scholarly journals KELAS SOIL DAERAH SEKITAR RENCANA TAPAK REAKTOR DAYA EKSPERIMENTAL (RDE) SERPONG DARI DATA MIKROTREMOR

2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 57
Author(s):  
Marjiyono Marjiyono ◽  
Hadi Suntoko ◽  
A. Soehaimi ◽  
Yuliastuti Yuliastuti ◽  
H. Syaeful

ABSTRAK KELAS SOIL DAERAH SEKITAR RENCANA TAPAK REAKTOR DAYA EKSPERIMENTAL (RDE) SERPONG DARI DATA MIKROTREMOR. Karakteristik geologi permukaan memegang peranan penting dalam analisis respon gelombang di suatu wilayah.  Sehubungan dengan rencana pembangunan Reaktor Daya Eksperimental (RDE) di Serpong, telah dilakukan pemodelan kondisi bawah permukaan dari kombinasi data mikrotremor array dan single station. Pengukuran mikrotremor array dilakukan di 9 lokasi, sedangkan single station di 90 lokasi yang tersebar pada radius ± 1 km di sekitar tapak RDE. Model bawah permukaan yang berupa struktur kecepatan gelombang geser selanjutnya dijadikan dasar untuk menghitung nilai Vs30 di daerah tersebut. Hasil klasifikasi soil berdasarkan nilai Vs30 menunjukkan kelas soil untuk wilayah sekitar tapak RDE secara umum terdiri atas kelas SD (soil menengah) dan SC (batuan lunak). Lokasi rencana tapak sendiri berada dalam wilayah kelas soil SD. Kata kunci : kelas soil, kecepatan gelombang geser, mikrotremor, tapak RDE, Vs30.   ABSTRACT SOIL CLASS AROUND THE SERPONG EXPERIMENTAL POWER REACTOR (EPR) SITE PLAN BASE ON MICROTREMOR DATA. Surface geological characteristics has an important role on site response analysis in a region. In regard with experimental power reactor (EPR) construction plan in Serpong, the subsurface modeling from combination array and single station microtremor data was done. The array and single station microtremor measurement were performed in 9 and 90 sites, respectively, at ± 1 km radius around the EPR site plan. The Vs30 value was calculated from shear wave velocity structure around the investigated area. The soil classification based on Vs30 in the investigated area generally consists of SD (medium soil) and SC (soft rock) class. The EPR site plan its self in the SD class region. Keyword : soil class, shear wave velocity, microtremor, EPR site, Vs30

2014 ◽  
Vol 580-583 ◽  
pp. 264-267
Author(s):  
Sheng Jie Di ◽  
Zhi Gang Shan ◽  
Xue Yong Xu

Characterization of the shear wave velocity of soils is an integral component of various seismic analysis, including site classification, hazard analysis, site response analysis, and soil-structure interaction. Shear wave velocity at offshore sites of the coastal regions can be measured by the suspension logging method according to the economic applicability. The study presents some methods for estimating the shear wave velocity profiles in the absence of site-specific shear wave velocity data. By applying generalized regression neural network (GRNN) for the estimation of in-situ shear wave velocity, it shows good performances. Therefore, this estimation method is worthy of being recommended in the later engineering practice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
Nanang Sugianto ◽  
Refrizon Refrizon

Shear wave velocity <em>(V<sub>s</sub>)</em> structure at along of Central Bengkulu-Kepahiang crossline has been mapped. This research aims to identify the subsurface structure and to estimate the constituent material type of rock in landslide-prone areas (Central Bengkulu-Kepahiang crossline). Shear wave velocity structure on each site is obtained by the HVSR-inversion of 146 microtremor data (ambient noise recording of seismometer). <em>V<sub>s</sub></em> structure at the line mapped from the surface until to 30 meters of the depth. Groups of Vs are identified in class E (<em>V<sub>s</sub></em> &lt;180), Class D (180≤<em> V<sub>s</sub></em> &lt;360), Class C (360≤<em> V<sub>s</sub></em> &lt;760), and Class B (760≤<em> V<sub>s</sub></em> &lt;1500). The subsurface structure at the depth of 0 to 10 meters are dominated by stiff soil, very dense soil, and soft rock which has highly fractured and weathered rock properties. At the depth of 15 meters to 30 meters, the subsurface structure is dominated by hard rock but it is high potential or easy to fracturing and weathering like the properties of the rocks in areas that have landslides in the past. Based on <em>V<sub>s</sub></em> value, rock constituent materials are deposition of sand, clay, gravel and alluvium ranging from soft to relatively hard structures at the depth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (13) ◽  
pp. 5273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karma Tempa ◽  
Raju Sarkar ◽  
Abhirup Dikshit ◽  
Biswajeet Pradhan ◽  
Armando Lucio Simonelli ◽  
...  

Earthquakes, when it comes to natural calamities, are characteristically devastating and pose serious threats to buildings in urban areas. Out of multiple seismic regions in the Himalayas, Bhutan Himalaya is one that reigns prominent. Bhutan has seen several moderate-sized earthquakes in the past century and various recent works show that a major earthquake like the 2015 Nepal earthquake is impending. The southwestern city of Bhutan, Phuentsholing is one of the most populated regions in the country and the present study aims to explore the area using geophysical methods (Multispectral Analysis of Surface Waves (MASW)) for understanding possibilities pertaining to infrastructural development. The work involved a geophysical study on eight different sites in the study region which fall under the local area plan of Phuentsholing City. The geophysical study helps to discern shear wave velocity which indicates the soil profile of a region along with possible seismic hazard during an earthquake event, essential for understanding the withstanding power of the infrastructure foundation. The acquired shear wave velocity by MASW indicates visco-elastic soil profile down to a depth of 22.2 m, and it ranged from 350 to 600 m/s. A site response analysis to understand the correlation of bedrock rigidness to the corresponding depth was conducted using EERA (Equivalent-linear Earthquake Site Response Analysis) software. The amplification factors are presented for each site and maximum amplification factors are highlighted. These results have led to a clear indication of how the bedrock characteristics influence the surface ground motion parameters for the corresponding structure period. The results infer that the future constructional activity in the city should not be limited to two- to five-story buildings as per present practice. Apart from it, a parametric study was initiated to uncover whatever effects rigid bedrock has upon hazard parameters for various depths of soil profile up to 30 m, 40 m, 60 m, 80 m, 100 m, 120 m, 140 m, 160 m, 180 m and 200 m from the ground surface. The overriding purpose of doing said parametric study is centered upon helping the stack holders who can use the data for future development. Such a study is the first of its kind for the Bhutan region, which suffers from the unavailability of national seismic code, and this is a preliminary step towards achieving it.


Author(s):  
Brian Carlton ◽  
Amir M. Kaynia

ABSTRACT This article describes a probabilistic site-response analysis for the city of Oslo, Norway. We first perform a probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) for hard rock. Then, we conduct site-response analyses using Monte Carlo simulations to capture uncertainty in the site profile. We include four base-case soil profiles to incorporate epistemic uncertainty, and we vary the shear-wave velocity profile and shear-modulus reduction and damping curves to account for aleatory variability. We base the soil profiles on over 7000 in situ tests, and the shear-wave velocity profile median, standard deviation, and interlayer correlation on over 559 cone penetration tests. Next, we perform regression analyses to estimate medians and standard deviations of site-specific amplification factors (AFs). Finally, we modify the ground-motion models for rock with the AFs and recompute the PSHA for the soil surface. The analyses show that (1) shallower soil profiles have larger uniform hazard spectra (UHS) values at short periods and smaller UHS values at long periods; (2) epistemic uncertainty of the base-case soil shear-wave velocity profile leads to alternative UHS values with a difference of a factor of 2 at short periods; (3) there is only a small difference in the mean magnitudes and distances controlling the hazard for the PSHA conducted for rock compared to soil; (4) response spectra calculated from site-response analyses with no aleatory variability of the soil properties predict significantly smaller spectral acceleration values at periods shorter than the natural site period; (5) using site amplification standard deviations based on ground-motion recordings, instead of site-response analyses, results in a 10%–20% reduction in the soil surface UHS at short periods and a 5%–10% increase at long periods; and (6) the Eurocode 8 AFs are, in general, conservative for Oslo.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boqin Xu ◽  
Ellen M Rathje ◽  
Youssef Hashash ◽  
Jonathan Stewart ◽  
Kenneth Campbell ◽  
...  

Small-strain damping profiles developed from geotechnical laboratory testing have been observed to be smaller than the damping inferred from the observed site amplification from downhole array recordings. This study investigates the high-frequency spectral decay parameter ( κ0) of earthquake motions from soil sites and evaluates the use of κ0 to constrain the small-strain damping profile for one-dimensional site response analysis. Using data from 51 sites from the Kiban-Kyoshin strong motion network (KiK-net) array in Japan and six sites from California, a relationship was developed between κ0 at the surface and both the 30-m time-averaged shear wave velocity ( V s30) and the depth to the 2.5 km/s shear wave velocity horizon ( Z2.5). This relationship demonstrates that κ0 increases with decreasing V s30 and increasing Z2.5. An approach is developed that uses this relationship to establish a target κ0 from which to constrain the small-strain damping profile used in one-dimensional site response analysis. This approach to develop κ0-consistent damping profiles for site response analysis is demonstrated through a recent site amplification study of Central and Eastern North America for the NGA-East project.


2010 ◽  
Vol 182 (3) ◽  
pp. 1603-1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ekrem Zor ◽  
Serdar Özalaybey ◽  
Aylin Karaaslan ◽  
M. Cengiz Tapırdamaz ◽  
Suna Ç. Özalaybey ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (02) ◽  
pp. 1650010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saeed Zaman ◽  
Pennung Warnitchai

Shear wave velocity ([Formula: see text]) through the uppermost subsurface (30 m) is usually considered an important parameter as it dictates the dynamic behavior of soil and also acts as an input parameter for site response analysis, seismic hazard analysis, and site classification. In majority of seismically active areas across the globe, especially in developing countries like Pakistan, the [Formula: see text] measurements are either not available or if available, they are very limited in number to develop a seismic site-conditions map. In the absence of proper geological studies and geotechnical investigation, the slope-derived method provides a simple solution to map the site-conditions. The current study presents the development of slope-derived [Formula: see text] map on the basis of a correlation between [Formula: see text] and topographic slope for active tectonic regions and its comparison with the [Formula: see text] values at various locations in Pakistan. The topographic slope is calculated from digital elevation model (CDEM) of the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) 30 arc-sec global topographic data set. The [Formula: see text] values comprise of directly available, values calculated/estimated from the standard penetration tests (SPTs [Formula: see text]-value) and primary waves at various locations in Pakistan. [Formula: see text] values at various parts/locations in Pakistan and values from the slope-derived [Formula: see text] map are found to be fairly comparable and based on these results for seismically active areas like Pakistan, slope-derived method can be applied for the first-order site-condition studies.


Author(s):  
Lee M. Liberty ◽  
James St. Clair ◽  
T. Dylan Mikesell ◽  
William D. Schermerhorn

ABSTRACT We present a simple and automated approach to estimate primary site-response resonance, layer thickness, and shear-wave velocity directly from a dispersion image for a layer over half-space problem. We demonstrate this for high-impedance boundary conditions that lie in the upper tens of meters. Our approach eliminates the need for time-consuming dispersion curve picking and 1D shear-wave velocity inversion for large data volumes that can capture velocity structure in profile. We highlight important relationships between dispersion characteristics and resonance parameters through synthetic modeling and field data acquired over Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments. In this environment, shallow soil conditions are critical to accurately estimate earthquake site response. We suggest that this image processing approach can be applied to a range of high-impedance conditions, at a range of scales, or can provide model constraints for more complex velocity structures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 11058
Author(s):  
Abdelouahab Issaadi ◽  
Fethi Semmane ◽  
Abdelkrim Yelles-Chaouche ◽  
Juan José Galiana-Merino ◽  
Anis Mazari

In order to better assess the seismic hazard in the northern region of Algeria, the shear-wave velocity structure in the Middle-Chelif Basin is estimated using ambient vibration single-station and array measurements. The Middle-Chelif Basin is located in the central part of the Chelif Basin, the largest of the Neogene sedimentary basins in northern Algeria. This basin hosts the El-Asnam fault, one of the most important active faults in the Mediterranean area. In this seismically active region, most towns and villages are built on large unconsolidated sedimentary covers. Application of the horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) technique at 164 sites, and frequency–wavenumber (F–K) analysis at 7 other sites, allowed for the estimation of the ground resonance frequencies, shear-wave velocity profiles, and sedimentary cover thicknesses. The electrical resistivity tomography method was used at some sites to further constrain the thickness of the superficial sedimentary layers. The soil resonance frequencies range from 0.75 Hz to 12 Hz and the maximum frequency peak amplitude is 6.2. The structure of the estimated shear-wave velocities is presented in some places as 2D profiles to help interpret the existing faults. The ambient vibration data allowed us to estimate the maximum depth in the Middle-Chelif Basin, which is 760 m near the city of El-Abadia.


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