4 research outputs found
Influence of corrosion on failure modes and lifetime seismic vulnerability assessment of lowâductility RC frames
Corrosion of reinforced concrete (RC) structures constitutes a critical form of environmental deterioration and may significantly increase the vulnerability of old nonâseismically designed buildings during earthquake events. This study proposes a probabilistic framework to evaluate the influence of corrosion deterioration on the lifetime seismic fragility of lowâductility RC frame buildings. In contrast to limited past literature on this topic, the proposed framework offers novel contributions. This is one of the first study to consider potential alteration in failure modes of building components (from flexure to flexureâshear) due to the timeâdependent aging process. Numerical models validated with past experimental test results are utilized to capture these failure modes, which are particularly relevant for low ductility RC frames designed prior to the introduction of modern seismic codes. Secondly, given the gamut of uncertainties associated with the corrosion process, this study develops conditionâdependent seismic fragility functions independent from an assumed exposure scenario, as often done in literature. These functions can be easily adopted by design engineers and stakeholders for prompt fragility assessment, and subsequent decisionâmaking without the need for computationally expensive finite element (FE) model runs. The proposed framework is demonstrated on a benchmark threeâstory RC frame that considers timeâvarying seismic demand models and damage state thresholds while accounting for the uncertain corrosion deterioration process and ground motion recordâtoârecord variability
Tool-tip dynamics in micromachining with arbitrary tool geometries and the effect of spindle speed
Mechanical micromachining has become a leading approach to fabricating complex three-dimensional microscale features and miniature devices on a broad range of materials. To satisfy the accuracy and productivity demands of various micromachining applications, the tool-tip dynamics, i.e., the dynamic behavior of the tool-ultra high-speed spindle assembly as reflected at the cutting edges of a microtool, should be well-understood. However, existing techniques for predicting tool-tip dynamics pose strict limitations in frequency bandwidth and do not capture the effect of the spindle speed on tool-tip dynamics. In addition, those techniques cannot be applied broadly to predict tool tip dynamics for a myriad of microtool geometries. This paper presents a systematic approach to predicting the tool-tip dynamics accurately in micromachining when using ultra-high-speed (UHS) spindles and for arbitrary microtool geometries. The speed-dependent dynamics of the UHS spindle are obtained using an experimental approach. The dynamics of microtools are obtained analytically using the spectral Tchebychev technique, such that any microtool geometry can be modeled accurately and does not require new testing. The tool-tip dynamics are then predicted by combining (coupling) the spindle and microtool dynamics using a novel modal-Tchebychev domain coupling technique. This technique enabled accurate coupling/decoupling of substructure dynamics within a broad frequency bandwidth (up to 15 kHz) and at different spindle speeds (up to 120,000 rpm). Furthermore, an empirical model for the mode-splitting effect is derived to capture the effect of spindle speeds on tool-tip dynamics. The overall approach is demonstrated and experimentally validated on a UHS spindle with microtool blanks and micro endmills at operational speeds. We conclude that the presented methodology can be used to determine the tool-tip dynamics accurately