MTS/PEER Hybrid Simulation Seminar material now available

 

We are pleased to announce the posting of the presentation material including a video archive for the Hybrid Simulation Technologies & Methods for Civil Engineering seminar, held at the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research (PEER) Center, March 20-21, 2018. You can access and view all related material online at http://apps.peer.berkeley.edu/events/mts2018/. Please note that some presentations may be subject to further post-production refinement.

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OpenFresco 2.7.0 released

OpenFresco 2.7.0 is now available for Win32 and Win64 systems. It provides updates to be compatible with the latest version 2.5.0 of OpenSees and OpenSeesSP. Please download the new version from the OpenFresco page. For compatibility some of the Examples have been updated too.

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OpenFrescoExpress 1.1 released

OpenFrescoExpress 1.1 adds “Experimental Site” capabilities to the graphical user interface. The new addition enables you to easily perform distributed hybrid simulations using the intuitive graphical user interface that many of our users have come to love. Please downloaded the new version from the OpenFrescoExpress page.

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Webinar material from “Conducting Hybrid Simulations with OpenSees/OpenFresco” now available

All the material from the latest presentation in the popular “Discovering OpenSees: Surfing the waves of OpenSees” webinar series is now available:

This webinar is the continuation of an earlier seminar on OpenFrescoExpress. This second webinar provides a short introduction to the hybrid simulation testing technique and the architecture of OpenFresco. It then illustrates how OpenSees/OpenFresco can be used to setup and execute more complicated hybrid models than what can be done with OpenFrescoExpress. The following topics are covered:

  • Introduction to hybrid simulation
  • OpenFresco architecture and TCL commands
  • Downloading and installing OpenFresco
  • Building a hybrid model in OpenSees/OpenFresco
  • Simulated versus real controllers
  • How to use other computational drivers
  • Summary and conclusions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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OpenFresco 2.6.2 released

OpenFresco 2.6.2 provides updates to be compatible with the new version 2.4.0 of OpenSees. OpenFresco 2.6.2 also works well with the newly released versions of OpenSeesSP and OpenSeesMP.

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Continuous intercontinental geographically distributed test between University of Kassel and UC Berkeley

Map showing the research sites that participated in this Continuous Intercontinental Hybrid Simulation Test

Map showing the research sites that participated in this Continuous Intercontinental Hybrid Simulation Test.

OpenFresco was used to conduct continuous geographically distributed hybrid simulations between the NEES facility at UC Berkeley (nees@berkeley) in the United States and the civil engineering laboratory at the University of Kassel (UNIKA) in Germany.

The experimental substructure of the test consisted of a friction device, named UHYDE-fbr [1], developed by Professor Uwe Dorka of UNIKA (mainly utilized for providing energy dissipation in bridge type structures), and a fixed Tuned-Mass-Damper (TMD). The computational portion of the hybrid model consisted of a single degree of freedom mass with viscous damping. Computations were executed at UC Berkeley and the experimental substructure was located at the University of Kassel. These computations were conducted using a custom-made program, developed by Ferran Obón. This program adapts Dorka’s sub-structure algorithm [2-7] so that it is able to perform distributed tests.

Test set-up at the University of Kassel in Germany showing the friction device, named UHYDE-fbr.

Test set-up at the University of Kassel in Germany showing the friction device, named UHYDE-fbr.

The communication between the computational platform and the test structure was made possible by using OpenFresco. For the purpose of this test, a new generic experimental control was implemented into OpenFresco by Andreas Schellenberg of UC Berkeley. Based on preliminary tests, the average network communication time was determined to be around 0.2 seconds. Communications between UC Berkeley and the University of Kassel were executed over a 1 gigabit network. Given the uncertainty in network communication speeds, the simulation time step was set at 1 second. The integration time step was 0.01 seconds, resulting in a test 100 times slower than real time. Due to the nature of Dorka’s substructure algorithm, the actuators never stopped moving. This resulted in a continuous intercontinental geographically distributed test.

More information can be found in this summary document (5 MB, pdf file).

Diagram of the interaction between various test components using the OpenFresco framework.

Diagram of the interaction between various test components using the OpenFresco framework.

The testing team of Andreas Schellenberg and Selim Gunnay at UC Berkeley's nees@berkeley laboratory, pose for a photo with Professor Uwe Dorka who is virtually present from the civil engineering laboratory at the University of Kassel (UNIKA) in Germany.

The testing team of Dr. Selim Gunnay (left) and Dr. Andreas Schellenberg (right) at UC Berkeley’s nees@berkeley laboratory, pose for a photo with Dr. Ferran Obón (center) who is virtually present from the civil engineering laboratory at the University of Kassel (UNIKA) in Germany.

[1] Dorka, U.E. (1995) Friction Device for protection of structural systems against dynamic actions, Patent Number 5456047. United States Patent.
[2] Dorka, U.E. and Heiland, D. (1991). “Fast online earthquake simulation using a novel pc supported measurement and control concept”. Proceedings of 4th Int. Conf. Structural Dynamics, Southhampton: 636-645.
[3] Dorka, U.E. and Füllekrug, U. (1998). Report of DFG-project No. Do 360/7: Sub-PSD Test. University of Kaiserlautern, Germany.
[4] Dorka U.E. (2002), “Hybrid experimental –numerical simulation of vibrating structures”, International Conference WAVE2002, Okayama, Japan.
[5] Dorka, U.E., Queval, J.C., Nguyen V.T. and Maoult, A.L. (2006), “Real-time sub-structure testing on distributed shaking tables in CEA Saclay”, Proceedings of 4th World Conference on Structural Control and Monitoring, San Diego, USA.
[6] Dorka, U.E., Queval, J.C., Nguyen V.T. and Maoult, A.L. (2007), “Substructure testing on distributed shaking tables”, Proceeding of the 2nd International Conference on Advances in Experimental Structural Engineering (2AESE), Shanghai, China.
[7] Roik, K. and Dorka, U.E. (1989), Fast online earthquake simulation of friction damped systems, SFB151 Report No. 15, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany.

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Launch of News Page

The OpenFresco Development Team is happy to announce the launch of a news page for posts about recent uses of the OpenFresco Framework!

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