Structural Engineering:
Structural Engineering Research
Currently there are four structural engineering faculty members in the School
of Civil and Construction Engineering: Dr.
Chris Higgins, Dr. Tom Miller,
Dr. Michael Scott and Dr.
Solomon Yim. While all four members have an interest in structural analysis
and seismic related issues, Dr. Higgins and Dr. Miller specialize in design
and experimental studies, and Dr. Scott and Dr. Yim emphasize structural mechanics,
dynamics, computer application and numerical modeling.
In recent years the teams research projects have been supported by the National
Science Foundation, Oregon Department of Transportation, United States Department
of Agriculture, and the Office of Naval Research. Collaborative work has been
developed with researchers at Lehigh University, Cornell University, the Transportation
Ministry (Japan), and the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Researchers also belong
to the Consortium of Universities for Research in Earthquake Engineering (CUREE)
and are affiliated with with the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research (PEER)
Center.
Strong Floor
Many structural engineering research projects take advantage of OSU's large
scale structural strong floor. This facility is the second largest structural
testing floor on the West Coast and allows researchers to simulate earthquakes
and forces up to one million pounds and frames up to two stories high. The floor
is steel-reinforced concrete five feet thick, with massive bolts and anchors
to which materials can be attached and their strength tested. The facility has
recently been used for studies of bridge cracking that have been undertaken
on behalf of the Oregon Department of Transportation. Of the states 1800 bridges
constructed in the 1950's, 500 have been identified as cracked. Replacement
and repair costs could cost several billion dollars. OSU researchers are developing
modeling tools and data banks to forecast how the cracked bridges will perform
over time, develop ways to assess bridge reliabiliy, and identify repair options.
Read more about the strong floor here...
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| A moving load test. |
Recent Projects
Below you can link to descriptions of several recent research projects:
Images and Video
View images and videos of structural engineering facilities and experiments.
Images:
Video:
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