capacity spectrum
DESCRIPTION
Spectro sismicoTRANSCRIPT
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CAPACITY SPECTRUM METHOD
Purdue UniversityCE571 - Earthquake Engineering
Spring 2002
Mete A. Sozen and Luis E. Garca
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Reference:
Freeman, S. A., (1990), On the Correlation of Code Forces to Earthquake Demands, Proceedings of the 4th US-Japan Workshop on Improvements of Building Structural Design and Construction Practices (ATC 15-3), Kailua-Kona, Hawaii.
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Acceleration-Displacement Spectra
O If values for the same period T of the acceleration response spectra and the displacement response spectra, obtained for the same damping coefficient, are plotted with the value of Sd(T,) in the abscissa axis, and the value of Sa(T,) in the ordinates axis, an acceleration-displacement response spectra is obtained.
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Acceleration-Displacement Spectra
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Push-Over AnalysisO The objective of the Push-Over is to establish the
lateral displacements of the structure as the applied base shear is increased monotonically.
O The relative distribution of the lateral loads that compose the base shear is maintained fixed during the analysis.
O Lateral load distribution employed usually follow the shape of the fundamental mode of vibration, but may be set arbitrarily to any type of distribution; inverted triangle, parabolic, and uniform have been employed, the result being sensitive to a certain extent to the distribution employed.
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Push-Over AnalysisO As the base shear is increased during the process,
the response of each individual element of the structure is evaluated for stiffness changes and failure modes.
O Using the component load-deformation data and the geometric relationships among components and elements, a global model of the structure relates the total seismic forces on a building to it overall lateral displacement to generate the capacity curve.
O During the pushover process of developing the capacity curve as brittle elements degrade, ductile elements take over the resistance and the result helps visualize the overall performance of the structure.
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Push-Over AnalysisO Backbone relationships are employed in most
cases.
O The properties of interest of such elements are relationships between the forces and the corresponding inelastic displacements.
Force
Displacement
Backbone curve
0
A
C
B D
E F G
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Push-Over AnalysisO During the procedure, once a point of behavior
change is detected for a particular element, appropriate changes in stiffness properties are made, and a new stage of the analysis is performed increasing the base shear until reaching a new point of change of behavior in any of the elements.
O This process is carried out iteratively until critical strength failure of one or several elements is detected or a collapse mechanism is reached.
O Results from the push-over analysis are presented in different forms; with a base shear vs. roof lateral displacement plot being the more popular.
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Push-Over Analysis
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0.00 0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25Story Drift (%h)
S
t
o
r
y
S
h
e
a
r
(
t
o
n
)
AnalyticalTest BTest 0
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Push-Over Example
3 m
6 m
A
B C
D E
F wall section 0.15 x 1 m
beam section 0.3 x 0.4 m
column section 0.5 x 0.5 m
Vs
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Push-Over Example
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Curvature (10-3/m)
M
o
m
e
n
t
(
k
N
.
m
)
ColumnBeam PositiveBeam NegativeWall
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Push-Over Example
Step 1 Wall cracks
Step 2 Wall yields
Step 3
Beam yields in positive moment
Step 4
Column yields
Step 5
Column yields
Step 6
Beam yields in negative
moment
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Push-Over Example
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
0 5 10 15 20 25
Roof Deflection (mm)
B
a
s
e
S
h
e
a
r
(
k
N
)
Stage 2
Collapse mechanism
forms
Stage 6
Stage 5
Stage 4
Stage 3
Stage 1
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O Freeman developed a procedure for finding the displacement demand on a system in the inelastic range by employing the response spectra of the ground motion, presented using the acceleration-displacement scheme, simultaneously with the capacity of the structure as obtained in a push-over analysis plotted in the same spectra by dividing the base shear by the weight of the structure (V/W).
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O The point where both the demand and the capacity curves intersect corresponds to the expected displacement demand during the ground motion.
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O The damping to use, eff, in order to define the demand spectral value correspond to the damping that occurs when the structure is pushed into the inelastic range and is viewed under this procedure as a combination of viscous and hysteretic damping.
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Capacity Spectrum Method
V/W
Sa
Sd
Teff Tinitial
eff
=2% =20%
displacement demand
CAPACITY push-over curve
=5%
DEMAND Acceleratio-displacement spectra
Ve/W
strength demand
elastic demand
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O The effective damping is obtained from:
O Where is a modification factor to account for the approximation involved in describing the hysteretic response of the system by a bilinear representation in the capacity curve.
O ranges with values as low as 0.3 for systems with poor and unreliable hysteretic behavior to a value of one for well-detailed elements with stable hysteresis loops.
O The 0.05 accounts for the viscous damping inherent in the system.
05.00eff +=
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Damping in the Capacity Spectrum Method
Sa
Sd Sdm Sdy
Sam Say
Area = Energy dissipated by hysteretic damping
Area = Maximum strain energy
Bilinear representation of capacity
Kinitial Keff
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O The value of 0 can be obtained from
Where ED corresponds to the energy dissipated by the hysteretic damping corresponding to the area of the shaded parallelogram in previous figure.
And Es corresponds to the maximum strain energy absorbed by the structure, equal to the area of the shaded triangle.
D0
S
E14 E
=
( )D ay dm am dyE 4 S S S S=
( )S am dm1E S S2=
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O In order to obtain the displacement demand on the structure, an iterative procedure must be employed.
O The initial stiffness and an arbitrary value of effective damping, say eff = 5%, are used to initiate the process.
O With these values, a displacement demand is obtained from the demand acceleration-displacement spectra for 5% damping, corresponding to point (0).
O The displacement demand for this period and damping is obtained, marked as 0.
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Capacity Spectrum Method
Sa
Sd
Tinitial
=2%
=20%
0
=5% =10%
(0)
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Capacity Spectrum Method
O From the capacity curve the effective period, Teff (1), compatible with this displacement is obtained, and the effective damping, eff (1), is computed.
O A new cycle is initiated by using this period and damping thus obtaining a new displacement demand 1.
O This procedure is repeated until the displacement demand m matches the spectral value for the Teff and eff employed.
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Capacity Spectrum Method
Sa
Sd
Teff (1) Tinitial
eff (1)
=2%
=20%
0
=5% =10%
(0)
1
(1)
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Capacity Spectrum Method
Sa
Sd
Teff (1) Tinitial
eff (1)
=2%
=20%
0
=5% =10%
(0)
1
Teff (2)
(1) eff (2)
(2)
2
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Capacity Spectrum MethodSa
Sd
Teff (1) Tinitial
eff (1)
=2%
=20%
0
=5% =10%
(0)
1
Teff (2)
(1) eff (2)
(2)
2 m
Teff
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Capacity Spectrum Method
Sa
Sd
Teff (1) Tinitial
eff (1)
=2%
=20%
0
=5% =10%
(0)
1
Teff (2)
(1) eff (2)
(2)
2 m
Teff
This is the expecteddisplacement compatiblewith the strength, stiffness,and ground motion
Acceleration-Displacement SpectraAcceleration-Displacement SpectraPush-Over AnalysisPush-Over AnalysisPush-Over AnalysisPush-Over AnalysisPush-Over AnalysisPush-Over ExamplePush-Over ExamplePush-Over ExamplePush-Over ExampleCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodDamping in the Capacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum MethodCapacity Spectrum Method