Viscous heating of fluid dampers under small and large amplitude motions : Experimental studies and parametric modeling

This paper summarizes the results from a comprehensive experimental program in an effort to better understand the phenom- enon of viscous heating of fluid dampers under small-stroke wind loading and large-stroke earthquake loading motions. Two dampers, one with 15-kip and one with 250-kip force output at peak design velocity, have been instrumented and tested under various amplitudes and frequencies. Temperature histories at different locations along the damper casing and within the silicon fluid that undergoes the shearing action have been recorded. Experimental data under small-stroke motions of the 250-kip damper showed that a single closed- form expression derived from first principles is capable of predicting the temperature rise at different locations of the damper with fidelity. The recorded data under long-stroke motions suggest a two-parameter law of cooling that allows the estimation of the internal temperature of the silicon oil once the external temperature on the damper casing is known. The presented cooling law is an extension of Newton's law of cooling. The study concludes that for both dampers, the same values of the model parameters provide a good approximation of the cooling behavior. The study presents a valuable formula that can be used in practice to estimate the internal fluid temperature of the damper given the external shell temperature. DOI: 10.1061/ASCE0733-93992007133:5566 CE Database subject headings: Damping; Heating; Monitoring; Earthquake engineering; Parameters; Earthquake resistant structures.