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Earthquake Analysis of an Existing Structure in the Southeast Region of the United States. Terri Norton and Makola M. Abdullah, Ph.D Wind Hazard & Earthquake Engineering Lab FAMU-FSU College of Engineering. OUTLINE. Introduction Earthquake Occurrence Objective Structural Description
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Earthquake Analysis of an Existing Structure in the Southeast Region of the United States Terri Norton and Makola M. Abdullah, Ph.D Wind Hazard & Earthquake Engineering Lab FAMU-FSU College of Engineering
OUTLINE • Introduction • Earthquake Occurrence • Objective • Structural Description • Structural Model • Dynamic Analysis • Results • Conclusion • Future Work Charleston earthquake of August 31, 1886.
INTRODUCTION • Southeastern US is exposed to natural phenomenon like hurricanes and earthquakes • One of the major earthquakes in the region occurred in Charleston, South Carolina (1886) • Between 1997 and 2001, more than 60 earthquakes have occurred in this region
SOUTH CAROLINA • 40 - 60% chance of another earthquake like the 1886 quake, in the next 30 years1 • $20 billion, total economic losses from damage2 • Earthquakes cause more damage in the eastern US3 (1. Nishenko & Bollinger, 1990; 2. SCEPD & FEMA, 2001 3. Chapman et. al, 1993)
OBJECTIVE • To evaluate the structure’s response to earthquake loading • Use control devices to reduce floor displacement • Reduce structural damage caused by earthquakes
STRUCTURE DESCRIPTION The Turlington Building was built in 1990 • Houses the Florida Department of Education • Located downtown Tallahassee, FL • Present worth: $39,624,000.00
STRUCTURE MODEL • 17 story steel frame building • W-shapes • 3 bays in the N-S, 10 bays in the E-W direction • 32 Columns, 104 Nodes • 312 DOF, including splices • Structure is fixed-connected at basement level 2
SYSTEM MODEL Equation of Motion: • M, C, K: mass, damping, and stiffness matrices • p: participation mass matrix • : ground acceleration (earthquake) • : relative displacement, relative velocity, relative acceleration.
DYNAMIC ANALYSIS • Passive Control • No external inputs to function • Tuned mass damper and Base Isolator • Input Load • Ground accelerations • Charleston Earthquake; Charleston, South Carolina • 1886 • Magnitude = 7.3 • Simulation Software • MATLAB, Simulink • Damage Approximation • Damage functions, HAZUS
CONCLUSION • By comparing the structure controlled to the uncontrolled structure, it can be seen that there is a reduction in the building displacement. • Reduced effects to structural and non-structural components • Reduced amount of damage
FUTURE WORK • Research the effects of building acceleration to nonstructural damage • Use a 3-D model for analysis • Repeat study using hurricane wind forces • Use results as a teaching tool
REFERENCE • Bollinger, G. A., Chapman, M.C., & Sibol, M.S. (1993). “A Comparison of Earthquake Damage Areas as a Function of Magnitude Across the United States.” Bulletin of Seismological Society of America, 83(4), 1064-1080. • Chopra, A. K. (2001). Dynamics of Structures, Theory and Applications to Earthquake Engineering, Prentice-Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ. • FEMA. (1999). “HAZUS: National Hazard Loss Estimation Methodology.”Technical Manual. • Nishenko, S. P. B., G. A. (1990). “Forecasting damaging earthquakes in the Central and Eastern U.S.” Science, 249, 1412-1416. • SCEPD. (2001). “Comprehensive Seismic Risk and Vulnerability Study for the State of South Carolina.” 1, URS Corporation. • Sibol, M. S., Snoke, J.A., Bollinger, G.A., Birch, J.B., & Johnston, A.C. (1990). “The Probability of a Major Earthquake in the Eastern United States.” Seismological Research Letters, 61(2), 133-134. • Spencer, B., Christenson, R., and Dyke, S. “Next Generation Benchmark Control Problem for Seismically Excited Buildings.” 2nd World Congress on Structural Control, Kyoto, Japan. • Tedesco, J. W., McDougal, W.G., and Ross, C.A. (1999). Structural Dynamics: Theory and Applications, Addison Wesley Longman, Inc., Melo Park.