Wind and Structures
Volume 34, Number 2, 2022, pages 199-213
DOI: 10.12989/sss.2022.34.2.199
Aeroelastic testing of a self-supported transmission tower under laboratory simulated tornado-like vortices
Nima Ezami, Ashraf El Damatty, Ahmed Hamada and Horia Hangan
Abstract
The current study investigates the dynamic effects in the tornado-structure response of an aeroelastic self-supported
lattice transmission tower model tested under laboratory simulated tornado-like vortices. The aeroelastic model is designed for a
geometric scale of 1:65 and tested under scaled down tornadoes in the Wind Engineering, Energy and Environment (WindEEE)
Research Institute. The simulated tornadoes have a similar length scale of 1:65 compared to the full-scale. An extensive
experimental parametric study is conducted by offsetting the stationary tornado center with respect to the aeroelastic model.
Such aeroelastic testing of a transmission tower under laboratory tornadoes is not reported in the literature. A multiaxial load cell
is mounted underneath the base plate to measure the base shear forces and overturning moments applied to the model in three
perpendicular directions. A three-axis accelerometer is mounted at the level of the second cross-arm to measure response
accelerations to evaluate the natural frequencies through a free-vibration test. Radial, tangential, and axial velocity components
of the tornado wind field are measured using cobra probes. Sensitivity analyses are conducted to assess the variation of the
structural dynamic response associated with the location of the tornado relative to the lattice transmission tower. Three different
layouts representing the change in the orientation of the tower model relative to the components of the tornado-induced loads are
considered. The structural responses of the aeroelastic model in terms of base shear forces, overturning moments, and lateral
accelerations are measured. The results are utilized to understand the dynamic response of self-supported transmission towers to
the tornado-induced loads.
Key Words
aeroelastic; dynamic analysis; response spectrum; tornado; transmission tower; wind
Address
Nima Ezami:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
Ashraf El Damatty:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
Ahmed Hamada:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada
Horia Hangan:WindEEE Research Institute, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada