Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
The Influence of Wind Direction on the Inelastic Responses of a Base-Isolated Square Section High-Rise Building
Previous studies show that the largest wind-induced response of a square section fixed-base high-rise building occurs when the strong wind is blowing perpendicular onto a building face, and the greatest translational response is likely to occur in the crosswind direction. When it comes to a square section base-isolated high-rise building that allows the isolation system to yield under strong wind excitation, the inelastic response shows distinctive non-Gaussian characteristics under fluctuating wind excitation and mean drift phenomenon under non-zero mean wind load. These characteristics may lead to a quite different result when determining the most unfavorable wind direction. Thus, the influence of wind direction on the inelastic response of a square base-isolated high-rise building is discussed in this study based on synchronous pressure measurement. The multi-story superstructure is modeled as a linear elastic shear building, while the isolation system is represented in a bilinear hysteresis restoring force model. The peak value of the inelastic response is estimated through a moment-based Hermit model from an underlying standard Gaussian process. The results show that when the strong wind blows perpendicular onto a building face, the greatest inelastic displacement, both at the top and isolation level, occurs in the along-wind direction, which is different from the elastic response. With the change of wind direction, the largest combined inelastic displacement still occurs when the wind inclination angle is 0°, while the combined displacement in other directions is also very large, which is worthy of concern.
The Influence of Wind Direction on the Inelastic Responses of a Base-Isolated Square Section High-Rise Building
Previous studies show that the largest wind-induced response of a square section fixed-base high-rise building occurs when the strong wind is blowing perpendicular onto a building face, and the greatest translational response is likely to occur in the crosswind direction. When it comes to a square section base-isolated high-rise building that allows the isolation system to yield under strong wind excitation, the inelastic response shows distinctive non-Gaussian characteristics under fluctuating wind excitation and mean drift phenomenon under non-zero mean wind load. These characteristics may lead to a quite different result when determining the most unfavorable wind direction. Thus, the influence of wind direction on the inelastic response of a square base-isolated high-rise building is discussed in this study based on synchronous pressure measurement. The multi-story superstructure is modeled as a linear elastic shear building, while the isolation system is represented in a bilinear hysteresis restoring force model. The peak value of the inelastic response is estimated through a moment-based Hermit model from an underlying standard Gaussian process. The results show that when the strong wind blows perpendicular onto a building face, the greatest inelastic displacement, both at the top and isolation level, occurs in the along-wind direction, which is different from the elastic response. With the change of wind direction, the largest combined inelastic displacement still occurs when the wind inclination angle is 0°, while the combined displacement in other directions is also very large, which is worthy of concern.
The Influence of Wind Direction on the Inelastic Responses of a Base-Isolated Square Section High-Rise Building
Huawei Pang (Autor:in) / Qingshan Yang (Autor:in) / Min Liu (Autor:in) / Yi Hui (Autor:in) / Baolong Cheng (Autor:in)
2022
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Metadata by DOAJ is licensed under CC BY-SA 1.0
Development of wind tunnel test model of mid-rise base-isolated building
British Library Online Contents | 2004
|Dynamic Responses of High-Rise Base-Isolated Building during the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2015
|Field testing of low-rise base isolated building
Elsevier | 2004
|