Geometrical Non-Linear Analysis of Truss Structures under 3D Seismic Loads

2014 ◽  
Vol 501-504 ◽  
pp. 1587-1591
Author(s):  
Yong Jiang ◽  
Jian Zhu ◽  
Yan Bin Zhang ◽  
Xin Zhang

The seismic response of space structures has been widely studied in the past few years. It has been shown that space structures behave well under seismic loading. However there has been little attention given to the effects of geometrical non-linearity on the seismic response. In this paper, a double-layer truss model was created by finite element analysis program-Lusas. The analysis process took into account of geometrical non-linearity and a 3D seismic loading obtained from a real earthquake. Time-history method was used to investigate the axial forces and displacements of critical members of the model during the earthquake. The seismic behavior of the model and the effect of non-linearity were finally discussed for further applications and studies.

2013 ◽  
Vol 663 ◽  
pp. 80-86
Author(s):  
Hai Qing Liu ◽  
Ming Ji Ma ◽  
Gui Jun Wang

More and more irregular structure appears in people's lives, while the theoretical research and disaster experience show that the irregular structure in the earthquake will produce translation and torsion coupled spatial vibration, and sometimes it will cause very serious consequences. Being based on the practical engineering -the Castle Hotel of Dalian, this text makes use of finite element analysis software--- ANSYS. By analyzing the dynamic characteristics and seismic response, we get the self-vibration characteristics of the structure and the time history curve of top level displacement and acceleration of the structure under the effect of earthquake forces. The calculation results indicate that it is effective and reasonable to set up three-dimensional finite element model used for the analyzing of seismic response by ANSYS.


2012 ◽  
Vol 166-169 ◽  
pp. 2124-2127
Author(s):  
Han Bing Qi ◽  
Qiu Shi Wang ◽  
Li Li Wang ◽  
Xiao Dan Wu

The finite element analysis method was used to analyze the seismic response of two oil pipelines, which have corrosion defects and no defects correspondingly. The velocity, displacement and acceleration time history of the two pipelines and the contrastive analysis of the maximum stress of two pipelines were obtained. The results show that the displacement, velocity and acceleration of the pipeline with corrosion defects are larger than those of the pipeline without corrosion defects, the corrosion has great influence on the bottom of the pipeline, and the influence also has certain wide, the farther away from the corrosion, the smaller the influence is.


2011 ◽  
Vol 90-93 ◽  
pp. 2487-2491
Author(s):  
Xue Ling Li ◽  
Xiang Chao Yin ◽  
Hai Bin Zhang

The results of theoretical research and earthquake damage investigation show that seismic response analysis of different plane structure in horizontal direction is different. Dynamic characteristics and seismic response analysis of four kinds of architectural models with different planes were analyzed by using the finite element analysis software. The inherent characteristics and earthquake time-history curves in different intensity level X, Y direction of displacement, velocity, acceleration and angle displace were studied. The results show that the seismic response of the four kinds of structures separates gradually, and the separation gap increases with increase of earthquake intensity. The building structure is safer in the long side direction than that in the short side in lateral earthquake response. The irregular structure can cause strong response in both horizontal in a single direction of earthquake effect. The second floor is a weak layer of the building structure which should be paid more attention to.


2011 ◽  
Vol 255-260 ◽  
pp. 1096-1101
Author(s):  
Qing Zhao

Taking an engineering design case about a city elevated curved box girders bridge, the dynamic calculating model of the curved box girders bridge is created by the finite element analysis program ANSYS. The analysis of curved box girders bridge with space seismic response are discussed, and a time history analysis is conducted for the curved box girders bridge subjected to the E1 Centro earthquake waves in two conditions.The internal force and the displacement time history response curve of the curved box girders bridge are obtained. The results indicate that the seismic response of curved box girders bridge with three-dimensional earthquake are bigger than two-dimensional, and consider the vertical seismic have considerable influence on the axial force of bridge piers, the internal force and displacement of box girders.


Author(s):  
Juan Ma ◽  
Mei Huang

This paper is aimed at analyzing the structural responses of a Generation IV heavy-liquid-metal-cooled reactor (lead-bismuth-cooled fast reactor) vessel in the event of earthquake. For a seismic design, the seismic time history response analyses are carried out for both a top support type and a bottom support type. It is found that the bottom support type exhibits the better performance. There is the gap between the reactor vessel and guard vessel being filled with [1] argon. It is indispensable to add bellows at vessel upper end for a bottom support type to achieve the connection and seal between the reactor vessel and guard vessel. This paper is the first attempt to evaluate the effects on structural seismic performance by adopting the equivalent springs to simulate this elastic connection. For a seismic investigation, there is a key issue that should be focused on, namely: the fluid-structure interaction due to seismic loading. The vessel is filled with a high-density fluid and might lead to severe hydrodynamic pressure significantly in the occurrence of earthquake. It will impair the structural integrity of reactor vessel. In order to study the structure effects of reactor vessel under seismic loading, an appropriate 3-D finite element analysis model has to be set up and the FEM code ANSYS has been implemented.


2014 ◽  
Vol 619 ◽  
pp. 81-90
Author(s):  
Xiu Yun Gao ◽  
Yi Tan Jiang

According to the Chaoyang town east bridge design data, build the model with finite element analysis method. Based on two levels fortification, two stage design ideas of seismic design, modal response spectrum and seismic response of the nonlinear time history analysis method are used respectively. The nonlinear effect of the boundary conditions are considered in the analysis process, and the seismic response of the cable-stayed bridge is obtained, providing bases and presenting methods for aseismic design of Chaoyang town east bridge.


2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 451-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Parish ◽  
M. Sadek ◽  
I. Shahrour

Abstract. The present study concerns analysis of the seismic response of earth dams. The behaviour of both the shell and core of the dam is described using the simple and popular non associated Mohr-Coulomb criterion. The use of this constitutive model is justified by the difficulty to obtain constitutive parameters for more advanced constitutive relations including isotropic and kinematic hardening. Analyses with real earthquake records show that the seismic loading induces plasticity in a large part of the shell and in the lower part of the core. Analysis shows that plasticity should be considered in the analysis of the seismic response of the dam, because it leads to a decrease in the natural frequencies of the dam together to energy dissipation, which could significantly affect the seismic response of the dam. Plastic analysis constitutes also a good tool for the verification of the stability of the dam under seismic loading.


1985 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 127-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Prabhakaran

Abstract The finite element method, which is a numerical discretization technique for obtaining approximate solutions to complex physical problems, is accepted in many industries as the primary tool for structural analysis. Computer graphics is an essential ingredient of the finite element analysis process. The use of interactive graphics techniques for analysis of tires is discussed in this presentation. The features and capabilities of the program used for pre- and post-processing for finite element analysis at GenCorp are included.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 906
Author(s):  
Payam Tehrani ◽  
Denis Mitchell

The seismic responses of continuous multi-span reinforced concrete (RC) bridges were predicted using inelastic time history analyses (ITHA) and incremental dynamic analysis (IDA). Some important issues in ITHA were studied in this research, including: the effects of using artificial and natural records on predictions of the mean seismic demands, effects of displacement directions on predictions of the mean seismic response, the use of 2D analysis with combination rules for prediction of the response obtained using 3D analysis, and prediction of the maximum radial displacement demands compared to the displacements obtained along the principal axes of the bridges. In addition, IDA was conducted and predictions were obtained at different damage states. These issues were investigated for the case of regular and irregular bridges using three different sets of natural and artificial records. The results indicated that the use of natural and artificial records typically resulted in similar predictions for the cases studied. The effect of displacement direction was important in predicting the mean seismic response. It was shown that 2D analyses with the combination rules resulted in good predictions of the radial displacement demands obtained from 3D analyses. The use of artificial records in IDA resulted in good prediction of the median collapse capacity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 3190
Author(s):  
Edmundo Schanze ◽  
Gilberto Leiva ◽  
Miguel Gómez ◽  
Alvaro Lopez

Engineering practitioners do not usually include soil–structure interactions in building design; rather, it is common to model and design foundations as embedded joints with joint–based reactions. In some cases, foundation structures are modeled as rigid bodies, embedding the first story into lower vertical elements. Given that the effects of underground floors on the seismic response are not generally included in current building design provisions, it has been little explored in the literature. This work compares and analyzes models to study the effects of different underground stories modeling approaches using earthquake vibration data recorded for the 16–story Alcazar building office in downtown Viña del Mar (Chile). The modeling expands beyond an embedded first story structure to soil with equivalent springs, representing soil–structure interaction (SSI), with varying rigid soil homogeneity. The building was modeled in a finite element software considering only dead load as a static load case because the structure remained in the framing stage when the monitoring system was operating. The instruments registered 72 aftershocks from the 2010 Maule Earthquake, and this study focused on 11 aftershocks of different hypocenters and magnitudes to collect representative information. The comparisons between empirical records and models in this study showed a better fit between the model and the real vibration data for the models that do consider the SSI using horizontal springs attached to the retaining walls of the underground stories. In addition, it was observed that applying a stiffness reduction factor of 0.7 to all elements in deformation verification models for average–height buildings was suitable to analyze the behavior under small earthquakes; better results are obtained embedding the structure in the foundation level than embedding in the street level; the use of horizontal springs with Kuesel’s model with traction for the analysis of the structure yields appropriate results; it is necessary to carefully select the spring constants to be used, paying special attention to the vertical springs. Even though the results presented herein indicate that the use of vertical springs to simulate the SSI of the base slab can result in major differences concerning the real response, it is necessary to obtain more data from instrumentation across a wider variety of structures to continue to evaluate better design and modeling practices. Similarly, further analyses, including nonlinear time–history and high–intensity events, are needed to best regulate building design.


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