Evolution of Earthquake Resistant Design Code - A Template for Future

Author(s):  
Ashok K. Jain
2010 ◽  
Vol 452-453 ◽  
pp. 517-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bai Tao Sun ◽  
Qiang Zhou ◽  
Pei Lei Yan

The Wenchuan earthquake occurred on May 12, 2008 (Beijing Time) caused great economical loss and large amount of buildings were destroyed. Many of single-story reinforced concrete industrial buildings in Hanwang town located in the highly seismic region were damaged, and the damaging phenomenons are very typical. According to the damage survey and analysis of typical seismic damage for the single-story reinforced concrete industrial buildings located in Hanwang town, the damage distribution and failure characters of these buildings are summarized in this paper. The single-story reinforced concrete industrial buildings which were designed according to current seismic design code have better earthquake resistant behavior than those old single-story reinforced concrete industrial buildings and the damaging phenomenon show some new features. Finally, combining current seismic design code of our country and the earthquake damage lessons, some reasonable suggestions on the work of seismic strengthening and earthquake resistant design of the single-story reinforced concrete industrial buildings have been given.


Author(s):  
R. Park

The development of codes for the earthquake resistant design of concrete structures in New Zealand since the 1931 Hawke's Bay-earthquake is traced. The background to the developments in the design procedures through the years is discussed. Californian seismic design codes, lessons from past earthquakes, and the results of analytical and experimental research work, much of it conducted
in New Zealand, have led to the current philosophy for seismic design in New Zealand as expressed by the 1976 SANZ loadings cods and the SANZ concrete design code about to be published. These codes state requirements for both adequate strength and ductility, and emphasize the importance of structural detailing to achieve satisfactory performance of structures during severe earthquake loading. This New Zealand seismic design philosophy for concrete building and bridge structures is reviewed. A summary of the seismic design provisions of the new SANZ concrete design code (NZS 3101) is given in an Appendix.


1983 ◽  
Vol 1983 (339) ◽  
pp. 127-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshio OHNE ◽  
Hidehiro TATEBE ◽  
Kunitomo NARITA ◽  
Tetsuo OKUMURA

Author(s):  
GENE F. SIRCA ◽  
HOJJAT ADELI

In earthquake-resistant design of structures, for certain structural configurations and conditions, it is necessary to use accelerograms for dynamic analysis. Accelerograms are also needed to simulate the effects of earthquakes on a building structure in the laboratory. A new method of generating artificial earthquake accelerograms is presented through adroit integration of neural networks and wavelets. A counterpropagation (CPN) neural network model is developed for generating artificial accelerograms from any given design spectrum such as the International Building Code (IBC) design spectrum. Using the IBC design spectrum as network input means an accelerogram may be generated for any geographic location regardless of whether earthquake records exist for that particular location or not. In order to improve the efficiency of the model, the CPN network is modified with the addition of the wavelet transform as a data compression tool to create a new CPN-wavelet network. The proposed CPN-wavelet model is trained using 20 sets of accelerograms and tested with additional five sets of accelerograms available from the U.S. Geological Survey. Given the limited set of training data, the result is quite remarkable.


1975 ◽  
Vol 101 (7) ◽  
pp. 1349-1366
Author(s):  
Anil K. Chopra ◽  
C-Y. Liaw

2021 ◽  
pp. 875529302110382
Author(s):  
Alan Poulos ◽  
Eduardo Miranda

A new measure of ground motion intensity in the horizontal direction is proposed. Similarly to other recently proposed measures of intensity, the proposed intensity measure is also independent of the as-installed orientation of horizontal sensors at recording stations. This new measure of horizontal intensity, referred to as MaxRotD50, is defined using the maximum 5%-damped response spectral ordinate of two orthogonal horizontal directions and then computing the 50th percentile for all non-redundant rotation angles, that is, the median of the set of spectral ordinates in a range of 90°. This proposed measure of intensity is always between the median and maximum spectral ordinate for all non-redundant orientations, commonly referred to as RotD50 and RotD100, respectively. A set of 5065 ground motion records is used to show that MaxRotD50 is, on average, approximately 13%–16% higher than Rot50 and 6% lower than RotD100. The new measure of intensity is particularly well suited for earthquake-resistant design where a major concern for structural engineers is the probability that the design ground motion intensity is exceeded in at least one of the two principal horizontal components of the structure, which for most structures are orthogonal to each other. Currently, design codes in the United States are based on RotD100, and hence using MaxRotD50 for structures with two orthogonal principal horizontal components would result in a reduction of the ground motion intensities used for design purposes.


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