University of Canterbury. Civil and Natural Resources Engineering
Doi
Abstract
In this paper, probabilistic seismic performance assessment of a typical non-seismic RC frame building
representative of a large inventory of existing buildings in developing countries is conducted. Nonlinear
time-history analyses of the sample building are performed with 20 large-magnitude medium distance
ground motions scaled to different levels of intensity represented by peak ground acceleration and 5%
damped elastic spectral acceleration at the first mode period of the building. The hysteretic model used in
the analyses accommodates stiffness degradation, ductility-based strength decay, hysteretic energy-based
strength decay and pinching due to gap opening and closing. The maximum inter story drift ratios obtained
from the time-history analyses are plotted against the ground motion intensities. A method is defined for
obtaining the yielding and collapse capacity of the analyzed structure using these curves. The fragility
curves for yielding and collapse damage levels are developed by statistically interpreting the results of the
time-history analyses. Hazard-survival curves are generated by changing the horizontal axis of the fragility
curves from ground motion intensities to their annual probability of exceedance using the log-log linear
ground motion hazard model. The results express at a glance the probabilities of yielding and collapse
against various levels of ground motion intensities