Analysis on effect of surface fault to site ground motion using finite element method

2003 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-112
Author(s):  
Bing-zheng Cao ◽  
Qi-feng Luo
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (16) ◽  
pp. 5489
Author(s):  
Rulin Zhang ◽  
Shili Chu ◽  
Kailai Sun ◽  
Zhongtao Zhang ◽  
Huaifeng Wang

This paper investigates the effect of the multi-directional components of ground motion on an unanchored steel storage tank. Both the liquid sloshing effect and contact behavior between the foundation and tank are included in the study. A three-dimensional model for a foundation–structure–liquid system is numerically simulated using the finite element method. The Lagrange fluid finite element method (FEM) in ANSYS is used to consider the liquid–solid interaction. In the liquid–structure–foundation interaction model, the contact and target elements are adapted to simulate the nonlinear uplift and slip effects between the tank and the foundation. Three earthquake ground motions are selected for evaluating the seismic behavior of the tank. Comparisons are made on the horizontal displacement, “elephant-foot” deformation, stress, base shear and moment, sloshing of the liquid, uplift, as well as slip behavior under the application of the unidirectional, bi-directional and tri-directional components. Under the selected ground motions, the horizontal bi-directional seismic component has great influence on the liquid sloshing in the tank studied in this paper. The vertical seismic component produces high compressive axial stress, and it also makes the uplift and slide of the tank bottom increase significantly. The applicability of this conclusion should be carefully considered when applied to other types of ground motion inputs.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (8) ◽  
pp. 992-998
Author(s):  
Fernando Vereda ◽  
Juan de Vicente ◽  
Roque Hidalgo-Alvarez

We report a finite element method study on the effect of surface roughness on the field-induced magnetization of micrometric iron particles and on the interparticle magnetostatic forces between them. Calculations were carried out for two-dimensional geometries in which particles were modelled as discs. Roughness was introduced as semicircular protrusions or as triangular- or square-wave profiles. Interestingly, we found that increasing amplitudes of the triangular- or square-wave profiles facilitated the magnetization of the particles, resulting in larger interparticle forces at fields below saturation. The effect of the semicircular protrusions and of the spatial frequency of the wave profiles was comparatively small, suggesting that in real systems the effect of particle roughness on magnetic properties may depend on the specific surface morphology. The permeability of the particles also influenced the extent to which roughness facilitated the magnetization process: a larger permeability resulted in larger differences between the magnetization curves of the smooth and the rough particles. Results are relevant to magnetorheological fluids, since we show that surface roughness can affect the magnetic interactions between particles.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 36-40
Author(s):  
Tilak Pokharel ◽  
Tsuyoshi Ichimura ◽  
Muneo Hori ◽  
Toshio Nagashima

In this study, the framework for the seismic response analysis of oil-storage tank along fault-structure system concept has been presented; where the long period ground motion simulation and sloshing simulation based on 3D finite element method (FEM) is integrated. Three dimensional finite element model is constructed using multi-resolution structured and unstructured mesh for the ground motion prediction. For the sloshing analysis Lagrangian Finite Element Method is used. Also the effect of surface topography on the sloshing response is checked and the effect is found to be significant.


Nanoscale ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (43) ◽  
pp. 20868-20875 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junxiong Guo ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Yuan Lin ◽  
Yu Tian ◽  
Jinxing Zhang ◽  
...  

We propose a graphene plasmonic infrared photodetector tuned by ferroelectric domains and investigate the interfacial effect using the finite element method.


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