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Effects of structural walls on the elastic-plastic earthquake responses of frame-wall buildings

✍ Scribed by Kongoli, Xhafer; Minami, Tadao; Sakai, Yuki


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
324 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
0098-8847

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✦ Synopsis


Effects of structural walls on the elastic-plastic earthquake response of short-to medium-height reinforced concrete buildings were investigated. The analytical model consists of independent lumped mass systems representing walls and frames connected at each floor. The wall structure undergoes flexural as well as shear deformation and fails in shear at relatively small story drifts, the frames deforming only in shear. As a measure of structural damage, the ductility factor responses of frame structures were calculated for different combinations of base shear coefficients for the frames and walls. In buildings with relatively weak frames, the installation of structural walls did not improve the large plastic response of the frames up to the point where the walls were unfailed in shear and the ductility factors of the frame structure were suddenly reduced to a very small number. For relatively strong frames, however, the response displacements decreased gradually as the number of walls increased, whether or not the walls failed. Empirical formulas for the required base shear coefficients of the walls and frames which gave a target ductility factor response also were derived for two particular groups of accelerograms. These equations should be of practical use in designing frame-wall type buildings and in retrofitting damaged buildings.


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Flanged walls are a common feature in concrete and masonry construction that require special consideration because of the distinct nature of their response to earthquake forces. Flanged walls typically have different strength, stiffness and ductility capacities in the two opposite directions when lo