Spinning For Science

Planning and building Europe's largest capacity geotechnical centrifuge took seven years. Now, after one and a half years of operation, its official inauguration is finally being celebrated at the Hönggerberg campus. And it's no coincidence that this is happening today.

An illustriation of the ETH Zurich geotechnical centrifuge
Measuring nine metres across and with a capacity of 500 gtonnes, the ETH Zurich geotechnical centrifuge has the biggest capacity in Europe. (Image: Ioannis Anastasopoulos / ETH Zürich)

In brief

  • Europe's largest capacity geotechnical centrifuge is being inaugurated today at the Hönggerberg campus.
  • The centrifuge is able to accelerate models so quickly that they are subjected to up to two hundred and fifty times the Earth's gravity.
  • This piece of equipment makes a vital contribution to research on infrastructure exposed to the forces of nature.

A giant metal door leads to a bright, circular underground room. This is home to the crowning glory of the Geotechnical Centrifuge Center (GCC): the blue beam centrifuge, measuring a total of some nine metres. Constructing this research facility was no mean feat - but the builders rose to the challenge. To prevent interference with highly sensitive measurements in laboratories surrounding the GCC, the centrifuge chamber is vibration-isolated and rests on four steel spring units. Europe's largest-capacity centrifuge has been operational and delivering research data since June 2023, but today ETH Zurich is celebrating this extraordinary piece of infrastructure on a very special date.

This is a day that Ioannis Anastasopoulos, Professor of Geotechnical Engineering and Head of the Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering at ETH Zurich, has been anticipating for a long time. It's no coincidence that the inauguration of the centrifuge falls precisely on 17 January 2025. While Anastasopoulos didn't want to turn up to this ceremony empty-handed, preferring instead to have some first research results to present, this date is of great personal significance to him. Today is the 30th anniversary of the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake, which devastated the city of Kobe in Japan. At the time of the disaster, Anastasopoulos was a civil engineering student. The event was instrumental to his future career, as it led to the decision to dedicate himself to geotechnical earthquake engineering.

He and his team use the centrifuge to conduct research into how buildings and civil engineering structures, including their foundations and the underlying soil, behave when exposed to the various forces of nature. To do this, they create reduced-scale models and place them at one end of the spinning beam centrifuge. The models are then accelerated so strongly that the g-forces acting on them multiply. In this process, the models are exposed to forces of up to 100 g - in other words, one hundred times the Earth's gravitational force. Scaled-down models of the ground cannot accurately represent reality, as the stresses in the ground are much smaller than those in real life, which affects the properties of the tested soil material. The increased gravitational field of the centrifuge multiplies the developing stresses in the model, reflecting real-life conditions, making this the only way to achieve realistic results.

Giving new life to an old centrifuge

While this may look like ultra-modern research infrastructure, it in fact already has a few stories to tell from its past life. ETH made the conscious decision not to acquire a new centrifuge, but rather to buy a centrifuge from Ruhr University Bochum that had been decommissioned. Although a complete overhaul was needed and new parts had to be fitted, this approach only cost around one-quarter as much as purchasing a new centrifuge of the same capacity.

 Ioannis Anastasopoulos and Ralf Herzognext to components for the centrifuge
Professor Ioannis Anastasopoulos and his laboratory manager, Ralf Herzog, on the Krupp centrifuge, stored in Kreuztal, Germany. (Image: Ioannis Anastasopoulos / ETH Zürich)

Refurbishing and modernising a centrifuge of this size is a daunting task. The refurbishment was performed in parallel to the construction of the facility at Hönggerberg. Both were delayed by the Covid pandemic and resulting supply-chain disturbances. But despite all these challenges, the centrifuge was put into operation just one year later than originally planned. For Anastasopoulos, this was a resounding success: "At times, we weren't sure when the centrifuge would actually be up and running, and quite a few projects depend on it. So we are happy to be able to produce some first experimental results."

A whirlwind of activity

The new "old" centrifuge has been in action for some eighteen months and is operating at full capacity. It is generally used to conduct one to three tests per week. Anastasopoulos is supported by a team of 10-15 researchers and technicians, all working to ensure that experiments can be conducted and that the centrifuge functions properly.

The frequency of the experiments depends on the complexity of the model being tested. Preparing the model takes up most of the time, because the structural and geotechnical conditions have to be reproduced as realistically as possible. Thanks to the additional g-forces generated by this extraordinary centrifuge, effects that take years to manifest in the real world can be simulated in a matter of just a few hours.

the mechanic Markus working on a cable
Markus Iten, a centrifuge technician, makes the final preparations before testing a model of a monopile supporting an offshore wind turbine. (Image: Ioannis Anastasopoulos / ETH Zürich)

Wind farms, bridges, Brienz and Leimbach

The centrifuge can be put to a multitude of uses. One example of research currently being conducted at the GCC is related to the foundations of offshore wind turbines, which are crucial for the transition to renewable energy. Far out at sea, wind turbines are exposed to all kinds of natural hazards. Exposed to storms and earthquakes, such structures are prone to tilting, which calls for our improved understanding of their mechanical response. An inclination of just 0.5 degrees can damage the mechanical systems and greatly reduce the service life of a wind farm.

Offshore wind farms are a rare sight in Switzerland, but the same can't be said for bridges. The country certainly has its fair share of them. Their vast majority (over 90%) were built before the '90s, are of merely "basic" seismic design and are in need of a seismic retrofit. Moreover, existing bridges need to be widened to accommodate increasing mobility volumes. While a bridge pier retrofit is relatively straightforward, foundation strengthening can be challenging, costly and time-consuming. This is especially true of pile groups, which are commonly used for bridges. This is where the research work of Anastasopoulos and his team comes into play: "Our centrifuge tests are vital to the safety of our transportation infrastructure. The centrifuge experiments can lead us to develop innovative solutions that minimise our carbon footprint and the cost of a foundation retrofit, while improving seismic safety."

In the canton of Graubünden, the entire village of Brienz is under threat from ground movements, while the Leimbach area of Zurich is constantly moving due to a slow creeping landslide. Here, the centrifuge could help us to better understand the causes of failure and the processes that lead to such massive movements, contributing to the quantification of risk for the affected population.

With such diverse research topics and areas of application, it's clear that the centrifuge has a busy future ahead.

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