Seismic damage and functional loss of ceiling systems: Observation in shaking table test of hospital specimen

Author:

Qi Liangjie12ORCID,Kurata Masahiro1ORCID,Huang Jiantao1ORCID,Kawamata Yohsuke3,Aida Shinji4,Cho Kosai5,Kanao Iori6,Takaoka Masashi7

Affiliation:

1. Disaster Prevention Research Institute Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

2. School of Civil Engineering Xi'an University of Architecture & Technology Xi'an China

3. Earthquake Disaster Mitigation Research Division National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (NIED) Hyogo Japan

4. Department of Medical Equipment Kyoto University Hospital Kyoto Japan

5. Department of Primary Care and Emergency Medicine Graduate School of Medicine Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

6. Faculty of Design and Architecture Kyoto Institute of Technology Kyoto Japan

7. Development Department OKUJU Corporation Osaka Japan

Abstract

AbstractThis paper presents seismic damage to continuous ceiling systems and the impact of damage on functionality in the hospital specimen tested at the E‐Defense shaking table. The specimen had four ceiling systems with different peripheral constraint conditions, coverage areas, suspended lengths, and ceiling panel materials. The test results demonstrate that the continuous ceiling system is less susceptible to collapse than the lay‐in ceiling system. However, medical facilities require maintaining functionality after earthquakes, and the consequence of damage as functional deterioration needs discussion. The two‐elevation ceiling system across two rooms with different ceiling heights sustains severe damage at the rise‐up part and the partition wall separating the rooms. The damage becomes severe when the ceilings at different heights vibrate at separate frequencies. The results highlight the enhancement of the lateral stiffness of the suspended ceiling at the rise‐up part, such as by adding bracing bars. In the case of long‐duration shakings assumed for far mega‐earthquakes, damage accumulates with repeated loadings, and the functional loss by the damage becomes intense. This observation indicates that peak‐related parameters (peak floor acceleration or peak floor velocity) do not comprehensively reflect the degree of damage in ceiling systems. The proposed functionality loss matrix highlights that the damage to the ceiling harms the aseptic environment for key medical rooms, especially for the cleanroom with extremely strict requirements on the air environment.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Civil and Structural Engineering

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