18 research outputs found
Seismic site effects in a deep alluvial basin: numerical analysis by the boundary element method
The main purpose of the paper is the numerical analysis of seismic site
effects in Caracas (Venezuela). The analysis is performed considering the
boundary element method in the frequency domain. A numerical model including a
part of the local topography is considered, it involves a deep alluvial deposit
on an elastic bedrock. The amplification of seismic motion (SH-waves, weak
motion) is analyzed in terms of level, occurring frequency and location. In
this specific site of Caracas, the amplification factor is found to reach a
maximum value of 25. Site effects occur in the thickest part of the basin for
low frequencies (below 1.0 Hz) and in two intermediate thinner areas for
frequencies above 1.0 Hz. The influence of both incidence and shear wave
velocities is also investigated. A comparison with microtremor recordings is
presented afterwards. The results of both numerical and experimental approaches
are in good agreement in terms of fundamental frequencies in the deepest part
of the basin. The boundary element method appears to be a reliable and
efficient approach for the analysis of seismic site effects
Numerical analysis of seismic wave amplification in Nice (France) and comparisons with experiments
The analysis of site effects is very important since the amplification of
seismic motion in some specific areas can be very strong. In this paper, the
site considered is located in the centre of Nice on the French Riviera. Site
effects are investigated considering a numerical approach (Boundary Element
Method) and are compared to experimental results (weak motion and
microtremors). The investigation of seismic site effects through numerical
approaches is interesting because it shows the dependency of the amplification
level on such parameters as wave velocity in surface soil layers, velocity
contrast with deep layers, seismic wave type, incidence and damping. In this
specific area of Nice, a one-dimensional (1D) analytical analysis of
amplification does not give a satisfactory estimation of the maximum reached
levels. A boundary element model is then proposed considering different wave
types (SH, P, SV) as the seismic loading. The alluvial basin is successively
assumed as an isotropic linear elastic medium and an isotropic linear
viscoelastic solid (standard solid). The thickness of the surface layer, its
mechanical properties, its general shape as well as the seismic wave type
involved have a great influence on the maximum amplification and the frequency
for which it occurs. For real earthquakes, the numerical results are in very
good agreement with experimental measurements for each motion component.
Two-dimensional basin effects are found to be very strong and are well
reproduced numerically
The direct boundary element method: 2D site effects assessment on laterally varying layered media (methodology)
The Direct Boundary Element Method (DBEM) is presented to solve the elastodynamic field equations in 2D, and a complete comprehensive implementation is given. The DBEM is a useful approach to obtain reliable numerical estimates of site effects on seismic ground motion due to irregular geological configurations, both of layering and topography. The method is based on the discretization of the classical Somigliana's elastodynamic representation equation which stems from the reciprocity theorem. This equation is given in terms of the Green's function which is the full-space harmonic steady-state fundamental solution. The formulation permits the treatment of viscoelastic media, therefore site models with intrinsic attenuation can be examined. By means of this approach, the calculation of 2D scattering of seismic waves, due to the incidence of P and SV waves on irregular topographical profiles is performed. Sites such as, canyons, mountains and valleys in irregular multilayered media are computed to test the technique. The obtained transfer functions show excellent agreement with already published results