scholarly journals Reliability-Based Earthquake Design of Jacket-Type Offshore Platforms Considering Pile-Soil-Structure Interaction

2009 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 631-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asgarian
Author(s):  
Mehrdad Kimiaei

Earthquake design of offshore platforms is one of the main parts in offshore platforms design on which seismic soil pile structure interaction could be the main concern. In seismically active areas, it is often necessary to perform a dynamic analysis that accounts for nonlinear pile soil structure interaction effects. Based on a previously developed numerical BNWF-FE model for nonlinear seismic response of offshore platforms, in this paper, sensitivity of seismic response of an existing sample offshore platform to different earthquake events (with different duration and different frequency contents) together with the sensitivity of the results to the model main parameters are investigated.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (Summer and Autumn 2019) ◽  
pp. 31-40
Author(s):  
Hossein Gholami ◽  
Behrouz Asgarian ◽  
Farshad Hashemi Rezvani ◽  
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...  

Author(s):  
Mehrdad Kimiaei ◽  
Mohsen Ali Shayanfar ◽  
M. Hesham El Naggar ◽  
Ali Akbar Aghakouchak

Pile supported offshore platforms in seismically active areas should be designed to survive severe earthquake excitations with no global structural failure. It is often required to perform nonlinear seismic analysis of offshore platforms that accounts for soil nonlinearity, discontinuity condition at pile soil interfaces, energy dissipation through soil radiation damping and structural nonlinear behaviours of the piles. In this study a BNWF (Beam on Nonlinear Winkler Foundation) model is incorporated into a finite element program (ANSYS) and it is used to compute the lateral response of piles subjected to seismic loading. The soil stiffness is established using the P-Y curve. The results of equivalent linear earthquake free field ground motion analyses are used as the input excitations at support nodes of the model. The components and advantages of this practical ANSYS model in seismic pile soil structure interaction analyses are discussed and addressed in detail. Computed responses compared well with the experimental test results. Sensitivity of the results to model parameters and site response calculations are evaluated.


Author(s):  
Jiun-Yih Chen ◽  
Richard Litton ◽  
Albert Ku ◽  
Ramsay Fraser ◽  
Philippe Jeanjean

Offshore platforms for oil and gas production in seismic regions around the world are often required to be designed for seismic hazards according to International Standards (e.g., ISO 19901-2 [1] and ISO 19902 [2]). This paper discusses three important aspects of the nonlinear dynamic time history analysis commonly used to design for Abnormal Level Earthquakes (ALE) in light of findings from recent centrifuge modeling and numerical simulation of the response of offshore structures under earthquake excitations. First, greater-than-expected ground motion de-amplification has been observed in a recent seismic soil-structure interaction centrifuge program for typical “soft” marine clays with undrained shear strength up to 100 kPa per API RP 2GEO [3]. Second, the current industry practice of using uniform down-pile ground motions in the time history analysis tends to underestimate pile bending moments. Use of depth-varying ground motions is strongly recommended to better characterize pile bending moments. Alternatively, a simplified design approach is proposed to account for the higher bending moments from the use of more realistic depth-varying ground motions. This approach is illustrated with a design example. Lastly, hysteretic and radiation damping in soil-structure interaction is discussed. Modeling of hysteretic damping is achieved using nonlinear elasto-plastic soil springs with unload-reload behavior following Masing’s rule, whereas modeling of radiation damping is achieved using viscous dashpots in a parallel or series arrangement with the axial and lateral soil springs and with dashpot coefficients based on O’Rourke and Dobry [4]. The centrifuge data show that proper modeling of radiation damping is important to accurately predict pile load and settlement.


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