8 research outputs found

    Potential Use of Locked Brick Infill Walls to Decrease Soft-Story Formation in Frame Buildings

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    The objective of this study is to investigate the effects of a new type of infillcalled locked brick infill adopting horizontal sliding jointsin reducing the soft-story formation in reinforced concrete (RC) frames with code-conforming seismic detailing. Nonlinear static time-history analyses were performed on multistory planar frames with only the upper stories infilled in order to force the soft-story irregularity. The parameters of frame and infill elements that were used in numerical simulations were obtained from half-scale RC infilled frame tests that had been performed by the author covering single story-single bay frames infilled with standard and locked bricks. The numerical simulations showed that the use of locked bricks to form infill walls has the potential to decrease the soft-story/weak-story formation in comparison to standard bricks due to its shear sliding mechanism and decreased upper-story/first-story stiffness, even in buildings that have noninfilled first stories. (C) 2014 American Society of Civil Engineers
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