142 research outputs found
Seismic hazard disaggregation in performance-based earthquake engineering: occurrence or exceedance?
Seismic hazard disaggregation is commonly used as an aid in ground-motion selection for the seismic response analysis of structures. This short communication investigates two different approaches to disaggregation related to the exceedance and occurrence of a particular intensity. The impact the different approaches might have on a subsequent structural analysis at a given intensity is explored through the calculation of conditional spectra. It is found that the exceedance approach results in conditional spectra that will be conservative when used as targets for ground-motion selection. It is however argued that the use of the occurrence disaggregation is more consistent with the objectives of seismic response analyses in the context of performance-based earthquake engineering. Copyright (c) 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Recorded Motions of the Mw6.3 April 6, 2009 L’Aquila (Italy) Earthquake and Implications for Building Structural Damage: Overview.
The normal-faulting earthquake of 6 April 2009 in the Abruzzo Region of
central Italy caused heavy losses of life and substantial damage to centuriesold
buildings of significant cultural importance and to modern reinforcedconcrete-
framed buildings with hollow masonry infill walls. Although
structural deficiencies were significant and widespread, the study of the
characteristics of strong motion data from the heavily affected area indicated
that the short duration of strong shaking may have spared many more damaged
buildings from collapsing. It is recognized that, with this caveat of shortduration
shaking, the infill walls may have played a very important role in
preventing further deterioration or collapse of many buildings. It is concluded
that better new or retrofit construction practices that include reinforcedconcrete
shear walls may prove helpful in reducing risks in such seismic areas
of Italy, other Mediterranean countries, and even in United States, where there
are large inventories of deficient structures.Published651-6844.1. Metodologie sismologiche per l'ingegneria sismicaJCR Journalreserve
Hazard-consistent response spectra in the Region of Murcia (Southeast Spain): comparison to earthquake-resistant provisions
Hazard-consistent ground-motion characterisations of three representative sites located in the Region of Murcia (southeast Spain) are presented. This is the area where the last three damaging events in Spain occurred and there is a significant amount of data for comparing them with seismic hazard estimates and earthquake-resistant provisions. Results of a probabilistic seismic hazard analysis are used to derive uniform hazard spectra (UHS) for the 475-year return period, on rock and soil conditions. Hazard deaggregation shows that the largest hazard contributions are due to small, local events for short-period target motions and to moderate, more distant events for long-period target motions. For each target motion and site considered, the associated specific response spectra (SRS) are obtained. It is shown that the combination of two SRS, for short- and long-period ground motions respectively, provides a good approximation to the UHS at each site. The UHS are compared to design response spectra contained in current Spanish and European seismic codes for the 475-year return period. For the three sites analysed, only the Eurocode 8 (EC8) type 2 spectrum captures the basic shape of the UHS (and not the EC8 type 1, as could be expected a priori). An alternative response spectrum, anchored at short- and long-period accelerations, is tested, providing a close match to the UHS spectra at the three sites. Results underline the important contribution of the frequent, low-to-moderate earthquakes that characterize the seismicity of this area to seismic hazard (at the 475-year return period)
Capturing geographically-varying uncertainty in earthquake ground motion models or what we think we know may change
Our knowledge of earthquake ground motions of engineering significance varies geographically. The prediction of earthquake shaking in parts of the globe with high seismicity and a long history of observations from dense strong-motion networks, such as coastal California, much of Japan and central Italy, should be associated with lower uncertainty than ground-motion models for use in much of the rest of the world, where moderate and large earthquakes occur infrequently and monitoring networks are sparse or only recently installed. This variation in uncertainty, however, is not often captured in the models currently used for seismic hazard assessments, particularly for national or continental-scale studies. In this theme lecture, firstly I review recent proposals for developing ground-motion logic trees and then I develop and test a new approach for application in Europe. The proposed procedure is based on the backbone approach with scale factors that are derived to account for potential differences between regions. Weights are proposed for each of the logic-tree branches to model large epistemic uncertainty in the absence of local data. When local data are available these weights are updated so that the epistemic uncertainty captured by the logic tree reduces. I argue that this approach is more defensible than a logic tree populated by previously published ground-motion models. It should lead to more stable and robust seismic hazard assessments that capture our doubt over future earthquake shaking
RINTC project: assessing the (implicit) seimsic risk of code-conforming structures in Italy
RINTC, which started in 2015, is a joint proj
ect of ReLUIS and EUCENTRE, two
centers of competence
for seismic risk assessment
of the Italian civil protection. The goal of the
project
, which is still ongoing,
is
to assess in an explicit manner the
seismic
risk of structures
designed according
to
the code currently enforced in Italy. To this aim five structural typologies
were considered: masonry, reinforced concrete, pre
-
cast reinforced concrete, steel, and
seismically isolated buildin
gs. In the framework of the project, multiple archetype
structures
have been designed for each typology according to standard practice at five sites across Italy,
spanning a wide range of
seismic
hazard levels. The seismic vulnerability of the designed
st
ructures was assessed by subjecting 3D computer models to
multi
-
stripe non
-
linear dynamic
analysis. Integration of the probabilistic hazard and
probabilistic
vulnerability
(i.e., fragility)
yielded
the
annual failure rate, in terms of
onset of non
-
structural
damage and collapse, of each
of the structures. Risk assessment takes into consideration record
-
to
-
record variability of non
-
structural response and, for selected cases, structural modeling uncertainty. Results
preliminarily
show that, for each structural
typology,
the
collapse
risk tend
s
to increase
with
the hazard of the site and that risk is not uniform a
cross
typologies
Floor Response Spectra for Bare and Infilled Reinforced Concrete Frames
The objective of this article is to study the effects of structural nonlinear behavior on Floor Response Spectra (FRS) of existing reinforced concrete frames. This study examines how the FRS vary with the level of post-elastic behavior in buildings of different number of stories and masonry infill wall configurations. The effect of damping modeling assumptions is also investigated. Differences and similarities with findings from the literature are discussed. On the basis of the obtained results, a commentary on the adequacy of basic assumptions used in predictive equations proposed by different seismic codes is offered
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