Seismic Soil-structure Interaction Effects in Tall Buildings Considering Nonlinear-inelastic Behaviors


Book Description

Soil-structure interaction (SSI) effects are relevant for the seismic analysis of tall buildings on shallow foundations since the dynamic behavior of structures is highly affected by the interaction between the superstructure and supporting soils. As part of earthquake-resistant designs of buildings, considering SSI effects in the analysis provides more realistic estimates of its performance during a seismic event, particularly when both the structure and soil undergo large demands that can compromise serviceability. Oversimplifications of structural or soil modeling in the analysis introduces variability and biases in the computed seismic response.




Response of Structures with Nonlinear Soil-structure Interaction in Near-source Earthquakes


Book Description

Current seismic regulations allow earthquake energy dissipation via inelastic behaviour of structures providing that collapse is avoided. Considering that this philosophy can negatively impact due to loss of function of critical structures, mitigation systems are currently being explored by researches. In the last decades a new concept for reducing structural response has emerged. By allowing soil plastic deformations and foundation lift-off, structural performance can be improved. However, more research is required in order to better understand this phenomenon. This thesis concerns an experimental investigation into the structural response of buildings allowed to uplift when subjected to near-source earthquakes considering nonlinear soil-foundation-structure-interaction (NSFSI). Considering that gravity cannot be neglected in scaled models allowed to uplift, a new modelling approach was developed to account for gravity effects. Based on this method, a small scale model of a low rise building was built. Inelastic behaviour of the superstructure was considered by means of replaceable plastic hinge components. To study the benefits of uplift and NSFSI on the structural response, 10 records of actual near-source earthquakes were considered and subsoil was simulated by means of sand in a box. The scaled model constructed using the modelling method developed in this research was validated and it was capable of simulating a more realistic uplift behaviour even at small excitations. The experimental results suggest that uplift is unavoidable and it can significantly reduce the response of the structure. When soil plastic deformation is considered, the response of the structure can be further reduced remaining practically elastic. In contrast, uplift can increase the absolute horizontal displacements of the structure when the supporting base is rigid but marginally increased when soil plastic deformations are permitted. Because of the impulsive loading of near-source earthquakes and soil plastic deformation of subsoil, permanent rotation of the footing was observed after the uplift.




Soil-Foundation-Structure Interaction


Book Description

Soil-Foundation-Structure Interaction contains selected papers presented at the International Workshop on Soil-Foundation-Structure Interaction held in Auckland, New Zealand from 26-27 November 2009. The workshop was the venue for an international exchange of ideas, disseminating information about experiments, numerical models and practical en




Soil-structure Interaction Effects on the Seismic Response of Low-rise Eccentrically Braced Frames


Book Description

The importance of soil-structure interaction (SSI) effects on the seismic response of buildings has been long recognized and has been researched for over 40 years. However, SSI analysis has only been applied in a few building projects because the fixed base condition is considered to provide a conservative estimation for the response of buildings under seismic loads. This assumption of a fixed base condition adopted by practitioners is not always conservative or cost-effective, especially for rigid buildings over soft soils. Additionally, for the case of ductile steel frames with eccentric configurations, the influence of SSI on their seismic performance has not been investigated. In this study, the seismic performance of eccentrically braced frames (EBFs) considering SSI effects is investigated using analytical models. Background information and modern guidelines available to consider SSI in the seismic analysis of buildings are presented and discussed. Following, a 3-story building with EBFs on shallow foundations is analyzed with and without SSI. The beam on Winkler foundation approach is used to model the linear and nonlinear soil-foundation interface behavior, considering linear-elastic, elastic-perfectly plastic, and nonlinear springs. Inter-story drifts, residual drifts, link rotations, and axial load column demands were similar for frames with flexible base and fixed base conditions when elastic and elastic-perfectly plastic springs were used. However, when nonlinear springs were used, frames with a flexible base showed a significant reduction in their responses in comparison to those observed for the fixed base condition. As a result, a reduction in frame member sizes was possible and justified through SSI analyses.




Performance Based Seismic Design for Tall Buildings


Book Description

Performance-Based Seismic Design (PBSD) is a structural design methodology that has become more common in urban centers around the world, particularly for the design of high-rise buildings. The primary benefit of PBSD is that it substantiates exceptions to prescribed code requirements, such as height limits applied to specific structural systems, and allows project teams to demonstrate higher performance levels for structures during a seismic event.However, the methodology also involves significantly more effort in the analysis and design stages, with verification of building performance required at multiple seismic demand levels using Nonlinear Response History Analysis (NRHA). The design process also requires substantial knowledge of overall building performance and analytical modeling, in order to proportion and detail structural systems to meet specific performance objectives.This CTBUH Technical Guide provides structural engineers, developers, and contractors with a general understanding of the PBSD process by presenting case studies that demonstrate the issues commonly encountered when using the methodology, along with their corresponding solutions. The guide also provides references to the latest industry guidelines, as applied in the western United States, with the goal of disseminating these methods to an international audience for the advancement and expansion of PBSD principles worldwide.




Soil-Structure Interaction


Book Description

Despite advances in the field of geotechnical earthquake engineering, earthquakes continue to cause loss of life and property in one part of the world or another. The Third International Conference on Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA, 22nd to 24th June 1987, provided an opportunity for participants from all over the world to share their expertise to enhance the role of mechanics and other disciplines as they relate to earthquake engineering. The edited proceedings of the conference are published in four volumes. This volume covers: Soil Structure Interaction under Dynamic Loads, Vibration of Machine Foundations, and Base Isolation in Earthquake Engineering. With its companion volumes, it is hoped that it will contribute to the further development of techniques, methods and innovative approaches in soil dynamics and earthquake engineering.




Developments in Dynamic Soil-Structure Interaction


Book Description

For the last couple of decades it has been recognized that the foundation material on which a structure is constructed may interact dynamically with the structure during its response to dynamic excitation to the extent that the stresses and deflections in the system are modified from the values that would have been developed if it had been on a rigid foundation. This phenomenon is examined in detail in the book. The basic solutions are examined in time and frequency domains and finite element and boundary element solutions compared. Experimental investigations aimed at correlation and verification with theory are described in detail. A wide variety of SSI problems may be formulated and solved approximately using simplified models in lieu of rigorous procedures; the book gives a good overview of these methods. A feature which often lacks in other texts on the subject is the way in which dynamic behavior of soil can be modeled. Two contributors have addressed this problem from the computational and physical characterization viewpoints. The book illustrates practical areas with the analysis of tunnel linings and stiffness and damping of pile groups. Finally, design code provisions and derivation of design input motions complete this thorough overview of SSI in conventional engineering practice. Taken in its entirety the book, authored by fifteen well known experts, gives an in-depth review of soil-structure interaction across a broad spectrum of aspects usually not covered in a single volume. It should be a readily useable reference for the research worker as well as the advance level practitioner. (abstract) This book treats the dynamic soil-structure interaction phenomenon across a broad spectrum of aspects ranging from basic theory, simplified and rigorous solution techniques and their comparisons as well as successes in predicting experimentally recorded measurements. Dynamic soil behavior and practical problems are given thorough coverage. It is intended to serve both as a readily understandable reference work for the researcher and the advanced-level practitioner.







Dynamic Soil-structure Interaction of Instrumented Buildings and Test Structures


Book Description

The effects of soil-structure interaction (SSI) are investigated through careful interpretation of available data from instrumented buildings and recently performed forced vibration experiments on instrumented buildings and test structures. Conventional engineering practice typically ignores soil-structure interaction (SSI) during evaluation of the seismic demand on buildings based on the perception that consideration of SSI will reduce demands on structures and ignoring SSI effects will cause seismic demands to be conservatively biased. I show that it is not always conservative to ignore SSI effects. Analysis of field performance data is undertaken to provide deeper insights into SSI phenomena ranging from kinematic effects on foundation ground motions to mobilized foundation stiffness and damping across a wide range of frequencies and loading levels. These data are interpreted to evaluate strengths and limitations of engineering analysis procedures for SSI. Foundation damping incorporates the combined effects of energy loss due to waves propagating away from the vibrating foundation in translational and rotational modes (radiation damping), as well as hysteretic action in the soil (material damping). Previous foundation damping models were developed for rigid circular foundations on homogenous halfspace and were often expressed using confusing or incomplete functions. Starting from first principles, we derive fundamental expressions for foundation damping in which foundation impedance components representing radiation damping and the soil hysteretic damping ratio appear as variables, providing maximum flexibility to the analyst. We utilize these general expressions with impedance solutions for rectangular-footprint foundations to: (1) compare predicted foundation damping levels with those from field case histories and (2) develop new foundation damping relationships for application in the building code (NEHRP Provisions). Ground motions at the foundation levels of structures differ from those in the free-field as a result of inertial and kinematic interaction effects. Inertial interaction effects tend to produce narrow-banded ground motion modification near the fundamental period of the soil-structure system, whereas kinematic effects are relatively broad-banded but most significant at high frequencies. Kinematic interaction effects can be predicted using relatively costly finite element analyses with incoherent input or simplified models. The simplified models are semi-empirical in nature and derived from California data. These simplified models are the basis for seismic design guidelines used in the western United States, such as ASCE-41 and NIST (2012). We compile some available data from building and ground instrumentation arrays in Japan for comparison to these two sets of models. We demonstrate that the model predictions for the sites under consideration are very similar to each other for modest foundation sizes (equivalent radii under about 50 m). However, the data show that both approaches overestimate the transfer function ordinates relative to those from a subset of the Japanese buildings having pile foundations. The misfit occurs at frequencies higher than the first-mode resonant frequency and appears to result from pile effects on kinematic interaction that are not accounted for in current models. A complete model of a soil-foundation-structure system for use in response history analysis requires modification of input motions relative to those in the free-field to account for kinematic interaction effects, foundation springs and dashpots to represent foundation-soil impedance, and a structural model. The recently completed NIST (2012) report developed consistent guidelines for evaluation of kinematic interaction effects and foundation impedance for realistic conditions. We implement those procedures in seismic response history analyses for two instrumented buildings in California, one a 13-story concrete-moment frame building with two levels of basement and the other a 10-story concrete shear wall core building without embedment. We develop three-dimensional baseline models (MB) of the building and foundation systems (including SSI components) that are calibrated to reproduce observed responses from recorded earthquakes. SSI components considered in the MB model include horizontal and vertical springs and dashpots that represent the horizontal translation and rotational impedance, kinematic ground motion variations from embedment and base slab averaging, and ground motion variations over the embedment depth of basements. We then remove selected components of the MB models one at a time to evaluate their impact on engineering demand parameters (EDPs) such as inter-story drifts, story shear distributions, and floor accelerations. We find that a "bathtub" model that retains all features of the MB approach except for depth-variable motions provides for generally good above-ground superstructure responses, but biased demand assessments in subterranean levels. Other common approaches using a fixed-based representation can produce poor results. To expand the data inventory of response histories to evaluate SSI, we performed forced vibration testing of a well-instrumented steel and reinforced concrete structure that has removable bracing. The testing was performed at three sites with varying soil conditions. I describe testing at one of the sites located in Garner Valley, California. During testing at this site an adjacent structure and local concrete slab were also instrumented in addition to the test structure. I describe the testing setup, schemes, instrumentation, and data processing techniques. The data are analyzed to evaluate the stiffness and damping associated with the foundation-soil interaction, revealing linear-elastic behavior at low forcing levels characterized by smaller stiffnesses and both lower and higher damping than is predicted by classical models. Nonlinear behavior at stronger shaking levels includes pronounced reductions of stiffness and changes in damping. Interestingly, kinematic interaction effects observed on an adjacent slab excited principally by surface waves were of a similar character to expectations from analytical models for body wave excitation from earthquakes. If verified, these results could lead to site- and foundation-specific test methods for evaluating kinematic interaction effects.