Published August 22, 2022 | Version pre-print
Journal article Open

Reduced‐order models for the seismic assessment of plan‐irregular low‐rise frame buildings

  • 1. Politecnico di Bari
  • 2. National Technical University of Athens

Description

A procedure is presented for deriving low-complexity structural models to predict the global response of asymmetricplan low-rise frame buildings for purposes of class-level assessment. As a compromise between employing a fullscale multi-degree-of-freedom structural model versus an equivalent single-degree-of-freedom one, the challenge is to create an idealized 3D structure with few degrees-of-freedom that can match the inelastic response of a building for which full knowledge of geometrical and mechanical properties is available. Such a 3D reduced-order model can offset the computational cost related to performing multiple nonlinear dynamic analyses within the framework of Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering. To this goal, rules and equations are proposed for achieving equivalence among the linear and nonlinear properties (e.g., mass, stiffness, strength) of the building analysed and the related 3D reduced-order model. The procedure is applied on a sample of 15 existing reinforced-concrete frame school buildings, from the province of Foggia in Southern Italy, for which the full numerical models are available. Both calibrated and uncalibrated reduced-order models are created, exploring the limitations of the proposed order-reduction in a real-life case study.
 

Notes

The first and the last authors acknowledge funding by the Italian Department of Civil Protection in the framework of the national project DPC‐ReLUIS 2019‐2021. Additional financial support has been provided by the Eugenides Foundation in Greece (scholarship for doctoral studies in NTUA grant) and by the European Commission through the Horizon 2020 program "HYPERION–Development of a decision support system for improved resilience & sustainable reconstruction of historic areas to cope with climate change & extreme events based on novel sensors and modelling tools", Grant Agreement No. 821054.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
HYPERION - Development of a Decision Support System for Improved Resilience & Sustainable Reconstruction of historic areas to cope with Climate Change & Extreme Events based on Novel Sensors and Modelling Tools 821054