Seismic response of segmental buildings
β Scribed by Tso-Chien Pan; Shih-Fu Ling; Wei Cui
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 493 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0098-8847
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper proposes an aseismic design concept in which the superstructure of a base-isolated building is divided into several segments. Each segment may comprise a few storeys and is interconnected by additional vibrational isolation systems. The dynamic characteristics of the segmental buildings are investigated. The optimum parameters of the vibration isolation systems are determined by minimizing the mean square acceleration response. The seismic response of a typical segmental building subjected to the N-S component of the 1940 El Centro earthquake input is evaluated and compared with the responses of the corresponding fixed-base and conventional base-isolated buildings. The comparisons show that, when the superstructure is segmented, while the acceleration response in the superstructure remains as small as that in the conventional base-isolated building, the displacement across the base isolation system at foundation level is substantially reduced.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This paper attempts to study the response of light equipment items attached to a multiβstorey building that may be subjected to large torsional deformations during the earthquake excitation. To account for the effect of torsion and translation, each storey of the building is modelled as
## Abstract Numerical simulations and parametric studies have been used to investigate the influence of potential poundings of seismically isolated buildings with adjacent structures on the effectiveness of seismic isolation. Poundings are assumed to occur at the isolation level between the seismic
Simulated ground motions from the M 5 6)7 Northridge earthquake and a simulated M 5 7)0 Elysian Park event are generated over a large grid of sites and used as input to mathematical models of six-storey and 20-storey steel-frame buildings. Purpose of the study is to quantify effects of strong near-s