due to the presence
Dynam/c behavior. Figures 10 and 11 portray the varia- of bedrock both the in-phase (real) and the 90°.out-of-
tion with frequency of the dimensionless compliance func- phase (imaginary) components of displacement (com-
tions GF,,, where a = v or h, and GB2Fr. Specifically, Fig. pliance) are not smooth and monotonically decreasing
10 intends to show the effect of H/B, and Fig. If the effect functions of frequency, as on a halfspace. Instead, they
of ~. The results of Fig. 10 were obtained for u = 0.49 and extu~oit peaks and valleys at frequencies related to the
= 0.05, with four different values of H/B, i.e. 1, 3, 8 and natural frequencies of the stratum. Note that, in general,
~; the last value corresponds to the homogeneous halfspace the peaks of a compliance function correspond to valleys
and is included for a comparison. Figure 11 shows the in the impedance function.
effect of u on vertical and rocking compliances only, for a The major differences between strip and circular founda-
layer with H/B = 2 and a homogeneous haifspace; the tions stem from the much greater sensitivity of the vertical
effect of v on swaying, being of secondary importance, is and swaying oscillation of a strip to variations in H/B.
not studied herein. Even for H/B = 8, relatively high amplitude peaks are
The same general trends observed in the dynamic observed in the two compliance functions of the strip,
behavior of circular foundations can now be seen in the for the case ~ = 0.05; their difference from the halfspace

H/B

8
3
--*--*-.-.*-- 1

o . . . . ....... - - - , ....

I
, I , I t I tl , I t I , I

i I I I I I t ! I t I t I t

I10
0
0 11-

I ~ I I I I t I I I t I
0 2 4 6 0 2 4 6
8, 0 8. 0
Figure 10. Convpliance functions of rigidstripfooting on stratum-over-bedrock;effectof H/B ratio (v = 0.49, ~ = 0.05)

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 23


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

compliances is substantial. On the other hand, rocking Numerical solutions for a uniform layer over a halfspace
vibrations of a strip exhibit very similar trends with rocking have been published by Hadjian and Luco 37 who studied
of a circular plate; beyond H/R = 3 the presence of bed- the dynamic of circular foundations, and by Gazetas and
rock is hardly noticeable. Roesset3a, 39 who studied the response of strip footings.
In the case of vertical loading, the resonant peaks are not Based on the results provided by Hadjian and Luco, 37
as sharp as those of the horizontal displacements. In fact, the author has derived simple but reasonably accurate
on very shallow deposits (H/B = 1) only a single flat reson- formulae for the static stiffnesses of a rigid circular disk, in
ance takes place, which is characteristic of a highly damped terms of H/R and G1/G:. Table 5 displays these formulae,
system. A possible explanation of such a behavior has been which are valid for the usual case in which GI < G2, i.e.
suggested by Gazetas and Roesseta9: at frequencies below a halfspace stiffer than the layer. At the lower limit,
the first resonance some 'leakage' of energy occurs in the G1/G2-~O, these expressions reduce to those of Table 3
form of laterally propagating P-, S- and R-waves. Evidence for a layer-on-rigid-base; at the upper limit, GI/G2 = 1,
in favor in this explanation comes from the fact that the the halfspace expressions of Fig. 5 are recovered. At inter-
first resonant frequency, aor, lies in between the funda- mediate values, as the rigidity of the supporting halfspace
mental natural frequencies of the stratum in vertical S- decreases, the static stiffnesses of the foundation decrease,
waves, aos, 1, and in vertical P-waves, aop, 1. For example, apparently due to increasing magnitude of strains in the
Fig. 11 shows that, for H/B = 2 and v = 0.40, aor-- 1.30 halfspace. The results are intuitively obvious and need no
compared to aos, i = 0.785 and aop, ~ = 1.90. Recall that further explanation.
for the circular foundation aor was much closer to aop, 1. For circular footings, no results are presented here on
No extensive numerical results for rigid rectangular dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients, but reference
foundations supported by a soil stratum have been found is made to the original publication by Hadjian and Luco. a7
in the literature. The variation of the dynamic compliances of a strip
footing with ao and GI/G: is portrayed in Fig. 12 for a
Foundation on stratum over a halfspace layer with H = 2B, v = 0.40 and ~ = 0.05. Shallower as
The homogeneous halfspace and the stratum-over-rigid- well as deeper layers have been examined by Gazetas and
base are two idealizations of extreme soil profiles. A more Roesset. 3s, a9
general soil model, the stratum-over-halfspace, is studied in An inspection of Fig. 12 indicates that the effects o f
this subsection. Besides the H/R or H/B ratio, the moduli layering increase with increasing contrast between G 1 and
ratio G~/G2 is needed to describe such a soil model. When G2; these effects are extreme for a layer on rigid bedrock
G]/G2 tends to O, the stratum-on-rigid base is recovered; (GI/G2 = 0) and, naturally, disappear in the case of a
when it becomes equal to 1, the model reduces to a homo- homogeneous halfspace (G~/G2 = 1). There are two main
geneous halfspace. Thus, the results presented in this effects of increasing the softness of the halfspace. First,
section help in bridging the gap between 'halfspace' and even for small positive values of GI/G2, i.e. as long as we
'stratum' solutions to which we have restricted our atten- do not deal with an infinitely rigid bedrock, the static
tion until now (Figs. 5-11). translational displacement tends to infinity, although at a

G%2
.4
G%, "4I
0 --'"~" "\ I I

.4
.8 GB2C:~
' n-- .8 "~° e5

G B 2 C'~'rZ
.4 " ~
/" "~_

I I I I --1 -- " I I I I I

0 1 2 0 1 2
ao ao
Figure 11. Compliance functions of rigid strip footing on stratum-over-bedrock; effect of v (H/B = 2, ~ = 0.05)

24 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

Table 5. Static stiffnesses of circularfoundations on a stratum-over-halfspace*

Type of loading Static stiffness* Range of validity Profile


R R
1 + 1.28 - - ~
4G~R H H <5
1 ~-- iiil[lllllllllllll
Vertical: R
1--vl 1 +1.28 RG__t
G2
H GI
1R
I+---
8GtR 2H H
Horizontal: 1<~<4
2--u I 1 R G~
1+----- • . G2
2H G2
e,D
1R
14----
8GIR 3 6H H
Rocking: 0.75 < - - < 2 0 ~'~a~ 1
3(1--vt) 1-+. 1RGI
... R
6HG2
* Derived by the author on the basis of results provided by Hadjian and Luco37

much slower rate compared to the halfspace displacements. Vertically loaded foundations o f various 'solid' shapes
Thus, in the very low frequency range the in-phase (real) Analytical expressions for the static stiffnesses of rigid
components of the displacements (compliances) are larger foundations supported to an elastic halfspace and having
than in the case of rigid bedrock. several different shapes (but without internal holes) can be
On the other hand, at any specific frequency, the radia- derived from the results of Borodachev94 (see also Selva-
tion damping of the system increases due to partial trans- durai9). It is convenient to cast these expressions into our
mission of body-waves in the halfspace and the existence familiar form:
of surface waves at all frequencies. Consequently, the
resulting variation of displacements with ao is smoother 4GRo
rv = --" Jv (55)
than in the rigid rock case. 1--v
The effects of decreasing stiffness and increasing radia-
tion damping are of major importance at frequencies equal in which: Ro = ~ is the radius of the 'equivalent' cir-
to or lower than the first resonant frequencies of the cular foundation, A being the area of the soil-footing
system. With GI/G2 ascending from 0 (rigid bedrock) contact surface; Jv is a shape-depended correction factor,
towards 1 (homogeneous halfspace), the aforementioned numerical values of which have been tabulated in Table 6
resonant peaks become shorter and flatter and the corre- for numerous plan shapes.
sponding resonant frequencies shift to lower values. Table 6 in conjunction with Table 2 (part 1) can be used
Higher resonant peaks also decrease substantially and for determining the vertical static stiffnesses of a variety of
may in some cases be completely suppressed. An example: foundations with very good accuracy. Moreover, the follow-
the third resonant peak in swaying (which, we recall, occurs ing trends are worthy of note:
at the second natural frequency of the stratum in S-waves) 1. The circular disk yields the smallest stiffness of all
disappears as soon as GI/G2 exceeds 0.10. footings with a given contact area.
Finally, it is hardly surprising that the vertical dynamic 2. Of all rigid footings with an n-sided polygon-shaped
compliances are most sensitive to variations in G~/G2, plan of a given area, the regular n-sided polygon yields the
while rocking compliances are least sensitive. The concept smallest stiffness.
of a 'dynamic pressure bulb' proves again very convenient 3. The correction factor depends primarily on the
in explaining these differences. The depth of the 'bulb' 'aspect' ratio of the foundation, being surprisingly insensi-
attains relatively large values in case of vertical vibrations, tive to the details of each particular shape. By 'aspect'
somewhat smaller values for swaying and very small values ratio we somewhat loosely mean the ratio between largest
for rocking. and smallest critical foundation dimensions. Thus, for
example, a rhombus, a rectangle and an ellipse having the
same aspect ratio, equal to 4, yield very similar correction
SOME R E S U L T S F O R R I G I D S U R F A C E factors of about 1.12.
F O U N D A T I O N S OF ' A R B I T R A R Y " S H A P E
In conclusion it seems that, by means of equation (55)
Only a few numerical results are available for foundations and Tables 2 and 6, very good estimates can be routinely
having 'arbitrary' geometries, i.e. plan shapes other than made of the vertical static stiffnesses of arbitrary-shaped
strip, circular or rectangular. One reason for the lack of rigid foundations on homogeneous halfspace.
interest is that foundations of such 'arbitrary' shape are not No information is available regarding the variation with
constructed very frequently• Moreover, substantial com- frequency of the dynamic stiffness coefficient kv. However,
putational effort must be expended to obtain dynamic inspection of Figs. 5 and 7 reveals that the 'equivalent'
solutions for such foundation geometries. The following circular footing can successfully predict the actual k v of
presentation is divided into two parts: one dealing with rectangular footings with aspect ratios up to 4, at least in
vertically loaded footings of various 'solid' shapes and one the low and medium frequency range (ao g 1.5). Hence,
with the complete response of annular footings. and in view of the observed insensitivity of the static stiff-

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 25


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

G1/G 2
0
0.06
0.25
m
.0
G1C'~v!
"%.
.4 "% .4 m

\ , ""... ,.~ - - _.,. ~ ' ? ' ~

, ............... ,
0 i I I I

D B

.8 c'3:h 1 .8i

°'.,. /
.4
"....

0 I

.8 _r- G1B2'C'~-I'Jr .8 c 2%,

.4 o.**'"
...............
~~ •
.............,,.~:
", ~.

I I I I I I I I I [

0 1 2 1 2
aO aO
Figure 12. Effect o f GI/G2 ratio on compliance functions o f rigid strip footings on soil layer~gver-halfspace (H/R = 2,
v = 0.40, ~ = 0.05)

ness to the details of the foundation shape, it is proposed in which Jv = the shape correction factor to be read from
that the variation of kv with ao for an 'arbitrary'-shaped Table 6 or Table 2. Consequently, the vertical dynamic
foundation be estimated from Fig. 5 using the 'equivalent' impedance of an arbitrary-shaped rigid foundation on a
radius, Ro = x ~ . homogeneous halfspace can be directly and reliably esti-
On the other hand, the damping coefficient c v is practic- mated using the provided information.
ally independent of frequency, as it is evident from Figs. 5 For the other translational and rotational modes of
and 7. For an arbitrary-shaped foundation, moreover, vibration of arbitrary-shaped rigid foundations, much less
Dobry et al. 9s have recently derived expressions for the information is presently available. The 'equivalent-circle'
(radiation) damping coefficients in vertical and swaying approximation appears to be a simple and reasonable choice.
vibrations, based on simple but realistic physical approxi-
mations. For the vertical damping coefficient of a surface
foundation their expression reduces to: Rigid annular foundation on soil stratum
It appears that the conclusions of the preceding sub-
0.85
cv = (56) section cannot be extended to foundations containing
Jv internal holes, like annular and crossed-beam foundations.

26 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


• Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

Table 6. Values of shape-depended correction factor for vertical sensitive not only to R~/R but toH/R as well. An example:
static stiffnesses* increasing Ri from 0 to 0.95R reduces K v to 70% of its
Shape of foundation plan Jv original value for H[R = 2; for a halfspace the corre-
sponding value is 77%. But, again, for values of Ri]R up to
Circle 1.00 0.5, K v remains practically equal to its original value,
Regular hexagon 1.01 4GR(1 + 1.28RIn)l(1--v).
Semicircle 1.05
Equilateral triangle 1.07 Figure 14 depicts the variation with ao of the dynamic
Triangle with angles, 45 °, 45 °, 90* 1.10 stiffness and damping coefficients, k and c. Four values of
Triangle with angles, 30 °, 60 °, 90 ° 1.12 Rs]R are considered, 0, 0.5, 0.8 and 0.90, with the first
Ellipse with a/b = 2~ 1.03 value corresponding to a solid circular foundation. It is
Ellipse with a/b = 3 1.07
Elfipse witha/b = 4 1.13 clear that: (1) there is little change in k and c with RflR;
Ellipse with alb 6= 1.21 (2) the effect of Ri[R is largest for vertical vibrations; and
Rhombus with an angle of 60 ° 1.07 (3) the differences in the four sets of curves occur in the
Rhombus with an angle of 45 ° 1.14 high frequency range ( a o ) 1.5).
Rhombus with an angle of 30° 1.27
Rectangle with LIB = 2 1.03
Rectangle with LIB = 4 1.13
Rectangle with LIB = 8 1.23
1
* Based on Borodachev 94' 9
a, b are the major, minor axes o f the ellipse

For example, the vertical static stiffness of such founda-


tions does not increase in proportion to the square-root of
the contact area, A, as equation (55) implies. In other
words, the 'equivalent-circle' approximation is no longer I I i I
valid. .5 1 0 .5 1
Results for the static displacements of a rigid circular Ri / R RL/R
ring on a halfspace have been published: by Egorov 96 and Figure 13. Static stTffnesses of a rigid annular foundation
Dhawan 97 for vertical loading; by Dhawan 98 for moment (R i = internal radius )ss' 97
loading; and by Dhawan 99 for torsional loading. Wong and
Luco °~ studied the dynamic vertical response of a rigid
square foundation with a square internal hole. Recently,
Tassoulas 8s presented a comprehensive parametric investi-
gation of the dynamic behavior of rigid circular-ring , "I '. ~ | '7'~
foundations on a homogeneous stratum.over-rigid-base. :7 " I
All modes of vibration were considered and the effect of 1 Cv -I ~
the dimensionless parameters Ri/R, H/R and ao = wR/Vs
was graphically illustrated. The following discussion is
based primarily on the remits of Tassoulas,~' although some
ok "'"
results from Dhawan, 97-99 are also included for comparison.
Figure 13 plots the variation of all static stiffnesses of a
circular ring versus Ri/R, where R i is the internal radius. As
expected, all stiffnesses invariably decrease as the size of
the hole increases, while the radius R remains constant. In • ..." ~,.f ~". \

the limit, when R i becomes equal to R, the stiffnesses


vanish (concentrated ring load). However, the sensitivity of
stiffnesses to increases in the Rt[R ratio is surprisingly
small. Particularly insensitive are the rocking and torsional I /r .4
stiffnesses. For values of RffR up to 0.50, they are prac- ~
tically equal to the corresponding stiffnesses of the circular r .:'1/ "'~"~
.5 .-" /
foundation with radius R; for Ri/R = 0.95, K t and K r are
respectively equal to 86% and 83%, of the circular stiff-
nesses in torsion and rocking (while the contact area has
been reduced to only 10% of the original circle). The
explanation is rather obvious: the large shear or normal
stresses which develop near the outside edge of the footing,
..-".. t
i.e. at large distances from the center, contribute substan-
tially to equilibrating the applied torsion or rocking .75
moments. In other words, the central foundation 'core'
is 'underutilized' and, hence, its 'removal' is of little conse- .51 I I
quence. Notice also that the variation of K t and K r with 0 2 4 0 2 4
Rs]R is independent of H/R - a result consistent with the .9
shallow 'pressure bulb' of moment loading discussed in a° ...... .8 } Ri/R a°
preceding sections (e.g. Table 3).
The horizontal stiffness is only slightly more sensitive rqgure 14. Dynamic coefficients o f a rigid annular founda-
to Ri/R. In contrast, the vertical stiffness is relatively tio n ee

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 27


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

THE INFLUENCE OF INHOMOGENEITY, ANISOTROPY halfspace, regardless of foundation geometry. The surface
AND NONLINEARITY OF SOIL settlement, on the other hand, being quite sensitive to the
assumed soil profile, becomes directly proportional to the
The results presented so far have been based on the simpli- applied normal pressure when Go = 0, independent of the
fying assumption that the soil can be modeled as a homo-
size and shape of the loaded area and of the thickness, H,
geneous, isotropic and linearly visco-elastic stratum or
of the soil layer on a rigid but frictionless (smooth) base.
halfspace. However, real soil strata frequently increase in
Thus, such a soil behaves like a Winkler medium rather than
rigidity with depth as a reflection of the increase in over-
a homogeneous halfspace, its spring constant being simply
burden pressure, while in some other cases weathered
equal to 2~JR. Expressions for the vertical static stiffnesses
crusts, in which rigidity decreases with depth, overlay
of surface foundations of several shapes supported by such
deposits of softer clay. Furthermore, laboratory tests show
a soil deposit (frequently referred to as 'Gibson soil') are
that soils deform differently in the vertical and horizontal
shown in Table 7.
directions - a manifestation of anisotropic fabric acquired This behavior remains only qualitatively true when
during natural formation and subsequent loading. Finally, drained soil behavior is taking place (i.e. ~ < 0.50). Thus,
when subjected to large enough stresses, soils respond as with increasing degree of irthomogeneity (e.g. increasing
nonlinear and inelastic materials. r~) normal and shear stresses affect the soil at greater
This section of the paper presents characteristic results vertical and lesser horizontal distances, in agreement with
and important conclusions from a number of recent studies intuition that expects stiffer material to attract larger
aimed at assessing the influence of soil inhomogeneity, stresses. On the other hand, surface displacements, being
anisotropy and nonlinearity on the behavior of dynamically moderately sensitive to v, do tend to become propor-
loaded surface foundations.
tional to the applied local pressures as m increases. It is,
thus, generally concluded that an inhomogeneous deposit
Effect o f soil inhomogeneity leads to more uniform distribution of stresses under rigid
Existing dynamic finite-element formulations can easily, foundations than the simple elastic theory (homogeneous
albeit approximately, simulate a continuous variation of soil halfspace) predicts.
properties, by dividing the deposit into a number of homo- This general behavior of vertically loaded surface founda-
geneous layers of increasing or decreasing stiffness. Yet, tions on an inhomogeneous soil deposit has been recently
such formulations have not been adequately exploited to shown to be applicable to torsionally loaded circular
footings. 9s
parametrically study the dynamic behavior of foundations.
Thus, most of the available solutions have been derived The static and dynamic vertical, horizontal and rocking
behavior of a rigid strip foundation supported by a half-
using analytical and semi-analytical methods.
space or a stratum whose wave velocities increase linearly
Numerous studies have been published for the vertical
static problem. Prominent among them is the work of with depth, has been studied by the author, sa Some results
Gibson and his co-workers; 13'1°°'1°I who studied the of that study are presented here for a halfspace consisting
response to arbitrary surface loads of a halfspace or stratum of soil with a constant mass density, a constant Poisson's
whose moduli increase linearly with depth, i.e. in the form ratio, v = 0.25, and a constant hysteretic damping, ~ = 0.05,
G = Go + ~ ( z / R ) , where Go and r~ are the moduli at the and an S-wave velocity varying with depth according to:
surface and at a one-radius (or one-semiwidth) depth. These
studies revealed that for an incompressible medium, i.e. Vs = V o I + X (57)
with Poisson's ratio of 0.50, the stress distribution is hardly
influenced by the degree of inhomogeneity; in the parti-
cular case of zero surface modulus (Go = 0) this distribu- in which: Vo = surface velocity; 2B = foundation width;
tion is identical with the distribution in a homogeneous and X = the dimensionless rate of inhomogeneity.

Table 7. Static stiffnesses of rigid foundations on inhomogeneous and cross~nisotropic soils*


Type of loading Static stiffness Range of validity Soil profile

r~ Cross-ardsotropic 'Gibson'
2--A halfspace obeying equation (60),
B with a modulus GVH = m (z/B)
Vertical, on foundation of A = contact area Undrained loading conditions
any shape General cross-anisotropic 'Gibson'
halfspaee (i.e. not obeying
A(I, E:v.14_n, equation (60)) with a modulus
C VH = '~ (z/B)
A = contact area
H Shallow cross-aulsotropie
45E V 1<3<4 undrained layer; soft properties
Vertibal, on rigid strip are uniform throughout the
(I+3.5H )I4--n](I/6)(H/B) 0.5 <n <2.5 layer and they satisfy
e q u a t i o n ~ ~

5B H
1+ 1<-<6
8 3H B n ~ . ' . . . . , " . •
Horizontal, on rigid strip -~Elf 4.10 - - n ( H / B ) .... 0.5 <n <2.5

* Based on results by Gibson~3and Gazetas54

28 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

Figure 15 portrays the dependence of k of the normal- model; to yield comparable rotation levels the two media
ized vertical, horizontal and rocking stiffnesses. As one must have the same moduli at a depth of about B/2, or
might expect, the vertical stiffness exhibits the largest somewhat less.
sensitivity to X and the rocking stiffness the smallest- Furthermore, a substantial difference between the
another manifestation of the difference in the 'pressure '~ = 1.5' and 'X = 0' compliance functions may be noted.
bulbs' of the three types of loading. Namely, the former are not smoothly varying functions of
The effect of soil inhomogeneity on the three dynamic ao, as are the latter, but exhibit peaks and valleys which are
compliance functions is shown in Fig. 16. Two values of the apparently the result of resonance phenomena. In the very
parameter X are considered: 0 and 1.5. The former value low frequency range the imaginary components of the
corresponds to a homogeneous halfspace, the wave velocity 'X = 1.5' compliances attain quite small values, increasing
of which, Veff, was selected to be the same with the wave almost linearly with ao.
velocity of the inhomogeneous halfspace at a depth equal These phenomena are reminiscent of the dynamic
to the foundation halfwidth, B; i.e.: behavior of foundations supported by a stratum-over-a-
rigid-base (Figs. 10-11). In this case, total reflection of the
Vetf = 1Io(1+ X) (58)
downward propagating waves is possible due to the increas-
The choice of such a homogeneous halfspace for the ing soil velocity with depth. A discontinuity in velocity is
comparison has been motivated by the frequent use in not necessary for such a reflection, since the wave rays in
practice of solutions developed for homogeneous soils, inhomogeneous media with linear velocity profiles are not
with an effective modulus equal to the actual modulus straight lines but circular arcs. As a result, however, the
at a depth equal to B or R, to approximate the actual resonant peaks on inhomogeneous soils are very flat and
response. the radiation damping is never zero. In contrast, the
It is evident from the comparison of Fig. 16 that, in the presence of stiff rock-like material at some depth beneath
low frequency range examined, the inhomogeneous the surface leads to very sharp and pronounced displace-
medium yields vertical and horizontal displacements (both ment peaks, occurring at well separated frequencies (see
in-phase and 90°-out-of-phase components) which are, Fig. 8-11).
indeed, of about the same average level with those of the
'equivalent' homogeneous halfspace. However, the rocking Deposits with a weathered crust. The dynamics of a rigid
motions on the inhomogeneous deposit are seriously strip foundation on an idealized soil deposit consisting of
underpredicted by the chosen homogeneous halfspace a homogeneous stratum or halfspace overlain by a top
stiffer layer in which the shear modulus decreases as a
second-degree parabola (Fig. 17) has been recently studied
by the author, ss Also recently, Rowe and Booker, 1°2 pre-
sented comprehensive parametric results pertaining to
• :~11f spiel:
i I
i
x Vs ,~$0
r= "": "'-'" : .::...
:.2.,.....- ": :": ~ VIII vertical static uniform loading, both plane-strain and axi-
i ..~nu~iva~equivalent ~ 4| symmetric, on several realistic inhomogeneous deposits,
,,-B i- . . . . T ~ ---°-"e°u' /
/ including a homogeneous layer with a weathered crust.
/ Figure 17 ss illustrates the effect of the reduced crust
Z Z nonhomogeneoug ~ ~ // r
thickness Dcr/B on the three normalized dynamic imped-
I~ 1,5 5 I|
ance functions of a rigid strip. The soft profiles are charac-
terized by a shear modulus ratio, Gcr/G , equal to 4, and
Figure 15. Static snffnesses of a rigid strip foundation on realistic values of the Poisson's ratios, Vcr and v, equal to
an inhomogeneous halfspace (v 0.25) s3 = 0.25 and 0.45, respectively. Note that the ratios Ger/B and
Dcr/B may be considered as indexes of the degree and
depth of weathering.
|N-PHASE COMPONENTS 9O°-OUT-OF-I~ASE~ E N T S It is evident that the presence of the crust has a pro-
nounced effect on all impedances. Especially sensitive to
changes in Dcr/B are the horizontal impedances, whereas
the vertical and rocking ones are somewhat less affected.
Variations in the assumed moduli ratio (not depicited in
t ~=0 (-t$ Fig. 17) have been shown to have a similar effect.
o or-, , , . , , , Furthermore, the weathering effects exhibit a strong
dependence on frequency. For example, at low frequency
"IV' factors vertical impedances are relatively indifferent to
variations (within realistic limits) in either stiffness or depth
of the crust. This is understandable in view of the fact that
vertical surface strip loading affects the soil at great depths,
0I I I i I i i I "ol ,' .... of the order of 8B, as discussed previously; thus, a stiff
.4 crest with Dcr ~ B can only be of secondary importance.
This picture, however, changes at higher frequency factors,
i.e. lower wavelength.thickness ratios, as may be seen in
IO .2 I Fig. 17. Greater participation of surface (Rayleigh)waves
in the motion and stronger reflection of the body waves
0 .2 .4 .6 0 .2 .4 .8 emanating from the foundation by the soft layer interface,
i may be part of the explanation.
Figure 16. Compliance functions of a rigid strip founda- It may also be noticed that rocking impedances show
tion on an inhomogeneous halfspace (v = 0.25, ~ = 0.05) 53 about the same sensitivity to weathering throughout the

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. I 29


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

m-Gcr tation makes the clay a cross-anisotropic material with a


: .'.'- "'t'. :" : ". t ' . :" vertical axis of symmetry. Similarly, fabric anisotropy in
-.',.D I /weathered sands arises from the influence of gravity forces and particle
-i-.'.2.1 / shape on the deposition process, while in rocks the aniso-
",',, ", ; ; tropy may result from the anisotropy of forming minerals
/ " * / I -- J normallfy c o n s o l i . d a t e d and micro- or macro-fabric features.
.... I I' " ' ,/~. cl,y
While an isotropic elastic material is characterized by
only two independent elastic constants (e.g. shear modulus
and Poisson's ratio), five parameters are needed to describe
the stress-strain relationships of an elastic cross-anisotropic
6 material: a Young's modulus E v in the vertical direction; a
0
4 Young's modulus EH in the horizontal direction (EH =
2 nEv); a Poisson's ratio vVH for the effect of vertical on
horizontal strain; a Poisson's ratio I~HH for the effect of
horizontal on complementary horizontal strain; and a shear
~'-20 0-4
modulus GVH = GHV for distortion in any vertical plane,
i.e. any plane parallel to the vertical axis of material sym-
metry. Note that isotropic materials are just a particular
-8 class (subset) of cross-anisotropic materials characterized
-40 by n = 1 (i.e. EH = E v = E, v v n = i)HH "~ 1) and GvH = G =
E/2(1 + v)).
The condition of incompressibility, appropriate for un-
g'80 Dcr/B / Dcr/B drained loading conditions, requires that:
n
~ 40 . 85 VVH = 0.50, VHH = 1 - - - - (59)
2
and, thus, reduces the number of independent material
0
constants to three. Moreover, utilizing the results of several
experimental investigations, the author has recently shown s4
4 that, in many clays, the shear modulus GVH is closely
related to the other four material constants. Under un-
2 ~.NDc r~l ~ 24
drained conditions, for example, with a reasonable accuracy:
0
¢~m 16 Ev
GVH - (60)
m -4 C9 4--n
(9 8 Thus, the number of independent material constants
-8 reduces to two, under undrained conditions, and to four,
I I
under drained conditions.
0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 Results for statically loaded rigid foundations on cross-
aO ao anisotropic soils have been presented by Gerrard and
Harrison, 92,1°7 Gibson ~3 and Gazetas. s4 Solutions for
Figure 17. Impedance functions o f a rigid strip founda-
dynamically loaded foundations on cross-anisotropic homo-
tion on deep soil deposit with a weathered crust ( Gcr/G = 4,
geneous soil deposits whose elastic constants satisfy equa-
1¥r=0.25, V=0.45, ~=0.05) ss
tion (60) (or its 'drained' counterpart, not given here) have
been presented by Kirkner 67 for circular foundations on
halfspace and by the author s*, 1o8,,09 for strip foundations
frequency range examined, and that, in general, the imagin. on homogeneous stratum or on halfspace. Table 7 and
ary parts of all three impedance functions exhibit only a Fig. 18 offer some characteristic results from the men-
small dependence on either Dcr/B or Ger[G. tioned publications.
Reference is made to the original publication by the Specifically, Table 7 displays simple but fairly accurate
author for a more complete parametric assessment of the formulae for the vertical static stiffness of arbitrary-shape
dynamic effects of 'weathering' on strip foundations. foundations on a cross-anisotropic, incompressible and
The author sees a definite need to extend these studies to inhomogeneous halfspace ('Gibson' soil), and for the
dynamically loaded circular foundations. vertical and horizontal static stiffnesses on a homogeneous
and incompressible cross-anisotropic shallow soil stratum-
Effect o f soil anisotropy on-rigid base. Notice that on an anisotropic 'Gibson' half-
Numerous experirnental studies have shown that most space obeying equation (60), the degree of anisotropy has
natural soils and rocks possess anisotropic deformational no influence on the vertical stiffness. In all other cases,
characteristics. ~a']°3-~°6 This anisotropy stems from the however, the stiffnesses increase substantially with
fact that soil fabric is intimately related to the mechanical n = EH[Ev. In fact, for n -*4 all stiffnesses tend to infinity,
processes occurring during formation, which involves aniso- since the strain energy of such a material is zero for all
tropic stress systems. Thus, for example, natural clay possible applied stress systems. TM to7
deposits formed by sedimentation and, subsequently, one- Regarding the sensitivity of the dynamic response to
dimensional consolidation over long periods of time acquire variations in the degree of anisotropy, n, under undrained
a fabric that is characterized by particles or particle clusters conditions, the main conclusions of the aforementioned
oriented in a horizontal arrangement. This preferred orien- studies are summarized as follows.

30 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

IN-PH~E COMPONENTS 90°-OUT-OF-PHASE COI4PONENTS shear modulus and the increase in (effective) damping ratio
with increasing amplitude of shear strain.
It Soil nonlinearities are not usually of a significant magni-
. - - tude in machine foundation problems, for the reasons
mentioned in the introduction. (In contrast, the response
O[ .... , ,,L,~..=,,~ ,,/~ '" "
of soil-foundation systems to strong earthquakes is very
1 2 sensitive to deviations from linear-elastic soil behavior.)
Nonetheless, even with small amplitudes of vibration,
,/3
n: E. it is almost certain that some soil elements will undergo
I
plastic deformations. For instance, under the edges of
2 rocking shallow foundations, large concentration of stresses
and low confining pressures will invariably lead to yielding
of soil.*
An interesting parametric investigation of the effects of
2V,r /, soil nonlinearities on the dynamic impedance functions of a
=" ' t../,~,t//~, -, L l/A[ rigid strip foundation has been conducted by Jakub and
o[ Roesset. s6 In their studies the soil was modeled as a homo-
| I 2 I geneous or inhomogeneous stratum-over-rigid.base with
, 2 I 2 reduced thicknesses H/B = 1, 2 and 4. A Ramberg-Osgood
L5~ /4
model was used to simulate the nonlinear constitutive
relation of soil and iterative linear analyses were performed.
One of the two parameters of the Ramberg-Osgood model,
.... . y "
5 ..... " / -" ! "~
r, was kept constant equal to 2, while the second one, a,
iii ..... was varied so as to cover a wide range of typical soil stress-
I
strain relations. For such a model the variation of secant
0 I 2 0 I 2 modulus and effective damping ratio with stress amplitude
is given by:
= ~ B / ' ¢ Ev/P •
G 1
Figure ]& Effect of soil anisotropy on compliance func- - (61)
tions o f a rigid strip foundation on stratum-over-bec~ock Go l + a(r/Go Ty)
(un~,ained conditions, H/B = 3, ~ = 0.05) s4 and
2 G r
For the two compressional modes of vibration, i.e. = (62)
vertical and rocking, the influence of anisotropy is appreci- 3n Go GoTy
able but seems to decrease as the thickness of the stratum-
on-bedrock decreases, with the shear modulus G v x remain. in which: Go = the initial shear modulus for low levels of
hag constant. The effect of anisotropy on the shearing strain; 7y = a characteristic shear strain, typically ranging
mode of vibration, i.e. swaying, is similar with the effect from 0.0001% to 0.01%, and ¢ = the amplitude of the
induced shear stress.
of anisotropy on Gv-/-/and independent of the layer thick-
hess; in other words, two soils with identical GvH and H From these studies Jakub and Roesset ~'6s concluded
but with different Young's moduli and n, will yield very that a reasonable approximation to the swaying and rocking
similar undrained dynamic displacements. impedances of a rigid strip may be obtained from the avail.
able linear visco-elastic solutions (e.g. Table 4 and Figs.
Figure 18 portrays the dependence on n of the three
10-11), provided that 'effective' values of G and ~ are
compliance functions of frequency, for a layer with H = 3B
and constant Er-. It is concluded that, in the low and estimated from equations (61)-(62) with:
medium frequency range, by increasing n the dynamic ¢ = ze (63)
displacements decrease and the resonant frequencies shift
to the right, roughly in proportion to ( 4 - - n ) -'/2. Obviously, where re is the statically induced shear stress at a depth
equal to 0.50B, immediately below the foundation edge.
the corresponding decrease in the static stiffness may be
While more studies would be necessary to improve the
held responsible for this effect. At certain higher frequencies,
however, rocking and vertical displacements increase, reliability of this simple rule, its use in machine foundation
analyses can be safely recommended, in view of the small
instead of decreasing, with n. Nonetheless, the practical
significance of such a reversal will probably be small, in local nonlinearities that usually develop.
view of the small displacement amplitudes at such fre-
quencies. RIGID EMBEDDED FOUNDATIONS
In conclusion, anisotropy exerts its main effect through
the static stiffnesses of the soil-foundation system. The response of embedded foundations to static and
dynamic loads has received considerable attention. As a
Effect o f soil nonlinearity result, several finite-element as well as approximate
continuum-type formulations have been developed, while
In current soil.structure interaction practice the non- parametric studies have explored the relative significance
linear plastic soil behavior is usually approximated through of the depth and 'type' of embedment. Reference is made
a series of iterative linear analyses, using soil properties to the work of Lysmer et al., s3 Novak et al., nl Beredugu
(moduli and damping ratios) that are consistent with the
level of shearing strains resulting from the previous anal- * Evidence of such yielding has been presented by Richart et al.7
(Figs. 10 and 26), while recent experimental work at the Univerdty
ysis.~,,10 These analyses may utilize a wealth of available of Michigan revealed a similar phenomenon under torsionallyexcited
experimental soil data relating the decrease in (secant) footings.' 28

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake En~neering, 1983, VoL 2, No. 1 31


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

et al., 72 Waas et al., 31 Kausel et al., a9 Chang-Liang, s7 John- 1/2 and 2/3 for vertical and horizontal loading, as compared
son et al., t*2 Luco, 66 Dominguez et al., 47 Harada et al. 76 to 2 and 2.67 for rocking and torsion).
and Tassoulas, as among several others. In contrast, the effect of D[H is more visible in the
Results have been presented for circular, strip and rect- vertical and horizontal modes, appreciably less important
angular foundations and a variety of idealized soil profiles, in rocking, and negligible in torsion; this is consistent with
including tl,e halfspace, stratum-over-bedrock and stratum- the expected depths of the corresponding 'pressure bulbs',
over-halfspace. In each case, the new key dimensionless discussed in the preceding sections.
problem parameter, in addition to the parameters control- Note that with embedded foundations the cross-coupling
ling the response of surface foundations, is the relative stiffness, Khr, can no longer be neglected, being approxi-
embedment, D/B or D/R. Moreover, the assumed interface mately equal to 0.4KhD.
behavior at the contact between vertical sidewalls and The effect of embedment on the frequency variation of
backfill is of crucial importance. Most of the aforementioned the dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients is demon-
studies assume that wails and soil remain in full contact strated in Fig. 19. We notice that k is not very sensitive to
during vibrations, as if they were welded at their interface. D[R. In fact, Elsabee etal. H4 recommended that the actual
In reality, however, no tensile stresses can be sustained frequency variation of k of an embedded foundation be
between the two media, while the magnitude of developing approximated by the variation of the corresponding surface
shear tractions cannot violate Coulomb's friction law. foundation. This seems to be very reasonable for all vibra-
Hence, separation and sliding are likely to occur between tion modes at low frequencies. For rocking and torsion, in
sidewalls and backf'dl, depending primarily on the mode particular, the approximation will for all practical purposes
of vibration and the nature and method of placement of be good throughout the frequency range examined; in other
the soil. Field evidence, documented by Stokoe and words, the beneficial effect of increasing D/R on the static
Richart, 1t3 seems to indicate that separation and sliding are rotational stiffnesses is preserved even at higher values of
more likely with clayey than with sandy soils, in accord ao, at least for not very large D/R ratios. However, beyond
with intuition. Furthermore, it is expected that separation the first resonant frequency, vertical and swaying vibrations
will be more significant with the two antisymmetric modes exhibit undulations in k which cannot be well reproduced
of vibration (swaying and rocking), whereas sliding will be with the results of surface foundations.
of greater importance in the two symmetric modes (vertical All damping coefficients increase substantially with
and torsional). Ideally 'welded' foundations are studied increasing embedment, although below the first resonance,
first. aor, they remain small. It has been recommended9°' u4 that
for ao >aor, c be taken equal to a constant value, corre-
' Welded' cylindrical foundations in a homogeneous stratum sponding to the average value of c of a foundation em-
The results to be presented are based on the work of bedded in a halfspace. To estimate this latter value of c,
Kause133 and are strictly applicable to foundations having use may be made of the simple expressions derived by
infinitely rigid sidewalls and mat, which are all in perfect Dobry et al. 9s on the basis of simple but realistic physical
contact with the soil. Moreover, the backfill must be of approximations. For the two translational modes, the fre-
very good quality and have the same properties with the quency-independent damping coefficients for cylindrical
soil beneath the mat. These are rather extreme conditions foundations embedded in a halfspace are approximated by:
and, thus, yield an upper bound of the possible effect of 1r(2 --v) 1+ 1.3(D/R) [1 + (3.6/n(1 --v))]
embedment. ch - - - (64)
Table 8 displays five simple and sufficiently accurate 8 1 + ~3(D/R)
formulae for the static stiffnesses of cylindrical founda- and
tions, perfectly embedded in a homogeneous soil layer
overlying bedrock. It is evident that embedment increases I + l.85(1--v)(D/R)
% =~ 0.85 (65)
the values of the static stiffnesses substantially. The increase 1 + ~ (D/R)
in D/R is especially beneficial to the two rotational modes,
rocking and torsion; the two translational modes, vertical The increase of the two damping coefficients with D/R
and horizontal, are considerably less affected (factors of is reflected in the much larger coefficients they are multi-

Table 8. Static stiffnesses of rigid embedded cylindrical foundations 'welded' into a homogeneous soil stratum-over-bedrock*

Type of loading Static stiffness Prof'fle


4GR(1+128R 1 1D' D D/H ] k~---'~R
Vertical l--v\ " )( + 2 R X I +
1 0"85--0"28"R
- - ~ ] 5 ~ I ~

8 G R ( I + I R ) ( I + 2 D ) ( I + - ~ D) -...'.
Horizontal 2 -- v~
/ / / / / / / / / I / / / / / 2 ):))22))
8GR 3 [ 1 R\/
Rocking 3(-TZ~_vjt 1 + g ~ ) [ l + 2 D) (I+ 0.7 D) Range of validity:
_D<2
Coupled horizontal-rocking 0.40KhD R

Torsion ~ GR'(1 + 2.67 D ) D "0"5'

* From Elsabee et al. H4 and Kauselet al. "s


t For foundation with deeper embedment the formulaeunderprediet the 'actual' increase in the stiffnesses

32 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

o }D/R
1

~'V

,L
0

A C
f\
/ \
\
/"~"~\ . / / \ / \_/
\
,I \
eh
- - \jr ,,1 _

0 I I I 1

~r Cr
/

0 I I I

• /'x/
et

.3

.5
I I I
• I I I,
0 2 4 6 O 2 4 6
ao ao
Figure 19. Effect of embedment on dynamic coefficients o f a rigid cylindrical foundation on stratum-over-bedrock
(H/R = 3, v = 1/3, ~ = 0.05) 3a'~ 9°

plied with in the numerator than in the denominator; e.g. Imperfect contact between sidewall and backfdl
for v = 0.40, ch is proportional to (1+ 3.8D/R)/(l+ 0.67 Two recent studies have addressed the question of the
D/R) and c v is proportional to (1 + 1.1D]R)](1 + 0.SD/R). dynamic response of embedded foundations, the sidewalls
Expressions similar to those of equations (64)-(65) have of which are not perfectly bonded to the backfdl, ss'ns
not been developed for rocking and torsion. In both studies, the nonlinear contact phenomena associ-
It is finally noted that, with very good accuracy, one ated with separation and sliding are modeled in an approxi-
may set for the cross-coupling impedance: mate way. Thus, Tassonlas assumes that no contact exists
khr = 1 ; Chr = 0 (66) between sidewall and backf'dl near the ground surface but

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. I 33


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

that a perfect contact is effective over a height equal to d Jakub and Roesset, s6,6s by utilizing the results of an
above the basement. By allowing d to vary between 0 and extensive parametric study, developed simple expressions
D all cases between the extremes of 'no-contact' and for the static horizontal and rocking stiffnesses, which are
'welded-contact' could be studied. On the other hand, displayed in Table 9. It is evident that the influence of
Novak et al. considers the sidewalls to be in contact not embedment is much smaller for strip than it is for circular
with the undisturbed soil but with a cylindrical zone foundations. In fact, the two coefficients multiplying D/B
consisting of softer material. By allowing the shear modulus in Table 9 (1/3 and 1) are exactly one-half of those multi-
of this zone to take values between the shear modulus of plying D/H in Table 8 (2/3 and 2, respectively). Intuitively,
the backfiU and zero, various qualities of contact could be these results appear to be very reasonable since a strip
considered. Note that a similar parametric study for static- foundation has sidewalls along two sides only. Thus, per
ally loaded foundations, the sidewalls of which are sur- unit length, the ratio of sidewall area to basement area is
rounded by a soft cylindrical zone, has been presented by equal to 2D/2B = D/B. Whereas, for a circular foundation
Johnson et al. 116 Only results from Tassoulas 8s are shown the ratio of the two areas is 2nRDhrR2= 2(D/R)! This
herein. seems to imply that the influence of D/R or D[B is pro-
The sensitivity of the static stiffnesses to variation in the portional to the sidewall-over-basemat area ratio.
contact-height over embedment ratio, d/D, is graphically The two normalized compliance functions, fhl+ifa2
displayed in Fig. 20. The effect is essentially independent and frl + f r2, show practically no sensitivity to the D/B
of H[R and D/R; hence only one curve is plotted for each ratio and hence are not reproduced herein. Reference is
mode. Consistent with the observations made in the made to the original publication s7 for more detailed
previous subsection, the effects of d[D are very significant information.
for rocking and torsional loading, substantial for horizontal
loading and secondary for vertical loading. For instance, Rectangular foundations embedded in halfspace
the 'welded-contact' stiffnesses (diD = 1) are 2.74, 2.33, Dominguez and Roesset47 developed a boundary element
1.60 and 1.30 times larger than the 'no-contact' stiffnesses formulation on the basis of which they derived unique
(diD = 0) for rocking, torsional, horizontal and vertical results for embedded rectangular foundations perfectly
loading, respectively. bonded into a homogeneous halfspace. Figure 22 presents
Figure 21 portrays the effect of diD on the variation of a few of their results for a foundation with an aspect ratio
k and c versus So. The stiffness coefficients are only slightly LIB = 2 and three embedment ratios, D/B = O, 2/3 and
affected by diD at low frequencies; at higher frequencies, 4/3. Only the stiffness and damping coefficients are plotted
however, the sharpness of the resonant valleys decreases as in Fig. 22 versus ao.
diD increases. On the other hand, the damping coefficients Results for the static stiffnesses are not shown here. It
show a substantial decline as the 'welded-contact' height, d, appears, however, that the sensitivity of most stiffnesses on
between sidewalls and backfill, decreases. Exception: c=, D/B is not as strong as in the case of circular foundations,
which is less affected by diD as well as by D[R (see equa- but is quite stronger than that of a strip footing. Note that
tion (65) and Fig. 19). Notice also that the influence of the sidewall-basemat area ratio in this case becomes equal to
d/D on Cr depends strongly on the particular frequency 4(B+L)D/(2B.2L)= 1.5(D/B), which is in between the
of oscillation. 1 and 2 times the embedment ratio of the previous two
cases!
Embedded strip foundations The dependence on D[B of the k and c versus ao curves,
Dynamic compliance functions of rigid strip foundations shown in Fig. 2, reveals the following trends.
embedded in a homogeneous soil stratum overlying bedrock 1. In the frequency range examined the sensitivity of
have been obtained by Chang-Liang. s7 Perfect contact is the stiffness coefficients to large variations in D[B is quite
assumed between the two sidewalls and the backfiU, and small. For all modes, the decline of k with ao at low fre-
the results are cast in the form of equation (20) (i.e. dyn- quencies becomes sharper as the level of embedment
amic compliances normalized with the static stiffnesses). increases.

3 B

D .' " '-"-'~,, 2


,~.. I -
h
• , ] •

• . ~ R - ~ • H "o
v

I I
0 0.5 1
d/D
Figure 20. Static stiffnesses of cylindrical foundations with different diD ratios (H/R = 3, D/R = 1, v = 1/3) as

34 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

2 /
/,
/

~V 0 "\\

-I 0 v J I I i "

r\ .//"
-- "*xx.Jl III 0h
hh
cl/D
0
0
I I "I 0 O.5
II, I

~r"
i °r ,

F
0

I I I 0

0"4r ,,/"'X°. ,/,:'*

~ jJ

I I I\
0 0
2 4 6 2 4 6
ao ao
Figure 21. Dependence o f dynamic coefficients o f cylindrical foundations on height o f sidewall-backfill contact (H/R = 3,
D/R =1, v =1/3, ~ = 0.05) as

•,Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, VoL 2, No. ] 35


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

Table 9. Static stiffnesses of rigid embedded strip foundations 'welded' into a homogeneous stratum-over.bedrock*
Type of loading Static stiffness Prof'fle
2.1Gt 2 B ) ( 1 + -1~ - ) ( 1 + ~4 D)
~,[I+
Horizontal

lrGB~ 1B /lll/I///I/] II) ] ) ) )


Rocking HIB ~ 2
D/B < 2/3
* From Jakub and Roessets6,6s

2. All the damping coefficients increase substantially backfill contact is assumed for set 3, no contact for set 4
with increasing D/B. The effect is particularly important for (Fig. 21). Material (hysteretic) damping is invariably taken
the rotational modes. Indeed, for rocking and torsion c equal to 0.05.
does not tend to zero in the low frequency range when the In our desire to isolate the effects of the dynamic parts
foundation is embedded. The practical significance of this of the impedance, k + iaoe, from the effects of the static
phenomenon is obvious, especially in cases involving small stiffnesscs, K, the latter are assumed to be the same in all
amounts of hysteretic damping in the soil. four sets. Thus, the four cases differ only in the corre-
sponding k and e values. In reality, of course, the static
SYNTHESIS: COMPARATIVE STUDY AND stiffnesses of each set differ substantially from the corre-
PRACTICAL RECOMMENDATIONS sponding stiffnesses of the other sets. For instance, the
horizontal stiffnesses corresponding to sets 1, 2, 3 and 4,
The previous sections have studied the effects of crucial are in the ratio of 1: 1.25:2.76: 1.725, respectively. The
problem parameters, related to the soil prof'de and the appreciable influence of these static stiffnesses on the
foundation geometry, on the dynamic response of massiess foundation response is well known, however, and requires
rigid foundation plates. It is interesting, however, to also no further demonstration. After all, the profession can
investigate the influence of these parameters on the determine static displacements with sufficient confidence,
response of a massive foundation, and thus develop a better and the numerous closed-form expressions offered in this
perspective of the role of some of these parameters. We paper make very simple the task of reliably estimating the
note that, in such a study, equations (39)-(46) can be static stiffnesses of essentially arbitrary foundations on/in
directly utilized to obtain amplitudes of steady-state a variety of soil profiles.
motion, once the dynamic impedance functions have been The question then which we try to answer in this section
evaluated. is the following: After having properly determined the static
The goal of the comparative study described here is to stiffnesses of a foundation, how important is it to also
investigate the sensitivity of the response of massive founda- accurately determine the dynamic stiffness and damping
tions to the exact variation with frequency of the dynamic coefficients at the frequency range of interest?
stiffness and damping coefficients, k and c. To this end, Figure 22 compares the four response spectra of founda-
two different foundations, both circular in plan, are con. tions A and B, corresponding to the aforementioned cases
sidered. Foundation A is a relatively heavy one, having a 1, 2, 3 and 4. Plotted in this figure is the variation with ao
radius R = 2 m , a mass m = 4 O p R 3 and a central mass of the normalized amplitude of the horizontal displacement,
moment of inertia lox =m(O.75R) 2. Foundation B is a lutl, experienced by the highest point of each foundation,
relatively light one, having R =1 m, m = 5 p R 3 and lox = at a distance z t = 1.2R above the center of gravity. The
m R 2. The center of gravity of the machine-foundation following trends are worthy of note in Fig. 22.
system is located in both cases at a distance z c = 1.10R 1. For frequency factors ao > 1, no differences exist
above the base. Both foundations support a machine with between the four response curves, of either the heavy or the
an unbalanced mass m o rotating with an eccentricity do at light foundation. In fact, the four displacement curves
frequencies co; the center of rotation is located at a distance attain a nearly constant value which is apparently con-
Zo = R above the center of gravity of the system, in each trolled by the static stiffnesses of each foundation. (Re-
case. Thus, the excitation forces, referrad to the center of member that in our study these stiffnesses do not change
gravity, are: from case to case.) Such a behavior is consistent with the
Q~ = m o do 0o2 exp [i(0ot + 90 °)] (67) high-frequency response of a 1-dof oscillator under a
rotating-mass-type excitation. 7 The implication is clear:
Qh =mo do 0o2 exp (i0ot) (68) at relatively high frequency factors, the motion of a rigid
Mr = Qh "Zo (69) massive foundation is controlled by its static stiffne~es and
it is not influenced by the exact variation of k and c with
and the solution can be derived from equations (39), (41) ao; therefore, one can safely use for k and c the values
and (42) by substituting: Qv = modo 0o2, ~v = 90°, Qh = obtained for surface foundations on halfspace, regardless
modo0o 2, ¢kh = O, M r = zo Qh and er = O. of the actual soil profde and depth of embedment!
Four different sets (1, 2, 3 and 4) of dynamic imped- 2. In the low frequency range ao < 1, the response
ance functions, K expressed in the form of equation (17), curves depend on the assumed dynamic coefficients as well
are considered. Set 1 corresponds to a surface foundation as the inertia characteristics of the foundation.
on a halfspace (Fig. 5). Set 2 corresponds to a surface The 'heavy' foundation experiences two resonant peaks.
foundation on a stratum-over-bedrock with H / R = 2 (Fig. The first occurs at a frequency ao ~ 0.15 regardless of the
8). Sets 3 and 4 correspond to a foundation embedded exact values of k and e. The only difference from case to
in a stratum with H / R = 3 and D/R = 1; 'welded' sidewall- case is in the maximum displacement amplitude, which is

36 Soil D y n a m i c s a n d E a r t h q u a k e Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, N o . 1


Analysis of machine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

0 apparently contxoUed by the inertia characteristics and the


D/B 213
radiation damping of each system. (At such frequencies
. . . . . . .

....... 4/3 ez
k ~= 1, while the hysteretic damping is invariably equal to
0.05.) As a result, use of the available halfspace curves for
c leads to an underprediction of the peak response.
....... =::::TL~ The second resonant frequency and resonant peak are
=z .5 both sensitive to the assumed values of k and c. It appears
that these peaks are the result of resonance phenomena
due to standing waves in the soil stratum, and, hence, they
l I I I I I are very little influenced by the foundation inertia. Notice
that for the halfspace (case 1) the resonance is very fiat
since no standing waves can be generated in the soil. Thus,
ex once more, the halfspace assumption proves unconservative.
The 'light' foundation, on the other hand, experiences
only one resonance which reflects the characteristics of
both the foundation inertia and the system dynamic
1 ..~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . | coefficients. The main influence of k and c is seen on the
peak amplitudes. Notice again that the halfspace values lead
to the flattest peak, a consequence of the high radiation
damping in a boundless medium.
On the basis of these observations and the results of
I I i
o some other case studies not presented herein, the following
practical recommendation can be made: A t relatively low
frequency factors, the motion of a rigid massive foundation
is controlled by its static stiffnesses, K, as well as its
Cy
....................... %
FOL~DATI Off A
50 m
MASS I~T]o p-~3 =41

]~ERT[^ ~TZO 1=' = 1 S l 4 12


mR z
30 t
1

~Y .5
~rrr,, ~,,,,, ~l ZC

/L f'\
~,~.. ......... ........
I I I I I I
0 .5 1 1.5 0 .5 1 1,5
\ !:i\,',. I
ao a0

1 c%

.......7.??.:._.7
0 0 5 1 1.5
30 -- ao
FOUHOATION B
[:

IOry .- .
/% .5 "¢.~-
lo
_ ,,,.",
ii \ , , \
mw

0 l
E~ ~ '\ . ~

1
•5 .5 . s."~-:-

, /, , I , , , , I , , , , I
0.5 1 t5
0 .5 1 1.5 .5 1 1.5 ao

a0 a0 Figure 23. Sensitivity of the response of two massive


Figure 22. Dynamic coefficients of embedded n~,id foundations on the exact variation of k and c with ao
rectangular foundations on halfspace (LIB = 2, v = I /3 )4~ (~=0.05)

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. ] 37


Analysis of rnachine foundation vibrations: state of the art: G. Gazetas

dynamic stiffness and damping coefficients, k and c; c can ing the contact pressure distribution to an infinite series
be assumed to be equal to: in terms of the natural modes of vibration of the soil
layer;T3-76,7a and (c) finite-element formulations.119-121
0 for f~<f, Figure 24 presents a typical variation of the horizontal
c = (70) impedance K h versus ao, for an end-bearing pile with
Chalfspae e for f > f ~ length-over-diameter ratio, H/D, equal to 15. The soil-
stratum consists of material with moduli increasing linearly
where f~ = V/4H is the first resonant frequency of the soil- with depth and a constant Poisson's ratio of 0.40, which is
foundation system for each particular mode; k can be typical for normally consolidated clays. The pile is of
approximated with the values obtained for surface founda- circular cross-section and has a Young's modulus Ep =
tions on a stratum-on-rigid-base; if, however, such solutions 8000Es, where E s is the soil modulus at a depth z = H/4.
are not available, use can be made of the halfspace values of This figure has been adapted from a recent study by Velez
k provided that the latter are approximately corrected at et al., ~22 who utilized the finite-element formulation of
and near the fundamental natural frequencies of the actual Blaney et al. H9 The dynamic impedance is expressed in the
stratum, using as a guide the results of Fig. 8. form:
The above conclusions and recommendations are strictly
applicable to rigid massive foundations carrying rotating- Kh = Kh(kh + 2i/3n) (71)
mass-type machines. For constant-force-type excitations where K h = static horizontal stiffness, k h = dynamic stiff-
the recommendations are still reasonably accurate. Frame- ness coefficient, and/3~ = equivalent critical damping ratio.
foundations, however, may be quite sensitive to the exact It is evident from this figure, that the general character-
variation of k and c at frequencies around the fundamental istics of the pile behavior are similar to those of a shallow
frequency of the superstructure. foundation on a soil stratum. The first resonance occurs
almost precisely at the fundamental frequency of the in-
SOME OTHER TOPICS homogeneous stratum in vertical shear waves, and no
radiation damping occurs below this frequency. At higher
The dynamic behavior of pile foundations, the effects of a frequencies, k h attains an essentially constant value; the
finite fiexular mat rigidity, and the dynamic interaction second resonance is barely noticeable, and hence of minor
between adjacent foundations, are three topics that have importance, despite the relatively small amount of assumed
received considerable attention in recent years. However, hysteretic damping (0.05).
present knowledge and understanding of the phenomena Reference is made to the aforementioned publications
related to these problems is more limited than for (single) for detailed studies of the influence of the main problem
rigid shallow foundations. Research is currently underway parameters on the response of tingle piles.
in several institutions, aimed at Idling the existing gaps of In the last few years, interest has switched to the dyn-
knowledge in these three areas. This section is restricted amics of groups of piles, a substantially more complex
to a brief general discussion of these topics and a listing of problem than that of a single pile. The first results, based
pertinent references for a more detailed study. on a rigorous formulation, 123 indicate that the dynamic
stiffness and damping coefficients of a large group of
Dynamic impedances of piles closely-spaced piles may be drastically different from the
Results have been presented by numerous authors for coefficients obtained by a simple superposition of the
end-bearing and floating single piles subjected to vertical, results for a single pile. More extensive parametric studies
horizontal, rocking and torsional loading. One may broadly are, however, needed before definitive conclusions can be
classify the developed formulations within three categories: drawn and before simple formulae and dimensionless graphs
(a) dynamic Winkler-foundation type formulations, which of direct applicability are developed for practical use.
neglect the coupling between forces and displacements at
various points along the pile-soil interface;41-43,sT'H6,Hs Effects of finite foundation rigidity
(b) analytical continuum-type formulations, which neglect
The in-plane (membrane) rigidity of mat foundations is
the secondary components of deformation and enforce the
practically infinitely large, when compared to the deform-
boundary conditions at the soil-pile interface by expand-
ability of soils; hence, for horizontal and torsional loading
most foundations clearly qualify as 'rigid', and the results
= 0,40 l l
of the preceding sections of this paper are thus pertinent.
Ep/Es = 8000 ~ t" " soil modulus
z
However, in many practical situations, the foundation
H/2r ° = 1S
(s 0.05
Z# E - Es H ~ - response to vertical and rocking loading cannot be properly

/J
predicted without accounting for the finite out-of-plane
U (flexural) rigidity of the mat.
A few studies have appeared lately on the dynamic
behavior of flexible circular and rectangular plates resting
on a homogeneous halfspace. 49-sl The additional dimension-
less parameter which in this case controls the foundation
kh Ic5 ~h response is the relative flexural rigidity factor R F = (Ef]Es).
(1--u}).(t/B) 3, where El, vf and t are, respectively, the
Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio and thickness of the
foundation raft. In addition, moreover, the exact distri-
I I i I I I I I I I t I
O 6.5 0 9,5 bution of the applied loading influences appreciably the
ao ao
behavior, especially of very flexible foundations.
Figure 24. Lateral dynamic coefficients of single pile in The results of the aforementioned studies indicate a
an inhomogeneous stratum 1 2 2 reduction in the vertical and rocking damping coefficients

38 Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

Co and Cr as the relative rigidity of the plate decreases. increases. But even for distances as small as 5B (or 5R) the
On the other hand, for small R F valfles, the stiffness presence of the second mass will in most cases be of
coefficients ke and k r do not exhibit as steep a decay with secondary importance, in view of the many other uncer-
ao as the one observed with rigid foundations (Fig. 5, for tainties of the problem. It is noted, however, that the
v > 1/3). Although additional parameter studies are needed natural frequencies of the soil-foundation system may also
to draw definitive conclusions, the author believes that the change duo to the interaction.
main influence of a decreasing R F on the response of a 2. The motions induced in the 'passive' foundation are
machine foundation materializes through the corresponding larger than the motion changes due to interaction effects on
decrease of the static stiffnesses; in other words, the effect the 'active' foundation. This is a quite logical result since
of the changes in k and c can be neglected, at least for waves emanating from the 'active' foundation excite the
realistic values of the R F factor. The results of the com- 'passive' foundation before they are 'reflected' back to the
parative study offered in the preceding section clearly 'active' one. Typically, one may expect the motions in the
support such a recommendation. second foundation to be about 20% of those experienced
An idea of how sensitive the static stiffnesses, K v and by the excited mass, for distances of the order of 5R and
K r, are to changes in the relative rigidity factor, RF, can be hysteretic damping ratio in the soil of 5%. However, for
obtained from the results of Table 10. The vertical static strip foundations (plane-strain problem) on deep soil
stiffness of a circular mat supported by a homogeneous deposits, the above value may increase to about 50%.
halfspace and loaded by either a uniformly or a parabolic- To protect sensitive structures from the vibrations
ally distributed load, are expressed in the form of equation induced by a nearby machine foundation, 'active' and/or
(55). The 'correction' factor Jr, which accounts for the mat 'passive' isolation measures may frequently be necessary.
flexural rigidity, is given as a function of RF. The Jv versus Results of experimental and theoretical investigations on
R F relationship was computed on the basis of some recent the effectiveness of several isolation schemes have been
results by the author; t24 the average of the center and edge published by Barkan, 1° Richart et al. 7 and Haupt. 12~
settlements were used in deriving the stiffness of the
flexible mat.
CONCLUSION
Dynamic interaction between ad/acent foundations
The vibration of a machine foundation may sometimes The state-of-the-art of analysing the forced oscillations of
appreciably affect a nearby structure; conversely, the shallow and deep foundations has advanced remarkably in
presence of such a structure may influence the response of the last 15 years and has reached a mature stage of develop-
the machine foundation itself. This 'coupling' in the motion ment. Several formulations and computer programs have
of two adjacent structures through the soil is referred to as been developed to determine in a rational way the response
'structure-soil-structure' interaction, and was first studied of foundations having various shapes and supported on/in
analytically by Warburton et al., ~Ts in connection with any kind of soil deposit. Numerous studies have been
cylindrical rigid foundations on a halfspace. More recently, published exploring the nature of associated phenomena
comprehensive studies have been presented by Chang- and shedding light on the role of the key parameters
Liang s7 who considered two rigid strip foundations on a influencing the response. This paper has reviewed these
stratum-over-bedrock and by Roesset et al. ~26 for two rigid developments and presented results in the form of simple
rectangular massive foundations or two structures idealized formulae and dimensionless graphs for the dynamic imped-
as simple 1-dof systems and also resting on the surface of a ance functions of circular, strip, rectangular and arbitrary-
homogeneous stratum. The following conclusions may be plan.shape foundations. The various results have been
drawn from the results of these studies. synthesized in a case study referring to two massive
1. The presence of a nearby ('passive') mass has a rather foundations, and practical recommendations have been
small overall influence on the motion of the foundation made on how to inexpensively predict the response of
carrying the machine ('active'). Perhaps the most important foundations in practice.
effect from a design point of view is the appearance of This progress in developing new methods of analysis
rocking motions, even under vertical excitation; this is for machine foundations has been paralleled by an equally
apparently the result of waves that are reflected by the impressive progress in our understanding of the dynamic
'passive' foundation. These effects increase when the masses behavior of soils and the development of excellent in situ
of the two foundations increase, when the distance between and laboratory procedures to obtain representative values
them decreases, and when the thickness of the soil stratum of dynamic soil parameters.
The author believes that, at present, there is a great n e e d
to calibrate our analytical procedures by means of actual
Table 10. Static vertical stiffness of flexible circular mat on case histories. Systematic post-construction observations of
haifspacet actual foundation performances are the key to this so
Jv(RF) important task. After all, confidence in advanced methods
of analysis can only be gained if these are proved capable
General Uniform Parabolic of predicting the field behavior of actual foundations.
expression RF load load* Analytical work is also needed to improve the present
0.01 0.67 0A6 knowledge and understanding of, among other topics, the
K 4GR J R 0.1 0.72 0.54 dynamic behavior of groups of piles, including the influence
v= ~ v(F) 1 0.92 0.82 of the pile-cap; the response of flexible mats founded on a
10 0.99 0.97 soil stratum; the dynamic characteristics of foundations
100 1.00 0.98 consisting of multiple isolated footings; and the effects of
* p = 2po(1--r2/R =) the non-uniform initial distribution of static stresses in the
~f Based on results by Gazetas 124 soil, arising from the weight of the structure.

Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1 39


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 25 Luco, J. E. and Westmann, R. A. Dynamic response of a


rigid footing bonded to an elastic halfspace, J. Appl. Mech.,
I would like to acknowledge financial support by the US ASME, 1968, 35E, 697
National Science Foundation (Grant CEE-82-00955) and 26 Karasudhi, P., Keer, L. M. and Lee, S. L. Vibratory motion
by the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (BUILD program). of a body on an elastic half plane, J. Appl. Mech. ASME,
1968, 35E, 697
I am also pleased to express my gratitude to my mentor 27 Luco, J. E. and Westmann, R. A. Dynamic response of
Jose M. Roesset, who encouraged my interest in the subject circular footings, J. Engng. Mech. Div., ASCE, 1971, 97.
of dynamic soil-foundation interaction. During the course EMS, 1381
of this work I had fruitful discussions with Ricardo Dobry 28 Veletsos, A. S. and Wei, Y. T. Lateral and rocking vibrations
who, also, read a draft of the paper and offered valuable of footings, J. Soil Mech. Found. Div., ASCE, 1971, 97,
SM9, 1227
comments. Professor Frank E. Richart, Jr., reviewed the 29 Veletsos, A. S. and Verbic, B. Vibration of viscoelastic
paper and offered many useful suggestions. Finally, my foundations, Int. J. Earthq. Engrg. Struct. Dyn., 1973,
thanks are extended to the Organizing Committee of the 2,87
International Conference on Soil Dynamics and Earthquake 30 Kuhlemeyer, R. Vertical Vibrations of Footings Embedded
in Layered Media, Ph.D. thesis, University of California,
Engineering for the invitation to prepare and present this Berkeley, 1969
state-of-the-art paper. 31 Waas, G. Analysis Method for Footing Vibrations Through
Layered Media, Ph.D. thesis, University of California,
Berkeley, 1972
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65 Jakub, M. and Roesset, J. M. Dynamic Stiffness of Founda- homogeneous soil, Geotechnique, 1981e, 31, No. 4,487
tions: 2-D vs 3-D Solutions, Research Report R77.36, 1977b, 94 Borodachev, N. M. Determination of the settlement on rigid
MIT plates, Soil Meeh. Fdn. Engrg. (USSR}, 1964, 1,210
66 Luco, J. E. Vibrations of a rigid disc o n a layered visco- 95 Dobry, R. and Gazetas, G. Stiffness and Damping of Arbitrary-
elastic medium, Nucl. Engrg. Des., 1976, 36, 325 shaped Embedded Foundations, Research Rep. CE-82-04,
67 Kirkner, D. J. Steady-state Response of a Circular Founda- RPI, 1982
tion on a Transversely Isotropic Half-space, PhD thesis, 96 Egorov, K. E. Calculation of Bed for Foundation with Ring
Case Western Reserve University, 1979 Footing, Proc. 6th ICSMFE, 1965, 2, 41
68 Wong, H. L. Dynamic Soil-Structure Interaction, Rep. No. 97 Dhawan, G. K. A transversely-isotropic halfspace indented
EERL 75-01, California Institute of Technology, 1975 by a flat annular rigid stamp, Acta Meehanica, 1979, 31,
69 Cruse, T. A. and Rizzo, F. J. A direct formulation and 291
numerical solution of the general transient eiastodynamic 98 Dhawan, G. K. An asymmetric mixed boundary value prob-
problem, I. J. Math. Anal. & Appl., 1968, 22 lem of a transversely-isotrupic halfspace subjected to moment
70 Gazetas, G. and Roesset, J. M. Plane-strain Soil-Structure by an annular rigid punch, Acta Mechanica, 1981a, 38, 257
Interaction for Seismic Response, Proc. 6th Syrup. Earthq. 99 Dhawan, G. K. A mixed boundary value problem of a trans-
Engng., Roorkee, India, 1978, 1,259 versely-isotropic halfspace under torsion by a flat annular
71 Kobori, T., Minai, R., Suzuki, T. and Kusakabe, K. Dynamical rigid stamp, Acta Mechanica, 1981b, 41,289
Ground Compliance of Rectangular Foundations, Proc. 16th 100 Brown, P. T. and Gibson, R. E. Surface settlement of a deep
Natl. Cong. for Appl. Mech., 1966 elastic stratum whose modulus increases linearly with depth,
72 Beredugo, Y. O. and Novak, M. Coupled horizontal and Can. Geotech. J., 1972, 9, 467
rocking vibration of embedded footings, Canad. Geotech. J., 101 Gibson, R. E. and Kalsi, G. S. The surface settlement of a
1972, 9, 477 linearly inhomogeneous cross-anisotrupic elastic halfspace,
73 Tajimi, H. Dynamic Analysis of a Structure Embedded in an Z. Angew. Math. Phys., 1974, 24, 843
Elastic Stratum, Proc. 4th WCEE, Chile, 1969 102 Rowe, R. K. and Booker, J. R. The behavior of footings
74 Nogami, T. and Novak, M. Soil-pile interaction in vertical resting on a non-homogeneous soil mass with a crust. I. Strip
vibration, Earthq. Engrg. Struct. Dyn., 1976, 4,277 footings. II. Circular footings, Cand. Geotech. J., 1981a,b,
75 Nogami, T. and Novak, M. Resistance of soil to a horizontally 18, 250
vibrating pile, Earthq. Engrg. Struct. Dyn., 1977, 5,249 103 Oda, M. Initial fabrics and their relations to the mechanical
76 Harada, T., Kubo, K. and Katayama, T. Dynamic Soil- properties of granular material, Soils & Foundations, 1972,
structure Interaction by Continuum Formulation Method, 12, 17
Inst. Indus. Sc., University of Tokyo, 1981, 29, No. 5 104 Barden, L. Influence of structure on deformation and failure
77 Takemiya, H. and Yamada, Y. Layered sori-pile-structure in clay soil, Geotechnique, 1972, 22, No. 1,159
dynamic interaction, Earthq. Engrg. Struet. Dyn., 1981, 105 Yamada, Y. and Ishihara, K. Anisotrupic deformation chat-
9, 437 acteristics of sand under three-dimensional stress conditions,
78 Akiyoshi, T. Soil-pile interaction in vertical vibration induced Soils & Foundations, 1979, 19, 79
through a frictional interface, Earthq. Engrg. Struct. Dyn., 106 Gazetas, G. Deformational Soil-Cross-Anisotropy: Expert-
1982, 10, 135 mental Evaluation and Mathematical Modelling, Research
79 Ang, A. H-S. and Harper, G. N. Analysis of contained plastic Rep. CE-8102, Case Western Reserve University, 1981b
flow in plane solids, Engrg. Mecit Div., ASCE, 1964, 90, 107 Gerrard, C. M. and Harrison, W. J. Stresses and Displacements
EM5,397 in a Loaded Orthorhombic Halfspace. Paper 9. Common-
80 Agabein, M. E., Parmelee, R. A. and Lee, S. L. A Model for wealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization: Div.
the Study of Soil-structure Interaction, Proc. 8th Conf. Appl. Mech., Australia, 1970b
Int. Assoc. Bridge &Struct. Engrg., New York, 1968 108 Gazetas, G. Importance of soil anisotropy on foundation
81 Krizek, R. J., Gupta, D. C. and Parmelee, R. A. Coupled displacement functions, Advances in Geoteeh. Earthq.
sliding and rocking of embedded foundations, J. Soil Mech. Engrg. SoilDyn., 1981c, 3, 1039
Fdn. Engrg., ASCE, 1972, 98, 1347 109 Gazetas, G. Dynamic compliance matrix of rigid strip footing
82 Tseng, N. M. and Robinson, A. R. A Transmitting Boundary bonded to a viscoelastic cross-anisotropic halfspace, Int. ?.
for Finite Difference Analysis of Wave Propagation in Solids, Mech. Sc., 1981f, 23, No. 9,547
Civ. Eng. Report No. 240, University of Illinois, Urbana- 110 Kausel, E., Roesset, J. M. and Christian, J. T. Nonlinear
Champain, 1975 behavior in soil-structure interaction, J. C,eotech. Engrg.
83 Lysmer, J. and Kuhiemeyer, R. L. Finite dynamic model for Div., ASCE, 1976, 102, GT12, 1159
infinite media, J. Engrg. Mech. Div., ASCE, 1969, 95, EM4, 111 Novak, M. and Beredugo, Y. O. Vertical vibration of em-
895 bedded footings. J. Soil Mech. b'hd Engrg. Div., A$CE,
84 Valliappan, S., White, W. and Lee, I. K. Energy absorbing 1972, 00, SM12, 000

Soil D y n a m i c s a n d E a r t h q u a k e Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, N o . 1 41


Analysis o f machine foundation vibrations: state o f the art: G. Gazetas

112 Johnson, G. R., Christiano, P. and Epstein, H. I. Stiffness H = thickness o f soil stratum
coefficients for embedded footings. J. Geotech. Engrg. Div., L
ASCE, 1975, 101, GTS, 789 = one-half of the longest side of a rectangular
113 Stokoe, K. H. and Riehart, F. E. Dynamic response of em- foundation
bedded machine foundations, J. Geotech. Engrg. Div., ASCE, R = radius o f a cylindrical foundation
1974, 100, GT4,427 Ro = radius o f 'equivalent' circular foundation
114 Elsabee, F. and Morray, J. P. Dynamic Behavior of Embedded (equations ( 4 7 ) - ( 5 0 ) )
Foundations, Research Rep. R 77-33, MIT, 1977
115 No.yak,M. and Sheta, M. Approximate approach to contact Zc = distance of center of gravity of a machine-
effects of piles, Dyn. Resp. Pile Fdns., ASCE, 1980 (O'Neil foundation system above the base.
and Dobry, eds.)
116 Johnson, G. R. and Epstein, H. I. Backfill effects on circular Related to material properties
foundation stiffnesses, J. Geotech. Engrg. Div., ASCE, 1977,
103, GT8,899 G = shear modulus o f soil
117 Kagawa, T. and Kraft, L. M. Lateral pile response during r~ = increase of shear modulus from the surface to
earthquakes, J. Geotech. Engrg. Div., ASCE, 1981, 107, a depth equal to R or B (applicable to inhomo-
GT12, 1713 geneous soil deposits)
118 Liou, D. D. and Penzien, J . Seismic Analysis of an Offshore
Structure Supported on Pile Foundations, Report No. n = EH/Ev, where EH and E v are the horizontal
EERC77-25, University of California, Berkeley, 1977 and vertical Young's moduli o f a cross-aniso-
119 Blaney, G. W., Kausel, E. and Roesset, J. M. Dynamic Stiff- tropic soil
ness of Piles, Proc. 2nd Int. Conf. Nunt Meth. Geomech., v = Poisson's ratio o f soil
Blacksburg, Virginia, 1976 = hysteretic critical damping ratio o f soil
120 Kuhlemeyer, R. Static and Dynamic Laterally Loaded Piles,
Research Rep. CE76-9, University of Calgary, 1976
121 Angelides, D. C. and Roesset, J. M. Nonlinear lateral dynamic Related to foundation impedances
stiffness of piles, J. Geotech. Engrg. Div., ASCE, 1981, 107, K = static stiffness referred to the base o f the
GT11, 1443
122 Velez, A., Gazetas, G. and Krishnan, R. Lateral Stiffness and foundation (Fig. 1)
Damping of Piles in Non-homogeneous Soil, Research Rep. K = dynamic impedance function o f frequency; it
CE.82-04, RPI, 1982 m a y be expressed in one o f the following
123 Wolf, J. P. and yon Arx, G. A. Impedance function of a group alternative forms:
of vertical piles, Earthq. Engrg. & Soil Dyn., ASCE, 1978,
!I, 1024 = Kl(W ) + iK2(~ )
124 Gazetas, G. Variational estimations of raft settlement on = K ( k + iaoc) (1 + 2i~)
cross-anisotropic soil, Soils and Foundations, 19818, 21, = K(k + iaoc)
No. 4,109
125 Warburton, G. B., Richardson, J. D. and Webster, J. J. Calligraphic characters are used on the figures in place of
Forced vibrations of two masses on an elastic half space, the bold K, k and c.
J. Appl. Mech., ASME, 1971, 38, E k and k = (dynamic) stiffness coefficients, functions o f oJ
126 Roesset, J. M. and Gonzalez, J. J. Dynamic interaction c and c = (dynamic) damping coefficients, functions o f
between adjacent structures, Dyrt Meth. Soil Rock Mech.,
ao = o~B/Vs or coR/Vs (dimensionless frequency
1977, 1,127
127 Haupt, W. A. Surface waves in non-homogeneous halfspaee, factor)
Dyrt Meth. Soil Rock Mech., 1977, 1,335 F = dynamic compliance function o f 6o; it may be
128 Riehart, F. E., Jr., personal communication, 1982 expressed in one o f the following alternative
forms:
= F l ( c o ) + iF2(co)
NOTATION 1
K [f'(~) + iA(~o)]
The following symbols are frequently used in the paper:

Related to geometry Subscripts


B = half-width o f a strip footing or the shortest v = vertical (also designated by z)
half-width o f a rectangular footing h = horizontal (also x, y )
D = depth o f embedment r = rocking (also r x, ry)
d = height o f perfect sidewall-backfill contact above t = torsion (also rz)
the foundation base hr = coupled horizontal-rocking (also xry, y r x )

42 Soil D y n a m i c s a n d E a r t h q u a k e Engineering, 1983, Vol. 2, No. 1


XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria


Coordinador: M. C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: M. C. Carlos Roberto Torres


14 de noviembre de 2012
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Existen varios tipos de maquinaria de impacto utilizadas


habitualmente en la industria. Este tipo de maquinaria
puede ser clasificada bajo las siguientes categorías:

i. Maquinaria que produce impactos repetitivos, por ejemplo:


martillos de forjado y martinetes.
ii. Maquinaria que produce cargas de impulsivas o de
vibración, por ejemplo: trituradoras, hornos siderúrgicos,
prensas de forjado y estampado.

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Ejemplos comunes de este tipo de maquinaria son los martillos


de forjado. Un martillo de forja se compone de un martillo, un
yunque y un marco.

Fig. 1. Arreglo común para cimentación de martillo.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

El martillo, el cual es un bloque pesado, cae desde una altura


determinada golpeando el material a ser forjado, colocado sobre un
yunque. Este último descansa sobre una almohadilla elástica, la cual se
apoya directamente sobre el bloque de cimentación.
La energía producida por el impacto provoca como consecuencia
movimientos del yunque, transmitiendo esta energía hasta el suelo a
través de la cimentación. Por lo tanto, es necesario calcular la velocidad
inicial generada por el yunque, así como las propiedades elásticas de la
almohadilla.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

FUERZAS DINÁMICAS

Las vibraciones de una cimentación sujeta a impactos de un


martinete se analizan básicamente como un problema de
velocidad inicial. Se puede representar el sistema completo
martillo-cimentación en dos partes:

i. Masa en caída m0 desde una altura h que produce el


impacto
ii. Parte del sistema que recibe el impacto

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Se evalúa primero la velocidad de caída de masa, considerando


que esta se deja caer libremente desde una altura h como sigue:

MARTINETES DE ACCIÓN SENCILLA

Para este tipo de maquinaria, la velocidad inicial de la masa en


caída libre desde una altura h se escribe como:

h Es la altura total de caída de la masa de forjado


g Es la aceleración de la gravedad
η Es la eficiencia de la caída

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

El factor η depende de la energía perdida debida a la fricción del


movimiento del martillo y de la resistencia de la resistencia de la
contrapresión vapor/aire. Por practicidad, el valor recomendado para
la eficiencia de caída η es 0.65.

Fig. 2. Arreglo común para cimentación de martillo y sistema equivalente.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

MARTINETES DE ACCIÓN DOBLE

Este tipo de martillo es operado por presión neumática, por lo


que la velocidad inicial está dada por:

La cuantificación en el soporte representa la influencia de la


fuerza generada por el pistón en la velocidad inicial

Ap Es el área del pistón


ps Es la presión de acción del pistón
m0 Es la masa total de la sección en caída
g Es la aceleración de la gravedad

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Fig. 3. (a) Representación de cimentación para martillo de acción sencilla


(b) Representación de cimentación para martillo de doble acción

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Para sistemas de acción sencilla, como el mostrado en la figura 3 (a), la


velocidad inicial aplicada al yunque (yunque mas cimentación) por
efectos del impacto de los martillos está dado por la ecuación:

λ = m/m0 representa la relación de la masa del yunque mas la cimentación


respecto a la masa del martillo.

Para sistemas de acción doble, como el mostrado en la figura 3 (b), la


velocidad inicial aplicada al yunque está dada por la expresión:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

λ2 = m2/m0 representa la relación entre la masa del yunque y la mas del


martillo

e es el coeficiente de restitución que depende de las propiedades del material


de las masas m0 y m o m0 y m2. Para efectos de análisis de casos reales,
este valor oscila de 0 a 1, por lo que es razonablemente práctico usar e igual
a 0.5.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

PRENSAS DE FORJADO Y ESTAMPADO

Estas pueden ser del tipo hidráulico, de fricción o excéntricas.


Generalmente tienen gran capacidad de compresión con capacidades
de prensado de alrededor de 10,000 toneladas. Aunque las fuerzas
dinámicas transmitidas a la cimentación son pequeñas por las bajas
velocidades de operación, no así los esfuerzos debido a los impactos
que son de orden significante y pueden causar sobrecargas de 50 al
100% mayores a los de la masa del material forjado.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

TRITURADORAS

Funcionan a través de un pisón, que imparte una elevada energía cinética a


la cimentación, resultando grandes vibraciones en el suelo. Por lo que las
estructuras colindantes deben de estar separadas de la cimentación de las
trituradoras. Las fuerzas de impacto son evaluadas de la misma forma que
los martinetes.

MOLINOS DE TRITURACIÓN, LAMINADO Y DISGREGADO

Estos, debido a la presencia de masas desbalanceadas, producen grandes


fuerzas dinámicas que a su vez son transmitidas al suelo por medio de la
cimentación. Debido a estas masas, las fuerzas dinámicas han de ser
evaluadas en forma lineal como si fuesen maquinas rotatorias.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

FUERZAS DINÁMICAS

Se consideran dos casos:

i. Cargas impulsivas de corta duración


ii. Cargas impulsivas de larga duración

Para el primer caso, las respuesta depende de la fuerza y la frecuencia de


excitación dinámica. Para calcular la amplitud se considera la frecuencia de
impacto, número de golpes por minuto. El factor de magnificación depende
de la relación entre la frecuencia de impacto y la frecuencia natural de
vibración. Las fuerzas dinámicas se analizan como cargas impulsivas

Impulso I=F

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Para el caso en el que la fuerza en la historia del tiempo/el momentum


impulso no sea definido por el fabricante del equipo, este puede
considerase como:
Impulso I = m0 x ν0

En donde m0 es la masa total del pisón v0 es:

De donde h es la altura de caída.

Frecuencia natural de vibración:

Número de golpes por minuto: N

Frecuencia d impacto:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Relación de frecuencias

Magnificación dinámica

Amplitud

Fig. 4. Sistema sujeto a carga impulsiva.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

La respuesta del sistema durante la duración de los pulsos (fase I) es la


respuesta de vibración forzada, en tanto que la respuesta después del pulso
(fase II) es la respuesta de vibración libre.
Independientemente de la forma de la pulsación, para una relación de
frecuencia βy < 1 para , la respuesta máxima ocurre durante la
vibración forzada, y cuando βy > 1 para , la respuesta máxima ocurre
durante la vibración libre.
Para un sistema que tiene una rigidez k y una masa m, la frecuencia natural
de vibración es :

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Esto da un periodo:

Para el fuerza dinámica pico inducida por la maquinaria Fy, la amplitud se


convierte en :

ξ es el factor de fatiga.
Igual a 2 cuando no está definido.

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Cálculo de la velocidad desarrollada por el yunque después del impacto,


suponiendo una eficiencia de caída η = 0.65 y un coeficiente de
restitución e = 0.5.

•Masa del martillo: m0 = 3500 kg


•Masa del yunque: m2 = 8000 kg
•Altura de caída: h=2m
Rigidez de la almohadilla k2 = 3.9 x 106 kN/m

Fig. 5. Sistema masa resorte sujeto a impacto.

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Solución:

Cálculo de la velocidad inicial de la masa m2

La velocidad de la masa m0 antes del impacto:

La velocidad de la masa m2 después del impacto es:

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Cálculo de la velocidad desarrollada por el yunque para un martillo de


doble acción

•Masa del martillo 2,000 kg


•Masa del molde superior (upper die) 500 kg
•Altura de caída h = 1.0 m
•Área del pistón Ap = 0.2 m2
•Presión de vapor ps = 1,000 kN/m2
•Masa del yunque 40,000 kg
•Masa del soporte 15,000 kg
•Área de la base del yunque 6.0 m2
•Modulo de elasticidad de la almohadilla Ep = 3.0 x 10 5 kN/m2
•Espesor de la almohadilla t = 0.4 m
•Eficiencia de caída η = 0.65
•Coeficiente de restitución para impacto e = 0.5

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Solución:

Velocidad inicial desarrollada por el yunque

la masa en caída, es:

La velocidad de la masa m0 antes del impacto v’0 es:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Velocidad v2, desarrollada por la masa m2 después del impacto

m2 = sumatoria de las masas del yunque y el soporte:

Por lo que la velocidad v2 es:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Para calcular la masa de la cimentación se emplea la siguiente


expresión:

mf es la masa de la cimentación
ma es la masa del yunque
D es la profundidad de desplante
yf es la amplitud deseada en cimentación
 factor de relación de masa y
v’0 es la velocidad inicial del martillo en m/seg.

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Ejemplo. Para un matillo de forjado con un yunque de 40 ton y una velocidad


inicial v’0 de 4 m/seg, con una amplitud deseada en la cimentación de 1.1 mm y
un Coeficiente de diseño de Compresión uniforme Cu = 20 x 104 kN/m3.

Se obtiene una masa de cimentación:

Que representa aproximadamente 4.5 veces las masa del yunque.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Los pasos recomendados para el análisis son los siguientes:


1. Considerar el yunque y la cimentación como una masa apoyada en el suelo,
es decir, sin cojinete o almohadilla elástica entre el yunque y la cimentación.
2. Considerar almohadilla elástica entre el yunque y la cimentación.
3. Considere total del sistema como Sistema de dos grados de libertad.

(1) (2) (3)

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Primer caso

la velocidad de la cimentación después del impacto es:

m1 masa total de la cimentación


m0 masa de la parte que cae
e coeficiente de restitución
v’0 velocidad del martillo antes del impacto.
Coeficiente de restitución (para casos prácticos reales) e = 0.6

Amplitud de la cimentación deseable yf en mm; y1 = yf x 10-3 m

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Rigidez del suelo requerida:

Área de la base de la cimentación requerida:

Donde Af es el área de la base de la cimentación

Se debe verificar que el área de la primera aproximación de la cimentación sea


igual o mayor que la calculada con la expresión anterior. De no ser así, esta
área ha de incrementarse adecuadamente hasta alcanzar este valor calculado.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Segundo caso

La velocidad del yunque después del impacto:

m2 masa del yunque

Amplitud deseable del yunque

Rigidez requerida de la almohadilla elástica

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

El espesor de la almohadilla es:

Ep módulo de elasticidad de la almohadilla


Aa área de la base del yunque.

Tercer caso

La velocidad del yunque después del impacto:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

La rigidez de la almohadilla elástica debajo del yunque es:

La rigidez del suelo (en la base de la cimentación es:

La ecuación de frecuencia es:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Amplitud de la cimentación

Amplitud del yunque

sin p1t representa la respuesta del primer modo y el termino sin p2t al segundo.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

denotando:

La amplitud de la cimentación queda:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Indicando:

Con lo que se puede representar la amplitud del yunque como:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Cimentación para un martillo de forjado de 1.1 ton de la figura 6,


teniéndose los siguientes datos:

Datos de la maquinaria

•Masa del martillo + el molde superior 1.38 ton


•Masa del yunque 34.00 ton
•Masa del yunque mas el soporte 34.00 ton
•Dimensiones de la base del yunque
Largo = 1.90 m
Ancho = 1.45 m
Altura del yunque = 1.30 m
•Factor de eficiencia de impacto 0.65
•Coeficiente de restitución 0.60

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Condiciones de operación

Tasa de golpeo del martillo:

Para el caso 1, golpes por minuto: 36.00


Altura de caída: 1.70 m

Para el caso 2, golpes por minuto: 75.00


Altura de caída: 1.00 m

Amplitudes máximas permisibles

Amplitud del yunque: 2.00 mm


Amplitud de la cimentación: 1.50 mm

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Datos del suelo

Propiedades dinámicas:
•Coeficiente de diseño de compresión uniforme: 4 x 104 kN/m3
•Relación de Poisson: 0.30
•Densidad del suelo: 2.00 t/m3
•Contante de amortiguamiento: 0.10
•Capacidad de carga última a 3.5 m de prof.: 230.00 kN/m2
•Intensidad de carga permisible a 3.5 m de prof.: 184.00 kN/m2

Datos de la cimentación

•Grado del concreto: M 25


•Densidad del concreto: 2.50 t/m3
•Profundidad de desplante de la cimentación: 3.50 m

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Fig. 6. Planta y elevación de la cimentación para el martillo de forjado.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Parámetros de diseño de la maquinaria

Velocidad del martillo antes del impacto:

Velocidad del yunque después del impacto:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

De la gráfica de Cu contra λ se obtiene esta última igual a 0.58, por lo que:

La masa del yunque mas la cimentación es:


La masa de la cimentación resulta:

Que conlleva a una relación de masa cimentación-yunque:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Dimensionamiento de la cimentación

Profundidad de desplante: 3.50 m


Área deseable de la base de la cimentación: 11.89 m2
Máximo largo de la cimentación: 4.00 m
Máximo ancho de la cimentación: 3.40 m
Máxima área de la cimentación: 13.60 m2

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

a) Respuesta de la cimentación para cargas de impacto:

Considerando que no existe almohadilla de amortiguamiento, por lo que la


cimentación y el yunque son una sola unidad de análisis, y el suelo descansa
suelo se tiene:

Masa total de la cimentación mas yunque:

Relación de masas:

Velocidad de la cimentación después del impacto:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Amplitud de la cimentación deseable:

Rigidez del suelo requerida:

Área de la base de la cimentación:

El área máxima de la cimentación es de 13.60 m2, por lo que el área calculada


esta dentro de lo permisible.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

b) Respuesta del yunque debido a cargas de impacto:

Considerando una almohadilla elástica colocada entre el yunque y la


cimentación, y considerando un sistema de un solo grado de libertad se tiene:

Masa del yunque:

Relación de masas:

Velocidad del yunque después del impacto:

Amplitud deseable del yunque (80% permisible):

Rigidez requerida de la almohadilla debajo del yunque:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Esfuerzo desarrollado en la almohadilla elástica:

El módulo de elasticidad para este esfuerzo es obtenido del esfuerzo de tensión


suministrado por la fabricante de esta almohadilla. Por lo que si el esfuerzo es
de 0.42 MPa y el esfuerzo de tensión es de 0.0150; el módulo de elasticidad es
de 28.22 MPa.

Multiplicando este último por el factor recomendado para esta almohadilla se


tiene:

Módulo de elasticidad dinámico de la almohadilla:

Espesor requerido de la almohadilla:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Espesor máximo de la almohadilla elástica: 120 mm

Rigidez modificada con el espesor máximo de la almohadilla:

Relación de amortiguamiento del material de la almohadilla (proporcionada por


el fabricante) se muestra en la siguiente gráfica:

Fig. 7. Esfuerzo-deformación del material de la almohadilla.


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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

c) Respuesta de la cimentación mas el yunque por cargas de impacto:

Considerando que existe una almohadilla elástica entre el yunque y la


cimentación, y que esta última esta soportada por el suelo, como un sistema de
dos grados de libertad.

Tenemos que:

m2 = 34 ton; k2 = 7.13 x 105 kN/m; m1 = 114 ton; k1 = 5.44 x 105 kN/m

Las frecuencias límite y la relación de masa son:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Sustituyendo en la ecuación de frecuencia:

Con los siguientes valores:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Respuesta del yunque y la cimentación (respuesta modal):

La respuesta máxima del yunque para el primer modo es:

La respuesta máxima del yunque para el segundo modo es:

La respuesta de la cimentación para el primer modo es:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

La respuesta de la cimentación para el segundo modo es:

La repuesta total para el yunque así como para la cimentación se presentan en


la figura 7, con los siguientes resultados:

Respuesta total del yunque: 2.15 mm


Respuesta total de la cimentación: 1.17 mm

Eficiencia del aislamiento:


Energía de impacto transferida del martillo al yunque: 9.72 kNm
Energía transmitida del yunque a la cimentación: 1.64 kNm
Eficiencia del aislamiento al nivel de la base del yunque 83.12%

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Energía transmitida al suelo a través de la cimentación: 0.37 kNm


Eficiencia del aislamiento al nivel de la base de la cimentación: 96.19%

Fig. 8. Amplitudes de respuesta del yunque y la cimentación.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Revisión de la capacidad de presión por debajo de la cimentación:

Cargas dinámicas sobre la cimentación:

Presión en el suelo debido a cargas dinámicas:

Presión en el suelo debido a cargas estáticas:

Capacidad de presión total:

Capacidad de presión admisible:

Relación entre presión total y presión admisible:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Respuesta dinámica bajo frecuencias de impacto

Usualmente no se es requerido hacer análisis dinámicos para menos de 150


golpes por minuto. Sin embargo para efectos de ejemplificación se tiene que.

Caso 1. 36 golpes por minuto:

Longitud de la carrera: 1.70 m

Constante de amortiguamiento del suelo: ζ = 0.1

Masa del martillo: m0 = 1.38 ton

Factor para la eficiencia del impacto: 0.65

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Velocidad del martillo antes del impacto:

Frecuencia de impacto (36 golpes por minuto): ω = 3.77 rad/seg

Aceleración:

Fuerza de impacto:

Rigidez

Frecuencia natural de vibración:

Relación de frecuencias:

Factor de magnificación dinámico:

Amplitud de la cimentación:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Pasos de diseño:
1. Dimensionamiento de la cimentación
2. Rigidez equivalente del suelo
3. Fuerzas dinámicas
4. Análisis:
I. Análisis dinámico
a. Frecuencia natural de vibración
b. Amplitudes dinámicas
I. Análisis de fuerzas y estabilidad
.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Datos requeridos:
a) Información de la cimentación
i. Geometría general de la cimentación, localización de los soportes
sobre la cimentación.
ii. Todos los detalles específicos de la maquinaria pueden ser útiles y
necesarios para el diseño.
Adicionalmente también se ha de establecer el tipo de cimentación, tamaño,
masa, rigidez, así como las propiedades de los materiales de esta. Es
necesario prever que esta cimentación permanecerá aislada de las
cimentaciones de estructuras colindantes.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Datos requeridos:
b) Información de la maquinaria

i. Masas
a. Masa total de la maquinaria
b. Masa del yunque
c. Masa de la cabeza de corte
d. Masa del material a forjar
e. Masa del pisón

ii. Fuerzas dinámicas


f. Carrera de la prensa o altura de caída del pisón
g. Presión ejercida por la prensa
h. Carga impulsiva en la historia del tiempo
i. Frecuencia de impacto
j. Fuerza desbalanceada
k. Fuerzas y momentos para el caso de maquinaria
excéntrica
l. Detalles de los pernos de anclaje y otras partes embebidas
m. Propiedades de las almohadillas de aislamiento
n. Coeficientes de restitución e impacto
o. Amplitudes de vibración permisibles

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Datos requeridos:
b) Información del suelo
i. Datos dinámicos del suelo en el sitio en especifico
ii. Tipo de suelo y propiedades índice
iii. Capacidad de carga
iv. Nivel de aguas freáticas
v. Potencial de licuefacción
Además se requiere conocer la sismicidad del sitio, así como la presencia de
otros tipos de industria o zonas habitacionales sensibles a los efectos nocivos
de la vibración de la maquinaria.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Este tipo de maquinaria normalmente causa sobreesfuerzos. Por lo que.


Presión en el suelo bajo cargas normales debe ser el 50% de la
capacidad de carga, manteniendo un margen del 100% para el
sobreesfuerzo. No debe de presentarse excentricidad entre el centro de
gravedad de la mas y el centro de gravedad de la rigidez.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Las cargas impulsivas son un tipo especial de caso de cargas dinámicas


y generalmente consisten en un impulso simple de corta duración. La
fuerza producida por la operación se calcula en términos de fuerzas de
impulso, por lo que es necesario considerar dos casos:

a) Impulsos de corta duración: la magnificación dinámica depende de


la relación de frecuencia de impacto y la frecuencia natural de
vibración.
b) Impulsos de larga duración: la magnificación dinámica depende de
la relación de la duración del pulso y el periodo natural de la
cimentación.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Este tipo de equipos generan un cierto número de golpes con una


frecuencia ω:

• Carga impulsiva: I

• Número de golpes: N rpm

• Frecuencia de repetición de golpes:

• Relación de frecuencias:

• Magnificación dinámica:

• Deflexión estática:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

• Amplitud

Estos equipos cuentan con una masa o pisón m0 y una altura de caída
h, por lo que el impulso se calcula como:

Donde:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

La magnificación de la respuesta debido a cargar impulsivas para un sistema de


un solo grado de libertad, por conveniencia se representa como se muestra en
la figura:

Fig. 9. Relación carga impulsiva-factor de magnificación


para un sistema de un solo grado de libertad.
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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Las fuerzas dinámicas inducidas por la maquinaria (carga impulsiva máxima) se


denotan como Fy.

La deflexión estática es:

El factor de magnificación se obtiene de la figura μy contra τ/T.

Por lo que la amplitud se convierte en:

Donde ξ es el factor de fatiga. Para el caso en que el factor de fatiga no sea


definido, este se puede suponer igual a 2.

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Ejemplo
Peso de la maquina :
Impulsos producidos por la maquina:
Peso de la cimentación:
Área de la cimentación:
Profundidad de la cimentación:
Capacidad de carga de la cimentación:
Coeficiente de compresión uniforme:
Frecuencia de golpes repetidos:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Diseño
Peso total de maquina + cimentación:
Presión sobre el suelo:
Margen de sobrecarga:
Frecuencia de excitación (90 rpm)
Masa (maquina + cimentación):
Rigidez del suelo:

Frecuencia natural (SDOF):

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Diseño
Relación de frecuencia:
Fuerza debido al impulso:

Deformación estática:

Magnificación:

Amplitud en la cimentación:

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

K. G. Bhatia - Foundation for Industrial Machines: Handbook for practising


Engineers, 2007
P. Srinivasulu - Handbook of Machine Foundation, 1977
Shamsher Prakash - Foundations for Machines: Analysis and Design, 1988
Suresh Arya - Design of Structures and Foundation for Vibrating Machines,
1984

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Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria


Coordinador: M. C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: M. C. Carlos Roberto Torres


14 de noviembre de 2012
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

El tipo de excitación que generalmente desarrollan las


maquinas rotatorias es de tipo senoidal; para determinar
esta fuerza es necesario conocer la masa rotatoria y la
excentricidad entre el centro de rotación y el centro de
gravedad de la masa rotatoria

Incluye turbinas a gas, turbinas a


vapor, bombas, compresores,
ventiladores y centrifugadoras.
Se caracteriza por el movimiento
de rotación de los impulsores o
rotores.

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 2
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Para este tipo de máquinas es posible, teóricamente,


balancear las partes móviles que producen las fuerzas
desbalanceadas durante la rotación; sin embargo en la
práctica es difícil eliminar del todo el desbalanceo.

Las fuerzas desbalanceadas


en este tipo de equipo son
originadas cuando el centro
de masas de las partes que
giran no coincide con el
centro de rotación

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 3
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

El rotor (de cada máquina giratoria) está


referido a un grado calidad de balance
requerido. El grado de calidad para un
rotor se decide en base a la velocidad de
operación y el uso previsto de la
máquina. La ISO 194011 da el grado de
balance recomendado para los rotores
(sólo rotores rígidos) de todos los tipos
de maquinas rotatorias. El grado de
calidad de balance se representa como
Gr, donde se utiliza la letra G como una
notación para el Grado y r es el número
(en mm/s), que representa productos de
excentricidad (en mm)

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

ROTOR

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

En términos prácticos las máquinas rotatorias se clasifican:


•De baja velocidad
operan a menos de 1500 rpm .- motores generadores, bombas centrífugas y
de vacío, ventiladores, devanadoras, etc.

La cimentaciones usadas son: bloque rígido y tipo marco.

•De alta velocidad


tienen velocidades de operación generalmente de 3000 a 3600 rpm pero en
algunos casos hasta 10000 rpm..- turbinas de gasolina o vapor, generadores,
compresores y turboventiladores

La cimentaciones tipo marco son las utilizadas generalmente para las


unidades de turbogeneradores

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

MAQUINA
MAQUINA

MARCO
BLOQUE DE
CONCRETO

BASE DE
CONCRETO

SUELO SUELO

MAQUINA
MAQUINA

BLOQUE DE
CONCRETO MARCO

SUELO

SUELO

Cimentación tipo Cimentación tipo


bloque marco

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

UNIDAD DE TURBO GENERADOR

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

CONSTRUCCIÓN DE CIMENTACIÓN TIPO MARCO

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Se puede considerar que una cimentación en bloque se desplaza como


cuerpo rígido. Por lo tanto, bajo la influencia de fuerzas y momentos
superpuestos puede vibrar en seis diferentes modos

Cualquier movimiento del bloque


puede ser resuelto dentro de
estos seis desplazamientos.
Es decir, el bloque tiene seis
grados de libertad o modos de
vibrar y seis frecuencias
naturales

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 10
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

De los seis modos, el traslacional a lo


largo del eje Z y su rotacional pueden
ocurrir independientemente de cualquier
movimiento.

La translación de los ejes Y o X y la rotación


alrededor de estos siempre ocurren juntas y
se llaman modos acoplados

En el análisis de cimentación de bloque se consideran cuatro tipos de


movimientos: dos son independientes y los otros dos son acoplados y
ocurren simultáneamente

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 11
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Antes de iniciar un análisis más


detallado se debe verificar que la
distancia del centro de gravedad del
sistema cimentación-maquina al centro
del área del bloque de la cimentación
con el suelo es menor al 5 % de la
dimensión correspondiente de la
cimentación

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 12
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Debido a los efectos adversos que


produce la vibración en las
cimentaciones, se aconseja revisar
las amplitudes de vibración en la
etapa del diseño preliminar para
asegurar que están bajo límites
aceptables

La amplitudes indicadas no son de


ningún modo las máximas que pueden
ser toleradas, estas aseguran que la
cimentación de la maquinaria funcione
de manera aceptable

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 13
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

La excentricidad e representa el desequilibrio residual que queda en el rotor


después del balanceo. El rotor genera una fuerza dinámica de desequilibrio, la
cual no es más que la fuerza centrífuga generada por la rotor de masa mr, que
tiene excentricidad e que gira a frecuencia .

La fuerza dinámica
desbalanceada esta dada
por :

También puede expresarse


como:

F0 representa la magnitud de la fuerza


desbalanceada

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XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 14
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

•Las dos componentes de •Máximo valor de las componentes


esta fuerza en X-X y Y-Y, son: (cos  = 1, sen  = 1)

Para máquinas que tiene mas de un rotor las fuerzas desbalanceadas en cada
rotor pueden o no tener el mismo ángulo de fase:

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Cálculo de la excentricidad de un rotor que tiene una masa mr = 1000 kg y opera


a una velocidad de 3000 rpm y tiene un grado de balance G6.3

Cálculo de la fuerza desbalanceada

La fuerza de 1794 N actúa en una frecuencia de 314.16 rad


o 3000 rpm
Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 16
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Frecuencia natural
El sistema de cimentación de la maquinaria está sujeto a seis modos de
vibración: tres de traslación y tres de rotación. La frecuencia natural corresponde
a estos 6 modos.
Movimientos no acoplados

A lo largo de Y (vertical)

Rotación alrededor de Y

Movimientos acoplados

Movimientos en el plano X-Y (traslación en X y rotación alrededor de Z)

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

donde

P1 y p2 representan las frecuencias naturales menor y mayor

Movimientos en el plano X-Y (traslación en Z y rotación alrededor de X)

donde

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Debe asegurarse que estas


frecuencias no están en
resonancia directa entre la
frecuencia de operación /
frecuencia natural del sistema.
De hecho, estas frecuencias
deben ser preferiblemente
separadas por un margen de ±
20%. En caso de resonancia
deben modificarse las
dimensiones de la cimentación y
repetir los cálculos hasta que se
evite la resonancia.

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración

La amplitud de vibración es la respuesta de sistema maquina


cimentación sujeto a fuerzas desbalanceadas que actúan sobre la
máquina. Cuando las frecuencias naturales están en resonancia con la
frecuencia de excitación el amortiguamiento juega un papel importante
y las amplitudes deben calcularse considerando el sistema con
amortiguamiento.

Cálculo de la respuesta utilizando FEM

Para el cálculo de respuesta, estas fuerzas desbalanceadas se aplican


directamente en la localización que las soporta, calculando las
amplitudes directamente en el punto deseado.

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Ejemplos de respuesta por FEM

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Ejemplos de respuesta por FEM

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 22
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Ejemplos de respuesta por FEM

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 23
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Ejemplos de respuesta por FEM

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 24
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración

Cálculo de la respuesta utilizando métodos manuales

Al evaluar la respuesta utilizando método manual de análisis, estas


fuerzas desbalanceadas se transfieren al CG del área de la base en
contacto con el suelo (punto O). Así tenemos tres componentes de
fuerza Fx, Fy y Fz y tres componentes de momento M, M y M en el
punto O.

Las amplitudes en cualquier otro lugar, en la parte superior de la


cimentación o en los puntos de apoyo, se calculan utilizando las
relaciones geométricas .

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XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 25
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración
Las amplitudes en el punto O se calculan como sigue:

Movimiento vertical (en Y) y torsional (alrededor de y)

Fuerza aplicada

Amplitud

Momento aplicado

Amplitud

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración
Movimiento en el plano X-Y.- traslación en X y torsional alrededor de Z
Modos acoplados

Fuerza aplicada

Amplitudes

Momento aplicado
Amplitudes

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración

Son las relaciones de frecuencia correspondientes a

Son las relaciones de frecuencia correspondientes a

Movimiento en el plano Y-Z.- traslación en z y torsional alrededor de x


Modos acoplados

Fuerza aplicada

Amplitudes

Sociedad Mexicana de
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 4: “Cimentación de Maquinaria Rotatoria”

Amplitudes de Vibración

Momento aplicado

Amplitudes

Son las relaciones de frecuencia correspondientes a

Son las relaciones de frecuencia correspondientes a

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 29
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

K. G. Bhatia - Foundation for Industrial Machines: Handbook for practising


Engineers, 2007
P. Srinivasulu - Handbook of Machine Foundation, 1977
Shamsher Prakash - Foundations for Machines: Analysis and Design, 1988
Suresh Arya - Design of Structures and Foundation for Vibrating Machines,
1984

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 30
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 6: “Cimentación de Maquinaria de Impacto”

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 31
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria


Coordinador: M. en C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: Mario Juárez Ramírez


14 de noviembre de 2012
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Srinivasulu, P. y Vaidyanathan, C,,1976, “Handbook of Machine Foundations”, Structural Engineering


Research Center, Mc Graw-Hill Publishing Company.

Arya, S., O´Neill, M. y Pincus, G.,1979. “Design of Structures and Foundations for Vibrating Machines”,
Mc Graw-Hill Publishing Company.

ACI Committee 351,2004, ”Foundations for Dynamic Equipment”, American Concrete Institute.

Wolf, J. y Deeks, A., 2004, “Foundation Vibration Analysis: A Strength of Materials Approach”, Elsevier.

Prakash, S. y Puri, V., 2006, “Foundations for Vibrating Machines” Journal of Structural Engineering,
Edición Especial abril-mayo.

Wolf, J. y Deeks, A., 2008, “Designing Rectangular Block Foundations for Vibrating Equipment”,
Hydrocarbon Proccesing, August.

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocarte”

Teoría del Semiespacio Elástico. Estima la respuesta de un cuerpo rígido circular sujeto a la acción de
una fuerza armónica, apoyado en la superficie de un suelo de profundidad infinita idealizado como
elástico, homogéneo e isótropo, de suerte que sus relaciones esfuerzo-deformación pueden ser
representadas mediante el módulo al cortante Gs, la relación de Poisson s y la densidad de masa s.
El sistema equipo-cimentación-suelo se representa mediante osciladores simples con resortes
y amortiguadores independientes de la frecuencia de la excitación. Esta hipótesis de independencia

60 Gs
sólo es válida para equipos con velocidad de operación menor que Vop  , donde r es el
r s
radio equivalente de una cimentación rectangular.

Este método predice con cierta precisión las frecuencias naturales del sistema y es conservador al evaluar
las amplitudes de vibración inducidas por las fuerzas dinámicas.
Originalmente, las frecuencias naturales correspondían a osciladores desacoplados de todos y cada
uno de los grados de libertad del cuerpo rígido, pero es posible introducir expresiones simples que
consideran el acoplamiento de los modos de traslación y cabeceo e, inclusive, el acoplamiento
de éstos con el modo vertical.

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocarte”

Método de las funciones de impedancia. Estima la respuesta de una cimentación cilíndrica rígida
carente de masa y sujeta a la acción de fuerzas dinámicas, enterrada en un suelo estratificado apoyado
en un semiespacio elástico lineal. En cada estrato de suelo, el módulo al cortante Gsi, la relación de
Poisson si, la densidad de masa si y el amortiguamiento material zsi, se consideran constantes. La
hipótesis de comportamiento lineal se justifica porque los desplazamientos permisibles para la
operación eficiente de un máquina son pequeños y la amplitud de las ondas emitidas por la máquina
hacía el semiespacio decaen geométricamente. El suelo queda representado por las llamadas
funciones de impedancia definidas como la relación entre las fuerzas dinámicas generalizadas y la
respuesta de la cimentación. Estas funciones de impedancia consideran las propiedades elásticas,
Inerciales y de disipación del conjunto suelo-cimentación, y están integradas por un coeficiente
constante que multiplica a coeficientes dinámicos dependientes de la frecuencia de la excitación.
Para la obtención de estas funciones se emplean técnicas rigurosas como el Método de Elementos
de Frontera o el Método del Elemento Finito, o métodos aproximados como el conocido como
Método del Cono que considera la dispersión de ondas elásticas en un medio semi-infinito cuya
sección transversal varia con la profundidad en forma cónica.´
Este método ha sido ampliamente utilizado para calcular la respuesta de cimentaciones rígidas
enterradas en suelos blandos y sujetas a la acción de fuerzas sísmicas.

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XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 4
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Frecuencias naturales y amplitudes de desplazamiento medidos comparados con los calculados empleando los
métodos del Semiespacio Elástico y de las Funciones de Impedancia.

Puri, V., Prakash, S y Kumar, S, “Shallow Foundations Under Dyamic Loads”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Cimentación rígida

Seis modos de vibrar:

Vertical

Traslación en x

Giro alrededor de y

Traslación en y

Giro alrededor de x

Torsión

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria recíprocante”

Recíprocantes Rotatorias

Factor de amplificación 
1 r2

1  r 2 2
 2zr  2
1  r   2z r 
2 2 2

F0 mi e
Amplitud a la frecuencia fn  
k m

fn
Frecuencia resonante fnr f nr  f n 1  2z 2 f nr 
1  2z 2

1 F0 1 mi e
Amplitud a la frecuencia fnr r  r 
f op 2z 1  z 2 k 2z 1  z 2 m
r
fn

Factor de transmisibilidad 1  2zr 2 r 2 1  2zr 2


Tr  Tr 
1  r  2 2
 2zr  2
1  r 2 2
 2zr 2

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria recíprocante”

Para máquinas reciprocantes

Para máquinas rotatorias

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

En los equipos reciprocantes, la magnitud de las fuerzas dinámicas depende


del peso, tamaño y disposición del mecanismo reciprocante, y son función
de la velocidad de operación w del equipo y del doble de esta velocidad. Las
fuerzas dinámicas que ocurren una vez cada ciclo armónico se denominan
fuerzas primarias; a las que ocurren dos veces por ciclo se les conoce como
fuerzas secundarias

Por otra parte, en las máquinas rotatorias la magnitud de las fuerzas dinámicas
depende del valor de una pequeña masa desbalanceada m localizada a una
distancia radial r del centro de rotación, y son función del cuadrado de la
velocidad de operación de la máquina.

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Haciendo uso de la identidad geométrica sen 2    cos 2 (  )  1

r2
cos(  )  1  sen 2 ( wt )
l2
2
r
1 r
Debido a que , entonces    1 , expandiendo en Series
l l
r2
cos(  )  1  2
sen 2 ( wt )
2l

Por lo tanto:
r2
Por geometría u p  r 1  cos( wt )  sen 2 ( wt )
2l
l  r  u p  l cos(  )  r cos( wt ) 1  cos( 2wt )
Haciendo uso de la identidad seno( wt )  , resulta:
l seno(  )  r seno( wt ) 2
r2
de donde u p  r 1  cos( wt )  1  cos( 2wt )
4l
u p  l 1  cos(  )  r 1  cos( wt )
 r 
up  w 2 r  cos( wt )  cos( 2wt ) 
seno(  ) 
r
seno( wt )  l 
l
 r2 
Pt   mrecw 2 r  cos( wt )  cos( 2wt ) 
 l 
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

mE
mC > 3mE
> 300 mm

H CM > 300 mm
mC
hC > 600 mm
d > 0.5 hC

CG
B >H
e < 0.05 B

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Propiedades de inercia Propiedades de disipación

M = mE + mC 1  1.9( 1  s )
d
rz
z 
= F0sen(wopt) z
Radio equivalente
A 1  s M
rz  Bmz 
 4  s rz3

0.425  z
z rz 
Propiedades elásticas Bmz

 z  1  0.6 1  s 
d
z z  z rz  z hz
rz
Gs Relación de frecuencias
Kz   z  z BL
1  s
f op 60 wop
r 
Frecuencia natural (rpm) f nz 2 f nz

60 KZ
f nz  Amplitud de la vibración
2 M
Frecuencia resonante 1 F0
z 
f nrz  f nz 1  2z z2 1  r  2 2
 2z z r 2
KZ

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Propiedades de inercia Propiedades de disipación

M = mE + mC 1  1.9( 2  )
d
rx
x 
x
Radio equivalente
A 7  8 s M
rx  Bmx 
 321  s   s rx3

0.288  x
z rx 
Propiedades de elásticas Bmx

 x  1  0.551  s 
d
z x  z rx  z hx
H(t)= H0sen(wopt) rx
Relación de frecuencias
K z  21  s Gs z  z BL
f op 60 wop
r 
Frecuencia natural (rpm) f nx 2 f nx

60 K x
f nx  Amplitud de la vibración
2 M
Frecuencia resonante 1 H0
x 
f nrx  f nx 1  2z x2 1  r 
2 2
 2z x r 2
Kx

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Propiedades de inercia Propiedades de disipación


3
= T0sen(wopt) I = IE + IC 1  0.7( 1  )
d
 0.6( 2 
 d
)


r  r 
   

Radio equivalente
7  8 s M
4I y Bmx 
r  4 321  s   s rx3

0.15 
z r 
Propiedades elásticas 1  Bm   Bm
3
d 
  1  1.21  s   0.22  s 
d 
r  r  z  z r  z h
 

Gs Relación de frecuencias
K    BL2
1  s
f op 60 wop
r 
Frecuencia natural (rpm) f n 2 f n
60 K
f n  Amplitud de la vibración
2 I
Frecuencia resonante 1 T0
 
f nr  f n 1  2z  2 1  r   2z r 
2 2 2 K

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

I y' 
m 2
12

a L 
2 ma 2
4

Iy 
m 2
12

a  L2 

Jx  Jy 
bL3 b 3 L bL 2
12

12

12
b  L2  
Jx  Jy b 2  L2
r 
2

A 12

I z  mr 2 
m 2

b  L2  Ix 
m 2
12

a  b2 
12

I z'  I z  md 2m 2

b L 
2 mL2
 I x' 
m 2
12

a b 
2 mb 2
4

12 4

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

vertical horizontal

cabeceo
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

vertical horizontal

cabeceo

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Fuerzas verticales Fuerza horizontal

Momentos alrededor de x Momento alrededor de y

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Severidad de las vibraciones en el problema original

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

nb nb
 m ju j  Aju j
j 1 j 1
uCM  nb
uCG  nb u= x,y,z
mj  Aj nb número de bloques de cimentación
j 1 j 1

760

Acotaciones en cm
4.391  4.200 3.7  2.7 mC
ex  100  2.3% e y  100  0%  6.6
840 760 mE

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 24
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

x j  x j ,CM  x0 ,CG nb número de bloques de cimentación

np partes del equipo relevantes

y j  y j ,CM  y0 ,CG
y

z j  z j ,CM  z0 ,CG

I 0   
j 
nb  m B 2  h 2  
 m j y 2j  z 2j

   m y
np
2
 z 2j 

j 1  12
j j
 j 1

I 0
nb
 

 m j L2  h 2 
 m j x 2j  z 2j

   m x
np
2
 z 2j 

j 1  12
j j
 j 1

I 0   
j 
nb  m B 2  L2  
 m j x 2j  y 2j

   m x
np
2
 y 2j 

j 1  12
j j
 j 1

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

m   x   K x  hK x   u   P sen( w t ) 
      hK  
K  hW  h 2 K x    M sen( w t )

 I     x

h altura de la base al centro de masas de la cimentación


I momento de inercia de masa
Kx rigidez a la traslación
K rigidez a la rotación
P amplitud fuerza dinámica
m masa
M amplitud del momento dinámico h

t tiempo
u traslación en x h

W peso de la cimentación
w frecuencia de la excitación
 Giro alrededor de y

Los puntos sobre las literales indican sus derivas respecto a t

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Suponiendo una solución armónica de frecuencia w, el sistema de ecuaciones diferenciales


puede transformarse en el de ecuaciones algebraicas siguiente:

 K x  hK x  2
m 0  u  2 x 
P
 w       w M 
 hK x K  hW  h 2 K x   0 I      

Considerando sólo la respuesta transitoria del sistema:

 K x  hK x  2
m 0    u  0 
  w     
 hK x K  hW  h 2 K x  n
   0 
 0 I 

Donde wn representa las frecuencias naturales del sistema.


Algunas operaciones algebraicas simples conducen a :
Kx
w x2    hw x2  Donde: wx 
   u  0  m
  
2
 hK h K
     0 
hW
x
w 
2
 x
 I I I 
  w 
K
Iw

  wn2
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Cuya ecuación característica es:

 2 K hW h 2 K x  K 
  w x 
2
    w x2    hW 0
 I I I   I I 
   

o bien:
 K hW I 0  K 
2     w x2   w x2    hW 0
 I I I   I I 
   

Donde I0 representa al momento de inercia de masa con respecto a la base. Introduciendo la
 I K  hW
relación de inercias   I y la frecuencia rotacional w 0  , resulta:
0 I 0

 w2 0  w x2 
  w 0  0
w 2 2
 
2 x
   
 

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

La solución:

wn21,n 2 
1  2
 w 0  w x2 
2 
 2 2
w 0  w x
2
 
 4 w x2w2 0 

Determina las frecuencias naturales que resultan del acoplamiento de los modos de
Traslación y cabeceo en el plano xz; para el plano yz se tiene la solución:

wn23 ,n4 
1  2
 w 0  w y2 
2 
w 2
0  w y2 
2 
 4 w y2w20 

Estas cuatro frecuencias en conjunto con las asociadas a los modos vertical wz y de
torsión w, son las seis frecuencias naturales del sistema equipo-cimentación-suelo.

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Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Frecuencias desacopladas Frecuencias acopladas

fnz = 621 rpm fnz = 621 rpm

fnx = 566 rpm fnx = 552 rpm

fny = 566 rpm fny = 552 rpm

fn = 1250 rpm fn = 1340 rpm

fn = 1005 rpm fn = 1034 rpm

fn = 876 rpm fn = 876 rpm

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Cuando el centro de masas del conjunto y el centro geométrico de la base no pertenecen


ala misma línea recta vertical, el modo vertical también se acopla. Para calcular los modos
Del sistema se usa la ecuación:

e x2wn2 
  
 w z2  wn2 wn21  wn2 wn22  wn2 

w z2 w x2  wn2
Siendo ex la excentricidad entre el centro de masas y el centro geométrico de la base.

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Equipos operando simultáneamente


Edificio de máquinas

Las cimentaciones de los equipos dinámicos deben


subyacer las correspondientes a edificios o estructuras
estáticas próximas.

Desplante de las cimentaciones

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

Método -Wilson
m z   z  C z   z 
        
 mx  x   Cx  hC x  x  Sistema de ecuaciones diferenciales
      hC x h C x  C
2
  
M u C u K u  Pt 
I
       
 my   y   Cy  hC y   y 
 I     hC y h C y  C
2   
     
 I    C    Se elige el paso de integración t
Se elige el paso de integración t

K z   z   Pz t  



Kx  hK x   
  x   Px t  
   M y t 

Keff   K  a0 M  a1 C
 hK x h 2 K x  hW  K
      
 Ky  hK y   y   Py t   Se definen las condiciones iniciales
  hK y h K y  hW  K
2     M t 


   x 
K     M z t  u  u  u  0
Se calcula la carga efectiva para t + t
Constantes de integración
Rt t   Pt  t 
  1.4 a2  2a1 t 
xt t   K eff 1 Rt t 
a2 2
a5   a8 
6 t  6
a0  a3 
t 2 2
Se calculan los desplazamientos para t+t
3
a6  1 
a1 
t
3
a4 
a0  xt t   a4 xt t  xt   a5 xt  a6 xt 

t
a7 
2
xt t   xt  a7 xt t  xt 
xt t   xt  txt  a8 xt t  2xt 
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 5: “Cimentación de maquinaria reciprocante”

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria


Coordinador: M en C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: Dr. Celestino Valle Molina


Fecha: 14 de Noviembre 2012
Curso: Nombre
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Contenido

 Introducción.
 Propiedades Dinámicas del Suelo.
 Parámetros que influyen sobre la propiedades
dinámicas del suelo.
 Determinación de las propiedades dinámicas en
campo.
 Determinación de propiedades dinámicas en
laboratorio.
 Conclusiones.

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Dinámica de suelos es la
rama de la ingeniería civil
que estudia las propiedades
y el comportamiento de los
suelos sometidos a carga
dinámica.

Módulo de
DEPÓSITO DE Rigidez al Relación de
Corte, G amortiguamiento,
SUELO Dóz

ROCA
Propiedades Dinámicas del Suelo

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Características de los Problemas Dinámicos

Ishihara, 1976

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”


G

Esfuerzo Cortante

Secante G0  Gmax
Tangente

Deformación angular

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

12
G0 = Gmax
t G  ct
10

8
Modulo
de Rigidez 6
A B
al Corte
G, MPa 4
C
2

0.0
10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 100
Deformación Angular, , %
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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

1.2
t  ct
1.0

0.8
Modulo
de Rigidez 0.6
Normalizado
G/Gmax 0.4

0.2

0.0
10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 100
Deformación Angular, , %
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

20

15
Relación de
amortiguamiento
D, % 10

5
Dmin

0
10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 100
Deformación Angular, , %
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Zona A
•Rango “lineal” de deformación (pequeñas deformaciones)
•Comportamiento elástico
•Rigidez constante con valor Gmax hasta la deformación
angular umbral t (≈1x 10-3 %)
•No se genera de presión de poro

Zona B
•Rango “no-lineal” de deformación
•Reducción de rigidez pero recuperable hasta la
deformación angular umbral cíclica ct (≈1x 10-2 %)
•Sin incremento de presión de poro

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Zona C
•Rango “no-lineal” de deformación mayor a ct (≈1x 10-2 %)
•Degradación de la rigidez en arcillas
•Incremento de presión de poro en arenas
•Endurecimiento en arena seca
•Número de ciclos impacta en el comportamiento

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

• Esfuerzo efectivo de confinamiento, sO’


• Nivel de deformación angular
• Índice de plasticidad
• Densidad
• Número de cíclos
• Frecuencia de excitación
• Relación de sobre consolidación, OCR
•

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto del esfuerzo efectivo

Aumenta sO’

G/Gmax 25 kPa
100 kPa
400 kPa
1600 kPa

log 

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto del esfuerzo efectivo sobre la relación de amortiguamiento

25 kPa
D
100 kPa
400 kPa
1600 kPa

Aumenta sO’

log 
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto del Índice de Plasticidad


1.0
Aumenta IP

G/Gmax

0.5

PI = 1 to 5 %
PI = 6 to 14 %
IP = 15 to 36%
0.0
0.0001 0.001 0.01 % 0.1 1
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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto del Índice de Plasticidad

Vucetic y Dobry, 1991


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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto del Índice de Plasticidad

Aumenta IP

Vucetic y Dobry, 1991


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

4
10 9
Efecto del esfuerzo efectivo 8 Washed Mortar Sand
7 Dry Specimen
en el rango lineal de deformación 6
e= 0.65

Compression and Shear Wave Velocity, fps


5
4
VS Calibration Chamber, (Lee, 1993)
Ajuste de las Leyes de Potencia 3 Vp Calibration Chamber, (Lee, 1993)
np Vp=1425* (s0/Pa)
0.23

s  , 2

V p  Ap   
 Pa 
3
10 9
8
7
ns VS=898*(s0/Pa)
0.23

s, 
6
5

VS  As    4

 Pa 
3

Pa = Presión Atmosférica 2
10 2 3 4 5 6 2 3 4 5 6 2 3 4 5 6
1 10 100 1000
Isotropic Confining Pressure, psi

Lee, 1993
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto de la frecuencia
de excitación sobre
Gmax y Dmin

Stokoe, 1999
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Efecto de la densidad sobre


G

Seed y Idriss, 1970


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

• Prueba de Cross-Hole (pozos cruzados)

• Prueba Down Hole

• Prueba de Sonda Suspendida

• Prueba de Cono Sísmico

Medición de las velocidades de onda de cuerpo Vp y VS


asociadas con pequeñas deformaciones.
No se ha medido con éxito el amortiguamiento en el campo

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Cross-Hole

Fuente y receptores al mismo nivel en dos pozos paralelos

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Cross-Hole

Stokoe y Hoar, 1978


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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Cross-Hole

Stokoe y Hoar, 1978


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Tiempos directos de arribo Cross-Hole

Hoar y Stokoe, 1980


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Down-Hole

Fuente superficial
y receptores en el pozo

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Down-Hole

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Sonda Suspendida

Stokoe y Santamarina, 2000


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Cono penetrometro
(CPTU) instrumentado
con geófonos o
acelerómetros
Prueba de
Cono Sísmico Velocidades de onda S
pueden combinarse
con mediciones de la
resistencia al corte

Campanella et. al, 1986


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de
Cono Sísmico

Ejecución e interpretación
de resultados similar
al Down-Hole

Campanella et. al, 1986


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Ventajas de la Prueba de Cross-Hole


• Las distancias de propagación de ondas constantes
• Receptores se colocan apropiadamente para medir la onda SV
• Perfil de velocidades detallado
• Relación señal/ruido es alta en todas las profundidades

Desventajas de la Prueba de Cross-Hole


• Se requieren 2 o más pozos
• Se necesita medir y asegurar la verticalidad de los pozos

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Ventajas de la Prueba de Down-Hole


• Se requiere un solo pozo
• Fuente de ondas superficial simple
• No se requieren mediciones de verticalidad del pozo

Desventajas de la Prueba de Down-Hole


• Las distancias de propagación de ondas aumentan con la profundidad
• Relación señal/ruido disminuye con la profundidad
• Perfil de velocidades promedio

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

• Prueba de Columna Resonante

• Prueba de Torsión Cíclica

• Mediciones Sísmicas con Transductores


Piezoeléctricos

• Prueba Triaxial Cíclica

•Prueba de Corte Simple Cíclico

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Equipo de Columna Resonante y Torsión Cíclica


RCTS (Resonant Column and Torsional Shear)

Excitación Torsional

Proxímetro Objetivo del Proxímetro


Acelerómetro
Contrapeso

Bobina Imán
Top Cap
Cabezal

Placa de Soporte

Placa de Fijación
Membrana Espécimen
Specimen
Fluido
Cámara
Piedra Cilíndrica
Porosa Pedestal O-ring
Base Plate

Columna Resonante Fijo-Libre


(Stokoe device)
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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Columna Resonante

Frecuencia de resonancia
en el rango entre 20 y 500 Hz

Rango de deformación
 ≈ 1x 10-4 % - 1x 10-1 %

Deformación angular no uniforme

Curva de respuesta dinámica medida en


una prueba de columna resonante, donde
Ar es la amplitud de resonancia y fr la
frecuencia de resonancia

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Columna Resonante


Ar Relación de amortiguamiento
120 por le método de “half-power
bandwidth”.
0.707*Ar
f 2  f1
D
2  fr
40

0
f1 f r f

Curva de respuesta dinámica utilizada


para la estimación de D
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Columna Resonante

Decremento de la amplitud al apagar la


columna resonante permite medir D con la
técnica de vibración libre (decaimiento
logarítmico)

Xi 2D
 
X i 1 1 - D2

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Prueba de Torsión Cíclica

Frecuencia de excitación
Entre 0.1 y 10 Hz

Rango de deformación
 ≈ 1x 10-3 % - 1x 10-1 %

Deformación angular no uniforme

Ciclo de histéresis del cual se pueden


determinar G y D

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Columna Resonante Libre-Libre

Excitación en la parte superior

Posibilidad de medir las propiedades


dinámicas en  ≈1x 10-6 %

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Pintura
Poliuretano
Dieléctrica

Tierra
Epóxico

S wave
Piezoelectricidad es una propiedad
que tienen ciertos materiales, la cual
les permite transformar la energía
mecánica en eléctrica y viceversa.

Valle-Molina, 2006
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Valle-Molina, 2006
Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Valle-Molina, 2006
Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 41
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Cabezal
Piezoelectric Disc
Discos
Piezoeléctricos

Cámara triaxial Instrumentada


con transductores piezoeléctricos

t ≈1x 10-5 %
Soil Specimen
Especimen

Frecuencia de excitación depende


del tipo de suelo, esfuerzo efectivo aplicado,
grado de saturación.

Generalmente varía de cientos a miles Bender Element


de Hz Bender Element
Top Cap
Pedestal

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Instrumentación requerida

Valle-Molina y Stokoe, 2012


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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Valle-Molina y Stokoe, 2012


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Amatán4-XV_01
0.05

0.04

0.03

0.02

0.01
Amplitud, V

-0.01

-0.02
3.96E-5
-0.03
Vp
-0.04

-0.05

-0.06

-0.07
0.0000354 0.0000374 0.0000394 0.0000414 0.0000434 0.0000454 0.0000474

Tiempo, s

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Comparación entre los resultados


de Columna Resonante y Torsión
Cíclica medidos en el mismo
espécimen de arcilla (IP = 20)

Stokoe et al., 1994


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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Comparación entre los resultados


de Columna Resonante y Bender
Elements medidos en el mismo
espécimen de arena seca.

VS medida con columna resonante fue


aproximadamente 5% más lenta
en comparación con VS determinada
con bender elements

Valle-Molina, 2006
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Triaxial Cíclica

Excitación axial

Rango de deformación
 ≈ 1x 10-2 % - 1 %

Se aplican esfuerzos a tensión


al suelo

Rotación de los esfuerzos principales


durante la carga cíclica

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Corte Simpe Cíclico

Corte Simpe Cíclico Bidireccional

Rango de deformación
 ≈ 1x 10-2 % - 5 %

Ideal para grandes


deformaciones

Boulanger et al., 1993


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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Incremento de presión de poro medido en pruebas de Corte Simple Cíclico

Probetas de arena Dr 20-80%

Dobry, 1985
Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

La rigidez y la relación de amortiguamiento son las parámetros de


diseño del suelo en condiciones dinámicas

En el rango “lineal” de deformación (pequeñas deformaciones,  <1x


10-3 %) el suelo exhibe un comportamiento elástico y Gmax constante

En el rango no lineal de deformación (1x 10-3 % <  <1x 10-2 %) el suelo


presenta reducción de rigidez pero recuperable y sin incremento de
presión de poro

En el rango no lineal de deformación ( >1x 10-2 %), las arcillas sufren


degradación de la rigidez, las arenas saturadas incremento de presión de
poro y las arenas secas densificación. El comportamiento cíclico controla.

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Los parámetros que influyen sobre la propiedades dinámicas del


suelo son el esfuerzo efectivo, amplitud de deformación angular,
índice de plasticidad, número de ciclos, frecuencia de excitación y
Relación de sobre-consolidación.
Las propiedades dinámicas pueden determinarse en campo con pruebas
como: cross-hole, down-hole, sonda suspendida y cono sísmico entre
otras. Sólo puede medirse la rigidez a pequeñas deformaciones.

En laboratorio, las propiedades dinámicas pueden determinarse en


mediante pruebas como: columna resonante, torsión cíclica,
transductores piezoeléctrico, triaxial cíclica y corte simple cíclico. Cada
equipo esta asociado a cierto rango de deformación y frecuencia de
excitación.

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Boulanger,R.W., Chan, C.K., Seed, H.B., Seed,R.B., and Sousa, J, (1993), “A Low
Compliance Bi-directional Cyclic Simple Shear Apparatus”, Geotechnical Testing
Journal, ASTM, Vol. 16-1, pp 36-45.

Campanella, R.G.,Robertson, P.K., Gillespie,D.,Laing,N., and Kurfurst, P.J.,


(1986), “Seismic Cone Penetration in Beaufort Sea”, 3rd Canadian Conference on
Marine Geotechnical Engineering. St.John´s, Newfounland.
Dobry, R, (1985), “Liquefaction of Soils During Earthquakes”, National
Research Council (NRC), Committee on Earthquake Engineering,
Report No.CETS-EE-001, Washington DC.
Ishihara K. “Soil Behavior in Earthquake Geotechnics”, McGraw-Hill 1976.

Lee, N-K.J., (1993), “Experimental Study of Body Wave Velocities in Sand Under
Anisotropic Conditions,” Ph.D. Dissertation, Geotechnical Engineering,
Department of Civil Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, pp 503.

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 53
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Seed, H.B., and Idriss I.M., (1970), “Soil moduli and damping factors for dynamic
response analyses”, Report EERC 70-10, University of California, Berkeley.

Stokoe, K.H. II, Hwang, H.K., Lee, J.N.-K., and Andrus R.D., (1994), “Effects of various
Parameters on the stiffness and damping of soils at small to medium strains,
Proceedings, International Symposium on Pre-Failure Deformation Characteristics of
Geomaterials, Vol. I, Japanese Society of Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering,
Sapporo, Japan, 785-816.
Stokoe, K. H., II, Darendeli, M. B., Andrus, R. D. and Brown, L. T. (1999) “Dynamic soil
properties:laboratory, field and correlation studies,” Proceedings, Second International
Conference on Earthquake Geotechnical Engineering, Sêco e Pinto, Editor, A.A.
Balkema Publishers/Rotterdam & Brookfield,
Netherlands, Vol. 3, pp. 811-845.
Stokoe, K.H. II, and Santamarina J.C., (2000), “Seismic-Wave-Based Testing in
Geotechnical Engineering”, International Conf. on Geotechnical and Geological
Engineering, GeoEng 2000, Melbourne Australia.

Sociedad Mexicana de
XXVI Reunión Nacional, 14 a 16 noviembre 2012, Cancún, Quintana Roo ┃ 54
Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 2: “Parámetros de Diseño del Suelo”

Valle-Molina, C., (2006), “Measurements of Vp and VS in Dry, Unsaturated and


Saturated Sand Specimens with Piezoelectric Transducers,” Ph.D. Dissertation,
Geotechnical Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, The University of
Texas at Austin, pp 433.

Valle-Molina, C, and Stokoe, K.H, (2012), “Seismic Measurements in Sand


Specimens Varying Degrees of Saturation Using Piezoelectric Transducers”,
Canadian Geotechnical Journal, Vol. 49-6, pp 671-685.

Vucetic, M., and Dobry, R, (1991), “Effect of soil plasticity on cyclic response,
Journal of Geotechnical Engineering, ASCE, Vol. 117, No.1, January, 89-107.

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria


Coordinador: M. en C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: Mario Juárez Ramírez


14 de noviembre de 2012
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Sistema de ecuaciones diferenciales


m1 0   z1  k1  k 2  k 2   z1  0 
0        
 m2  z2    k 2 k 2   z 2  0 

proponiendo una solución armónica de frecuencia n


 k1  k 2  k2  m 0    z1  0 
   n2  1     
  k 2 k2  0 m2    z 2  0 

Problema de valores característicos


  k1  k 2 k2 
 m  
 m1    z1  0    n2
1    
  k 2 k2
     z 2  0 
  m2 m2  

Problema de valores característicos

 k1  m  k2  m   m  k1 k2
2    1  2    1  2     1  2

 0
 m1  m2  m1  m2  m1   m1  m1  m2 m2

 
n4  1    n21  n22 n2  1   n21n22  0
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Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

 
n4  1    n21  n22 n2  1   n21n22  0

m2  k1  k2
 n21   n22 
m1 m1  m2 m2

Sencillas operaciones algebraicas conducen a:

4 2
 n   m2 k1    k
     1    n    1  0
 n 2   m1 k 2  n 2  k2

k2
Introduciendo la relación de rigideces 
k1
4 2
 n         n  
       0
 n 2     n 2  

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Sistema de ecuaciones diferenciales


m1 0   z1  k1  k 2  k 2   z1   0 
0        
 m2  z2    k 2 k 2   z 2  P0 senmt 

considerando una solución armónica

 k1  k 2  k2  m 0    z1   0 
   m2  1     
  k 2 k2  0 m2    z 2  P0 

multiplicando por la inversa de la matriz de masas, se tiene

 k1  k 2 k2   1 
 m   m2   0 
m1  z1   m1 0 
     
1   P0 
1
 k k2
 2   m2   z 2   0
 m2 m2   m2 

que puede escribirse como

 k1 m1  m2 m2 k 2 m2 k 2 
m  m    m2   0 
m m m m1 m2   z1   P 
 1 2 1 1 2     0 
 k2 k2
   m2   z 2  
 m2 

 m2 m2 

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Haciendo uso de las relaciones de frecuencias  n1 y  n 2

1   n21  n22  m2  n22   z1   0  


  
2  z   P0 
  n 2
2
n 2  m   2   m2 
2

Las amplitudes de vibración resultan ser:


1
 z1  1   n21  n22  m2  n22  
0  
    P0 
 z 2    n22 n22  m2  
 m2 

o bien:

 n22   m2  n22 
 2 0
 z1    n 2
2
1   n1  n 2  m   
2 2
   P0 
z2  1   n1  n22  m2  n22  m2 
2

  n22  n22   m2

finalmente:
n22 P0
z1  4 2
 2 2

m  1    n1  n 2 m  1   n1n 2 m1
2 2

z2 
1   n21  n22  m2 P0
m4  1   n21  n22 m2  1   n21n22 m2

Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

En el caso de máquinas rotatorias: P0   m2


 m2 n22
z1 
 
m1 m4  1    n21  n22 m2  1   n21m2

manipulando algebraicamente

 n22
  m2
z1 
 2  2 
  1     n1  n 2
m1 2 2
1  1    n1 2 n 2
    m2  m2
 m 
m m
Introduciendo las relaciones 1  y 2 
 n21  n22
  22
z1 

m1 1  1    12   22  12 22 
si k2 = 0

m1  m2 z2  k1 z2  P0 senmt 


Sencillas manipulaciones algebraicas conducen a:

 1 1
z2 
m1 1   12  1
Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

z2
Denominando a   como el grado de absorción de la vibración
z1



1  1    12   22  12 22 

 22 1    12  1 

0 
1   12  1
21   12  1

Si  es conocido, entonces:

  
 1   12  1  22  1  1   12  22 1222 
de donde::

1  1    12
 22 
 
1    1  12 1   
Sociedad Mexicana de
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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Suponga que la máquina es rotatoria y que todo el desplazamiento


vertical está asociado a dicho modo
me = 2.654 t-s2 / m

Objetivo: Dzo = 12.7 mm

m1 = 6.122 t-s2 / m

m2 = 6.440 t-s2 / m
mc1 = 0.35 mc
k2 = ¿ ? 
m2
 1.050
mc2 = 0.65 mc m1

k1 = 71794 t/ m
Dz
   4.37    5
Dzo
mc = 9.908 t-s2 / m
 n1 
k1
 75.6 rad / s k 2  m2 n22  9091 t / m
m1  m2
z = 75.6 rad/s

fz = 722 r/min 12 


 n21
 1.448  
n4  1    n21  n22 n2  1   n21n22  0
m2
fm = 600 r/min n1)2 n2)2
1  1    12 
 22
2
  0.358 (rad/s)2
 
(rad/s)
Dz = 54.7 mm 1    1 12 1    1.052 5715 1412

n1 n2 fn1 fn2


 rad/s rad/s rpm rpm
n2  2 m  37.5 rad / s 35.2 143.9 336 1374

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Sistema de ecuaciones diferenciales

m1 0   z1  k1  k 2  k 2   z1  P0 senmt 


0        
 m2  z2    k 2 k 2   z 2   0 

considerando una solución armónica, operando algebraicamente y


sustituyendo variables, resulta:

 n22   m2 P 
 0 
 n22
  m 
 z1     n 2
2
1   n21   n22  m2   01 
 
  4
 2

 z 2   m  1     n1   n 2  m  1    n1 n 2
2 2 2 2

De donde:

n22  m2 P0
z1 
2 2

m  1    n1  n 2 m  1   n1n 2 m1
4 2 2 2

n22 P0
z2 
 
m4  1    n21  n22 m2  1   n21n22 m1

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Definiendo los parámetros:

P0  m m
zs  , 1  m y 2  
k1 k1 k2 n2
m1 m2

k1
Multiplicando por k1
n22  m2 P0 k1
z1  
2 2 2

m  1    n1  n 2 m  1   n1n 2 k1 m1
4 2 2

Definiendo la deformación estática: z s  P0 y al factor de amplificación:


k1
z1
m1 
dinámica: zs

k2
  m2
m2 k1
m1 
 m   k1 k   m  k1 k2 m1
 m4   1  2    2  m2   1  2 
 m1  1 m  m 2 m 2   m1  1
m  m 2 m 2

de donde:

m1 

 22 12  12 22 
  
12  12 22  22   12  12 22   14

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Si  = 0.2, m1 y m2 presentan la variación siguiente:

De forma similar:

12 22 Si   1  n2  m  z1  0
m 2 
  
12  12 22  22   12  12 22   14

Para el caso especial  = 1 = 2, resulta:

1  2
m1 
1  
2

1    2  

1
m 2 
1  2

1    2  

P0
Si   1  n 2  m  z 2  
k2

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Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

k2
Si n 2   m
m2

n22  m2 P0
z1  4 0
2
 2 2

m  1    n1  n 2 m  1   n1n 2 m1
2 2

n22 P0
z2  2
 2 2

m  1    n1  n 2 m  1   n1n 2 m1
4 2 2

1 P0
z2 
m2  1    
n21 2

 m  1   n1 m1
2

1 P0 m m P P
z2    1 2 0  0
 m2 m1 m2 k 2 m1 k2

k1
 n1   m
Cuando m1

Se puede recurrir a un sistema auxiliar de frecuencia m y masa m2


tal que z2 sea admisible y que la vibración del sistema original operando
a la frecuencia m sea nula (z1 = 0)

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Curso: Cimentación de maquinaria
Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Índice de trasmisibilidad para amortiguamiento activo

fuerza trasmitida a la cimentació n


Tr 
fuerza inducida por la máquina

Índice de trasmisibilidad para amortiguamiento pasivo

Desplazami ento trasmitido a la máquina


Tr 
Desplazami ento inducido en la base

1  2r 2
Tr 
1  r 
2 2
 2r 2

Para  = 0

1 1
Tr  
1 r2 f2
1  m2
fn

fm 1  Tr 2R
  donde; R  1  Tr
fn Tr 1 R

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Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

Tr  1  0.875  0.125

P fm 1  0.125
 3
Para  = 0 fn 0.125

2
 300 
2
d f n2 f n2      0.36 cm
g 1 300 3
Tr   fn    d  
f n2  f m2 f m2  f n2 4 2 d d  fn  5
k
Para g en cm/s2, entonces: P 200
k   556 kg / cm
d 0.36
1  1  Tr 
fm  5   , en cps Utilizando un pad de hule con dureza
d  Tr 
1 k 1 gk 1 g Shore 55 y dimensiones: b = 5 cm,
f n2    l = 11 cm y h = 4 cm
4 2 m 4 P
2
4 2 d
1  1  Tr 
f m  300   ,en rpm bl 55
Tr 
1

1
d  Tr Ar    0.43
 2hb  l  8 16 
f m2
1 2f dg  1
2
m
f n2
Ejemplo 1 h  1 1 
   0.0018
fm 
1 g  1  Tr



200 kg k pad 
A  E 1  2Ar
2

B 
cm / kg

4 2 d  Tr 
k pad  563 kg / cm
d
1 g  1T  h
fm   r 
 k 200
4 d 2
 r 
T d pad   0.36 cm
563
l
E  33.13 kg / cm 2
fm = 1500 rpm
B  11111.1 kg / cm 2
R = 0.875   0.64
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Tema 7: “Sistemas de Aislamiento de Vibraciones”

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XXVI
Reunión Nacional de Mecánica de
Suelos e Ingeniería Geotécnica
14 a 16 de noviembre, 2012
Cancún, Quintana Roo

Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria


Coordinador: M en C. Carlos Roberto Torres Álvarez

Expositor: Dr. Celestino Valle Molina


Fecha: 14 de Noviembre 2012
Curso: Nombre
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Ecuación de movimiento para sistemas de un


grado de libertad.

 Solución a la ecuación de movimiento.

 Propagación de Ondas.

 Relación entre las Ondas de Cuerpo y Constantes


Elásticas.

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

q Diagrama de cuerpo libre


f(t) m
fI

m
k1 k2
k1 fD k2
c
fS

f t   f D  f S  mq(t )
Un grado de libertad

m q(t )  c q (t )  k q(t )  f (t )
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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

m q(t )  c q (t )  k q(t )  f (t )
masa coeficiente de rigidez Carga dinámica
amortiguamiento

Representa adecuadamente varios


problemas prácticos y juega un papel
importante en la teoría clásica de
vibración lineal.

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

La solución completa se compone de dos partes:

q(t )  qc (t )  q p (t )
Solución Solución
complementaria particular

Vibración Libre Vibración Forzada

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración libre no amortiguada

m q(t )  k q(t )  0
q (0)
q(t )  q(0) cosnt   sennt 
n
k 1
n  ; Tn  2 n ; fn 
m Tn

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración libre no amortiguada

k 1
n  ; Tn  2 n ; fn 
m Tn
Frecuencia circular: Período natural: Frecuencia natural.
Es el número de radianes Es el tiempo requerido Es el número de ciclos
por unidad de tiempo para completar un ciclo por unidad de tiempo
(1 cps = 1 Hz)

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración libre amortiguada

mq(t)  cq(t)  kq(t)  0


q(0)   n q(0)
q(t)  q(0) cos( Dt)  sen(Dt )
D
c c
 D  n 1   2
;   
2mn ccr
Relación
de amortiguamiento Amortiguamiento
 D crítico
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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración libre amortiguada


Relación
de amortiguamiento
 D
se expresa en %

c c
 D  n 1   2
;   
2mn ccr

Frecuencia circular
amortiguada
Amortiguamiento crítico: Valor del
coeficiente de amortiguamiento
para el cual el movimiento pierde
su carácter vibratorio.

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Sistema no amortiguado

Sistema amortiguado

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Xi 2
Decremento logarítmico.  
Es el logaritmo natural de la relación de
dos amplitudes sucesivas de un
X i 1 1- 2
movimiento de oscilación libre.
1.2

0.8

Xi
0.6

Xi+1
0.4
Despl (cm)

0.2

0
0 5 10 15 20 25
-0.2

-0.4

-0.6

-0.8
Tiempo (s)

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

w  10 kg
f 10kg  9.81N
m   10 Ns 2
/m
Masa g 9.81 m/s 1kg
2

c  2 N - s/m
k  10 N/m
a)  n  ? rad/s
C
K

b)   ? %
c)  D  ? rad/s
d) f n  ? Hz
e) f D  ? Hz
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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

k 10
   1 rad/s
m 10
c c 2
     0.1100%  10%
ccr 2m 2 10 1
D  n 1   2  1 1  (0.1) 2  0.99 rad/s
1 k 1 10
fn    0.16 Hz
2 m 2 10
0.99
fD   0.157 Hz
2
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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración armónica de sistemas no


amortiguados

m q(t )  k q(t )  p0 senet 


 La solución completa es:

  
  
 p0    e 
 sen et   sen n t 
1
q(t)   
k   2
   n 
 1  e  
  2 
   n  

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

 Vibración armónica de sistemas amortiguados

m q(t )  c q (t )  k q(t )  p0 senet 


 La solución completa es:

 
 - pe k - e2 m
 
 pce 


- t  p0 ce  2

 k - e2 m  c 2e2
cos  D t   
2

k - e2 m  c 2e2  
q(t)  e  sen  D t 

 e 
 k -  2 m 2  c 2 2
e 
D 
 
  


p0
(k -  2
m) sen et   c e cos et  
k -  m
2
e
2
c 
2 2
e
e

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

En el caso

e La vibración libre es más importante


 y es una carga rápida
n
e
 La vibración libre no impacta mucho
n
e RESONANCIA!!!
0
n

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Ingeniería Geotécnica A.C.
Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

MÉTODOS NUMÉRICOS
 El método anterior se aplica a sistemas
lineales.
 Si la excitación varía de forma arbitraria con el
tiempo o si el sistema es no lineal se usan
métodos de integración paso a paso.
 Los métodos numéricos también son útiles
para sistemas lineales que tienen una
excitación que es difícil de definir en forma
analítica.

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Dilatation Compression
Undisturbed Medium

   

Wavelength, P

Direction of Propagation

Onda de Compresión (P)


Undisturbed Medium

Wavelength, S

Direction of Propagation

Onda de Corte (S)

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Módulo de Rigidez al Corte G  V 2


S

Módulo de Compresión Confinado M  V 2


p

E  V
Módulo de Young 2
c

Vp 2(1 - )

Relación entre las velocidades
de onda P y S con la
Relación de Poisson VS (1 - 2)

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Variación
de Vp, Vc y VS
con la relación
de Poisson

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Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

E= = G= K= =

E,G E E E
21    31  2  1   1  2 
E,K E  2G EG G E  2G 
2G 33G  E  3G  E
E, λ 2 E  3  R E  3  R
E R 4 6
, G 2G1    2G 1  2  2G
31  2  1  2
, K 3K 1  2  3K 1  2  3K
21    1 
, λ  1   1  2   1  2   1   
 2 3
G, K 9 KG 3K  2G
3K  G 6 K  2G
G, λ G 3  2G   3  2G
 G 2  G  3

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Curso: Cimentación de Maquinaria
Tema 1: “Teoría de Vibraciones”

Chopra A.K. “Dynamic of Structures”, Prentice Hall, Second Edition, 2001.

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