scholarly journals Effect of Soil-Structure Interaction on the Seismic Response of Existing Low and Mid-Rise RC Buildings

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8357
Author(s):  
Ibrahim Oz ◽  
Sevket Murat Senel ◽  
Mehmet Palanci ◽  
Ali Kalkan

Reconnaissance studies performed after destructive earthquakes have shown that seismic performance of existing buildings, especially constructed on weak soils, is significantly low. This situation implies the negative effects of soil-structure interaction on the seismic performance of buildings. In order to investigate these effects, 40 existing buildings from Turkey were selected and nonlinear models were constructed by considering fixed-base and stiff, moderate and soft soil conditions. Buildings designed before and after Turkish Earthquake code of 1998 were grouped as old and new buildings, respectively. Different soil conditions classified according to shear wave velocities were reflected by using substructure method. Inelastic deformation demands were obtained by using nonlinear time history analysis and 20 real acceleration records selected from major earthquakes were used. The results have shown that soil-structure interaction, especially in soft soil cases, significantly affects the seismic response of old buildings. The most significant increase in drift demands occurred in first stories and the results corresponding to fixed-base, stiff and moderate cases are closer to each other with respect to soft soil cases. Distribution of results has indicated that effect of soil-structure interaction on the seismic performance of new buildings is limited with respect to old buildings.

Author(s):  
Jim Xu ◽  
Sujit Samaddar

The soil-structure interaction (SSI) has a significant impact on nuclear power plant (NPP) structures, especially for massive and rigid structures founded on soils, such as containments. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC) Standard Review Plan (SRP) provides the requirement and acceptance criteria for incorporating the SSI effect in the seismic design and analyses of NPP structures. The NRC staff uses the SRP for safety review of license applications. Recent studies have indicated that ground motions in recorded real earthquake events have exhibited spatial incoherency in high-frequency contents. Several techniques have been developed to incorporate the incoherency effect in the seismic response analyses. Section 3.7.2 of Revision 3 of the SRP also provided guidance for use in the safety evaluation of seismic analyses considering ground motion spatial incoherency effect. This paper describes a case study of the SSI and incoherency effects on seismic response analyses of NPP structures. The study selected a typical containment structure. The SSI model is generated based on the typical industry practice for SSI computation of containment structures. Specifically, a commercial version of SASSI was used for the study, which considered a surface-founded structure. The SSI model includes the foundation, represented with brick elements, and the superstructure, represented using lumped mass and beams. The study considered various soil conditions and ground motion coherency functions to investigate the effect of the range of soil stiffness and the ground motion incoherency effect on SSI in determining the seismic response of the structures. This paper describes the SSI model development and presents the analysis results as well as insights into the manner in which the SSI and incoherency effects are related to different soil conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 877 ◽  
pp. 276-281
Author(s):  
Shreya Sitakant Shetgaonkar ◽  
Purnanand Savoikar

Current seismic design practice assumes the base of the building to be fixed and does not consider the flexibility of foundation and soil. This assumption is realistic only when the structure is founded on solid rock or when the relative stiffness of the foundation soil compared to the superstructure is high. Whereas, in reality due to natural ability of soil to deform, supporting soil medium modifies the response of the structure during earthquake to some extent. In this work the effect of soil structure interaction on seismic response of building resting on different types of foundation was studied. Present work aims to study the effect of soil structure interaction on seismic response of building resting on fixed base, pile foundation, raft foundation and combined pile-raft foundation. G+9 RCC building is analyzed for earthquake loads considered in zone III by response spectrum method and storey displacement and base shear force of building by considering and without considering SSI effect is found out by using MIDAS GEN software.


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (08) ◽  
pp. 1550043 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aslan S. Hokmabadi ◽  
Behzad Fatahi

In selecting the type of foundation best suited for mid-rise buildings in high risk seismic zones, design engineers may consider that a shallow foundation, a pile foundation, or a pile-raft foundation can best carry the static and dynamic loads. However, different types of foundations behave differently during earthquakes, depending on the soil–structure interaction (SSI) where the properties of the in situ soil and type of foundation change the dynamic characteristics (natural frequency and damping) of the soil–foundation–structure system. In order to investigate the different characteristics of SSI and its influence on the seismic response of building frames, a 3D numerical model of a 15-storey full-scale (prototype) structure was simulated with four different types of foundations: (i) A fixed-based structure that excludes the SSI, (ii) a structure supported by a shallow foundation, (iii) a structure supported by a pile-raft foundation in soft soil and (iv) a structure supported by a floating (frictional) pile foundation in soft soil. Finite difference analyzes with FLAC3D were then conducted using real earthquake records that incorporated material (soil and superstructure) and geometric (uplifting, gapping and [Formula: see text] effects) nonlinearities. The 3D numerical modeling procedure had previously been verified against experimental shaking table tests conducted by the authors. The results are then presented and compared in terms of soil amplification, shear force distribution and rocking of the superstructure, including its lateral deformation and drift. The results showed that the type of foundation is a major contributor to the seismic response of buildings with SSI and should therefore be given careful consideration in order to ensure a safe and cost effective design.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 43-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shehata E. Abdel Raheem ◽  
Mohamed M. Ahmed ◽  
Tarek M. A. Alazrak

Recent studies show that the effects of Soil Structure Interaction (SSI) may be detrimental to the seismic response of structure and neglecting SSI in analysis may lead to un-conservative design. Despite this, the conventional design procedure usually involves assumption of fixity at the base of foundation neglecting the flexibility of the foundation, the compressibility of soil mass and consequently the effect of foundation settlement on further redistribution of bending moment and shear force demands. The effects of SSI are analyzed for typical multi-story building resting on raft foundation. Three methods of analysis are used for seismic demands evaluation of the target moment resistant frame buildings: equivalent static load (ESL); response spectrum (RS) methods and nonlinear time history (TH) analysis with suit of nine time history records. Three-dimensional Finite Element (FE) model is constructed to analyze the effects of different soil conditions and number of stories on the vibration characteristics and seismic response demands of building structures. Numerical results obtained using soil structure interaction model conditions are compared to those corresponding to fixed-base support conditions. The peak responses of story shear, story moment, story displacement, story drift, moments at beam ends, as well as force of inner columns are analyzed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 3495-3505 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Çelebi ◽  
F. Göktepe ◽  
N. Karahan

Abstract. The objective of this paper focuses primarily on the numerical approach based on two-dimensional (2-D) finite element method for analysis of the seismic response of infinite soil-structure interaction (SSI) system. This study is performed by a series of different scenarios that involved comprehensive parametric analyses including the effects of realistic material properties of the underlying soil on the structural response quantities. Viscous artificial boundaries, simulating the process of wave transmission along the truncated interface of the semi-infinite space, are adopted in the non-linear finite element formulation in the time domain along with Newmark's integration. The slenderness ratio of the superstructure and the local soil conditions as well as the characteristics of input excitations are important parameters for the numerical simulation in this research. The mechanical behavior of the underlying soil medium considered in this prediction model is simulated by an undrained elasto-plastic Mohr-Coulomb model under plane-strain conditions. To emphasize the important findings of this type of problems to civil engineers, systematic calculations with different controlling parameters are accomplished to evaluate directly the structural response of the vibrating soil-structure system. When the underlying soil becomes stiffer, the frequency content of the seismic motion has a major role in altering the seismic response. The sudden increase of the dynamic response is more pronounced for resonance case, when the frequency content of the seismic ground motion is close to that of the SSI system. The SSI effects under different seismic inputs are different for all considered soil conditions and structural types.


Effect of soil-structure interaction (SSI) on seismic response of bridges is not clearly understood, and in general practice, bridge design is carried out ignoring its effect. This is due to the general consensus that fixed base leads to a more conservative design despite the fact that many researchers indicate that ignoring soil-structure interaction may lead to underestimation of seismic response. The current paper aims to investigate the effect of SSI on the nonlinear seismic behavior of 9-span continuous bridge supported on pile foundation penetrating sandy soils. Three types of soils were investigated representing medium to stiff sandy soil. Both pushover analysis and nonlinear time history incremental dynamic analysis are carried out using Opensees to investigate the effect of SSI on the seismic response parameters (namely, fundamental period, pushover curves, foundation rigid body motions, global ductility capacity and demand, and maximum drift ratio) of the bridge and to compare it to fixed base assumption (i.e., SSI ignored). The results indicate that although SSI increases the flexibility of the structure (accordingly increasing fundamental period), the seismic demand of the bridge increases. This increase is more pronounced as the soil becomes softer.


Author(s):  
Toshio Iwasaki ◽  
Kazuhiko Kawashima

In analyzing seismic behaviour of highway bridges constructed on soft soil deposits, it is important to take account of soil-structure interaction effects. In this paper, seismic response of a bridge pier-foundation is investigated based on earthquake acceleration records measured simultaneously on the pier crest and on the ground surface near that bridge. Four motions were used in the analysis, i.e., two were induced by two earthquakes with magnitudes of 7.5 and 6.6, respectively; and two by their aftershocks. In the former two earthquakes, the maximum accelerations were 186 and 438 gals on the ground surface, and 310 and 230 gals on the pier top, respectively. Analyses of frequency characteristics of the motions showed that the predominant frequencies of pier-foundation were always approximately identical with the fundamental natural frequency of the subsoil. Analyses of micro-tremors measured at the sites revealed that the natural frequency of the pier-foundation system is higher than the fundamental natural frequency of the subsoil. Analytical models were formulated to calculate the seismic response of the pier-foundation assuming the subsoil and pier-foundation to be a shear column model with an equivalent linear shear modulus and an elastically supported beam on the subsoil, respectively. Bedrock motions were computed from the measured ground surface motions and then applied to the bedrock of the analytical model. The seismic responses of pier-foundation were thus calculated and compared with the measured records giving a good agreement.


2012 ◽  
Vol 256-259 ◽  
pp. 2106-2110
Author(s):  
Xin Liang Jiang ◽  
Yue Li

An analytical approach based on branch mode method is formulated in this paper to study the dynamic response of eccentric structure considering soil-structure interaction The superstructure branch and foundation soil branch are coupled through mode aggregation procedure. The computational scale of system equations decreases to an acceptable level. Sample analysis indicate that the seismic response of eccentric structure increases first and then decreases with the decreasing of stiffness of soil-foundation system, which is affected by the inertia effect of foundation branch. For the soft soil case, the influence of SSI effect is more intensive that the trends of transfer function curves are fundamentally changed comparing to the results of other foundation conditions.


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