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Rocking isolation of nonductile moderately tall buildings subjected to bidirectional near-fault ground motions
Highlights Foundation uplifting and soil yielding subject to biaxial near-fault ground motion are studied. Rocking isolation concept and application to foundation design. Consequent inelastic foundation tilting is compared with those of the current design codes. Site effect on seismic response of rocking structures. Liquefaction potential of the soft site subjected to bidirectional near-fault ground motions.
Abstract Recent studies show that slender structures with shallow foundations located on soil medium can benefit from rocking isolation effects during strong earthquakes. In such condition, foundation uplifting and soil yielding provide supplemental energy dissipation potential at substructure level. As a result, the structural demands would be significantly reduced. In this study, building structures with various geometrical properties mounted on surface raft foundations are examined. A set of 91 component pairs of near-fault forward-directivity ground motions recorded at soft as well as dense sites are selected. Three dimensional nonlinear soil–structure interaction (SSI) including foundation uplifting and soil yielding is considered. The results show that the protective effects of rocking isolation can play vital role in survival of medium-to-high-rise building structures subject to catastrophic earthquakes which are excessively greater than design limits. Evidently, rocking isolation has enhanced the elastic structural demands up to 50% for low-aspect-ratio as well as 75% for high-aspect-ratio structures. Such beneficial effects keep the superstructure in significantly larger safety margins. In addition, site effects on seismic demands of rocking structures, as well as liquefaction potential in case of buildings located on soft site are investigated.
Rocking isolation of nonductile moderately tall buildings subjected to bidirectional near-fault ground motions
Highlights Foundation uplifting and soil yielding subject to biaxial near-fault ground motion are studied. Rocking isolation concept and application to foundation design. Consequent inelastic foundation tilting is compared with those of the current design codes. Site effect on seismic response of rocking structures. Liquefaction potential of the soft site subjected to bidirectional near-fault ground motions.
Abstract Recent studies show that slender structures with shallow foundations located on soil medium can benefit from rocking isolation effects during strong earthquakes. In such condition, foundation uplifting and soil yielding provide supplemental energy dissipation potential at substructure level. As a result, the structural demands would be significantly reduced. In this study, building structures with various geometrical properties mounted on surface raft foundations are examined. A set of 91 component pairs of near-fault forward-directivity ground motions recorded at soft as well as dense sites are selected. Three dimensional nonlinear soil–structure interaction (SSI) including foundation uplifting and soil yielding is considered. The results show that the protective effects of rocking isolation can play vital role in survival of medium-to-high-rise building structures subject to catastrophic earthquakes which are excessively greater than design limits. Evidently, rocking isolation has enhanced the elastic structural demands up to 50% for low-aspect-ratio as well as 75% for high-aspect-ratio structures. Such beneficial effects keep the superstructure in significantly larger safety margins. In addition, site effects on seismic demands of rocking structures, as well as liquefaction potential in case of buildings located on soft site are investigated.
Rocking isolation of nonductile moderately tall buildings subjected to bidirectional near-fault ground motions
Masaeli, Hamid (author) / Khoshnoudian, Faramarz (author) / Hadikhan Tehrani, Mohammad (author)
Engineering Structures ; 80 ; 298-315
2014-08-19
18 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Active Interaction Control of Tall Buildings Subjected to Near-Field Ground Motions
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|Active Interaction Control of Tall Buildings Subjected to Near-Field Ground Motions
British Library Online Contents | 2002
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