PEER EARTHQUAKE SCIENCE-ENGINEERING INTERFACE: STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING RESEARCH PERSPECTIVE Allin Cornell Stanford University SCEC WORKSHOP Oakland, CA.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PEER 2002 PEER Annual Meeting PEER 2002 Annual Meeting uHelmut Krawinkler Seismic Demand Analysis.
Advertisements

Ground Motions Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering: Steve Kramer
PEER Relating Structural Response to Damage Eduardo Miranda Hesaam Aslani Shahram Taghavi Stanford University PEER 2002 Annual Meeting.
Performance-based Evaluation of the Seismic Response of Bridges with Foundations Designed to Uplift Marios Panagiotou Assistant Professor, University of.
Nirmal Jayaram Nilesh Shome Helmut Krawinkler 2010 SCEC Annual Meeting A statistical analysis of the responses of tall buildings to recorded and simulated.
TBI Committee Members Y. Bozorgnia C.B. Crouse J.P. Stewart
PEER 2002 PEER Annual Meeting PEER 2002 Annual Meeting uPractical Application of the PEER Limit State Checking Methodolgy uAllin Cornell uwith F. Jalayer,
EERI Seminar on Next Generation Attenuation Models SCEC GMSV Workshop: Summary of Other Validation Methodologies/Applications Nicolas Luco, Research Structural.
Prague, March 18, 2005Antonio Emolo1 Seismic Hazard Assessment for a Characteristic Earthquake Scenario: Integrating Probabilistic and Deterministic Approaches.
Keck Telescope Seismic Upgrade Design Support - Progress Report Frank Kan Andrew Sarawit 4 May 2011 (Revised 5 May 2011)
Distant Deep Earthquake Impact on Seismic Hazard in Serbia
by: Jon Heintz, S.E. & Robert Pekelnicky
GMSM Mission and Vision Jennie Watson-Lamprey October 29, 2007.
Earthquake location rohan.sdsu.edu/~kbolsen/geol600_nhe_location_groundmotion.ppt.
PEER Jonathan P. Stewart University of California, Los Angeles May 22, 2002 Geotechnical Uncertainties for PBEE.
February 24, 2003James N. Brune Precarious Rocks, Shattered Rock, and Seismic Hazard at Low Probabilities for Yucca Mountain Presentation to the Nuclear.
GMSM Methodology and Terminology Christine Goulet, UCLA GMSM Core Members.
1 Workshop on GMSM for Nonlinear Analysis, Berkeley CA, October 26, 2006 ATC-63 Selection and Scaling Method Charles Kircher Curt B. Haselton Gregory G.
Quantifying risk by performance- based earthquake engineering, Cont’d Greg Deierlein Stanford University …with contributions by many 2006 IRCC Workshop.
Ground Motion Intensity Measures for Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering Hemangi Pandit Joel Conte Jon Stewart John Wallace.
The use of risk in design: ATC 58 performance assessment procedure Craig D. Comartin.
Demand and Capacity Factor Design: A Performance-based Analytic Approach to Design and Assessment Sharif University of Technology, 25 April 2011 Demand.
Characterization of Ground Motion Hazard PEER Summative Meeting - June 13, 2007 Yousef Bozorgnia PEER Associate Director.
Yousef Bozorgnia, Mahmoud Hachem, Kenneth Campbell PEER GMSM Workshop, UC Berkeley October 27, 2006 Attenuation of Inelastic Spectra and Its Applications.
Yousef Bozorgnia PEER Associate Director PEER GMSM Workshop, UC Berkeley October 27, 2006 PEER Ground Motion Selection & Modification (GMSM) Workshop.
Overview of GMSM Methods Nicolas Luco 1 st Workshop on Ground Motion Selection and Modification (GMSM) for Nonlinear Analysis – 27 October 2006.
Review of GMSM Solicitation and Methods Nicolas Luco, On behalf of The PEER GMSM Program 2 nd Annual PEER Ground Motion Selection & Modification (GMSM)
First a digression The POC Ranking the Methods Jennie Watson-Lamprey October 29, 2007.
Assessing Effectiveness of Building Code Provisions Greg Deierlein & Abbie Liel Stanford University Curt Haselton Chico State University … other contributors.
S a (T 1 ) Scaling Nilesh Shome ABS Consulting. Methodology Developed in 1997 (Shome, N., Cornell, C. A., Bazzurro, P., and Carballo, J. (1998), “Earthquake,
Project Review and Summary of NGA Supporting Research Norm Abrahamson NGA Workshop #6 July, 2004.
Selection of Time Series for Seismic Analyses
Roberto PAOLUCCI Department of Structural Engineering
Ground Motion Parameters Measured by triaxial accelerographs 2 orthogonal horizontal components 1 vertical component Digitized to time step of
Youssef Hashash In collaboration with Duhee Park
Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering
Preliminary Investigations on Post-earthquake Assessment of Damaged RC Structures Based on Residual Drift Jianze Wang Supervisor: Assoc. Prof. Kaoshan.
Structural Engineering Issues for a Large Cascadia Event.
Static Pushover Analysis
Earthquakes (Chapter 13). Lecture Outline What is an earthquake? Seismic waves Epicenter location Earthquake magnitude Tectonic setting Hazards.
Performance-based Earthquake Engineering – A Very Short Introduction (why taking Dynamics of Structures) Dr. ZhiQiang Chen UMKC Spring,2011.
GROUND MOTION INTENSITY MEASURES THAT CORRELATE TO ENGINEERING DEMAND PARAMETERS Jonathan Bray and Thaleia Travasarou University of California, Berkeley.
IMPLEMENTATION OF SCEC RESEARCH IN EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING ONGOING PROJECTS SCEC PROPOSAL TO NSF SCEC 2004 RFP.
OPENQUAKE Mission and Vision It is GEM’s mission to engage a global community in the design, development and deployment of state-of-the-art models and.
EERI Seminar on Next Generation Attenuation Models Role of SCEC Ground Motion Simulation Validation Technical Activity Group (GMSV TAG) in SEISM Project.
Session 1A – Ground Motions and Intensity Measures Paul Somerville Andrew Whittaker Greg Deierlein.
SCEC Workshop on Earthquake Ground Motion Simulation and Validation Development of an Integrated Ground Motion Simulation Validation Program.
Probabilistic Ground Motions for Scoggins Dam, Oregon Chris Wood Seismotectonics & Geophysics Group Technical Service Center July 2012.
Important topics related to earthquake hazard Calling for Bi-lateral collaboration.
NEEDS FOR PERFORMANCE-BASED GEOTECHNICAL EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING
Presented by: Sasithorn THAMMARAK (st109957)
Nonlinear Performance and Potential Damage of Degraded Structures Under Different Earthquakes The 5 th Tongji-UBC Symposium on Earthquake Engineering “Facing.
Epistemic Uncertainty on the Median Ground Motion of Next-Generation Attenuation (NGA) Models Brian Chiou and Robert Youngs The Next Generation of Research.
C ONSIDERATION OF C OLLAPSE AND R ESIDUAL D EFORMATION IN R ELIABILITY-BASED P ERFORMANCE E VALUATION OF B UILDINGS Chiun-lin WU 1, Chin-Hsiung LOH 2,
GROUND MOTION VARIABILITY: COMPARISON OF SURFACE AND DOWNHOLE GROUND MOTIONS Adrian Rodriguez-Marek, Washington State University, USA Fabrice Cotton, LGIT,
1J. Baker Jack Baker Civil & Environmental Engineering Stanford University Use of elastic & inelastic response spectra properties to validate simulated.
Progress towards Structural Design for Unforeseen Catastrophic Events ASME Congress Puneet Bajpai and Ben Schafer The Johns Hopkins University.
Ground Motions and Liquefaction – The Loading Part of the Equation
Repeatable Path Effects on The Standard Deviation for Empirical Ground Motion Models Po-Shen Lin (Institute of geophysics, NCU) Chyi-Tyi Lee (Institute.
Metrics, Bayes, and BOGSAT: Recognizing and Assessing Uncertainties in Earthquake Hazard Maps Seth Stein 1, Edward M. Brooks 1, Bruce D. Spencer 2 1 Department.
Novel Approach to Strong Ground Motion Attenuation Modeling Vladimir Graizer U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Erol Kalkan California Geological Survey.
British Seismology Meeting 5th – 7th April 2017, Reading, UK
ANDRÉS ALONSO-RODRIGUEZ Universidad de Valparaíso, Chile
CE 5603 Seismic Hazard Assessment
Earthquake resistant buildings
Dr. Praveen K. Malhotra, P.E.
End-Users Needs in Seismic Hazard Analysis
March 21-22, University of Washington, Seattle
Notes on the Intensity Measure Breakout Session - PEER Annual Meeting - Jan. 17, 2002   ·   Testbeds will not provide definitive answers as to the best.
Presentation transcript:

PEER EARTHQUAKE SCIENCE-ENGINEERING INTERFACE: STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING RESEARCH PERSPECTIVE Allin Cornell Stanford University SCEC WORKSHOP Oakland, CA October, 2003

PEER Objective λ C = mean annual rate of State C, e.g., collapse Two Steps: earth science and structural engineering: λ C = ∫P C (X) dλ(X) Where X = Vector Describing Interface

PEER “Best” Case X = {A 1 (t 1 ), A 2 (t 2 ), …A i (t i )..} for all t i = i∆t, i = 1, 2, …n i.e., an accelerogram · dλ(x) = mean annual rate of observing a “specific” accelerogram, e.g., a(ti) < A(ti) <a(ti) + da for all ∙ Then engineer finds PC(x) for all x ∙ Integrate

PEER Current Best “Practice” (or Research for Practice) λ C = mean annual rate of State C, e.g., collapse Two Steps: earth science and structural engineering: λ C = ∫P C (IM) dλ(IM) IM = Scalar “Intensity Measure”, e.g., PGA or Sa1 λ(IM) from PSHA P C (IM) found from “random sample” of accelerograms = fraction of cases leading to C

PEER Current Best Seismology Practice*: ·Disaggregate PSHA at Sa1 at p o, say, 2% in 50 years, by M and R: f M,R|Sa. Repeat for several levels, Sa1 1, Sa1 2, … · For Each Level Select Sample of Records: from a “bin” near mean (or mode) M and R. Same faulting style, hanging/foot wall, soil type, … · Scale the records to the UHS (in some way, e.g., to the S a (T 1 )). *DOE, NRC, PEER, … e.g., see R.K. McGuire: “... Closing the Loop”( BSSA, 1996+/-); Kramer (Text book; /-); Stewart et al. (PEER Report, 2002)

PEER Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Curves

PEER

PEER Beam Column Model with StiffnessBeam Column Model with Stiffness and Strength Degradation in Shear and Flexure using DRAIN2D-UW by J. Pincheira et al. Seismic Design Assessment of RC Structures. (Holiday Inn Hotel in Van Nuys)

PEER Multiple Stripe Analysis Multiple Stripe Analysis The Statistical Parameters of the “Stripes” are Used to Estimate the Median and Dispersion as a Function of the Spectral Acceleration, Sa1.The Statistical Parameters of the “Stripes” are Used to Estimate the Median and Dispersion as a Function of the Spectral Acceleration, Sa1. C

PEER Best “Research-for-Practice” (Cont’d) : Analysis: λ C = ∫P C (IM) dλ(IM) ≈ ∑PC(IM k ) ∆ λ(IM k ) Purely Structural Engineering Research Questions: –Accuracy of Numerical Models –Computational Efficiency

PEER Best “Research-for-Practice”: Analysis: λ C = ∫P C (IM) dλ(IM) ≈ ∑PC(IM k ) ∆ λ(IM k ) · Interface Questions: What are good choices for IM? Efficient? Sufficient? How does one obtain λ(IM) ? How does one do this transparently, easily and practically?

PEER  when IM 1I&2E is employed in lieu of IM 1E, (0.17/0.44) 2 ≈ 1/7 the number of earthquake records and NDA's are needed to estimate a with the same degree of precision IM = Sa1 IM = g(Sd-inelastic; Sa2) (Luco, 2002) BETTER SCALAR IM? More Efficient?

PEER Van Nuys Transverse Frame: Pinchiera Degrading Strength Model; T = 0.8 sec. 60 PEER records as recorded 5.3<M<7.3.

PEER Residual-residual plot: drift versus magnitude (given S a ) for Van Nuys. (Ductility range: 0.3 to 6 ) (60 PEER records, as recorded.)

PEER Residual-residual plot: drift versus magnitude (given S a ) of a very short period (0.1 sec) SDOF bilinear system. (Ductility range 1 to 20.) (47 PEER records, as recorded.)

PEER Residual-residual plot: drift versus magnitude (given S a ) for 4-second, fracturing-connection model of SAC LA20. Records scaled by 3. Ductility range: mostly 0.5 to 5

PEER What Can Be Done That is Still Better? Scalar to (Compact) Vector IM Interface Issues: What vector? How to find λ (IM)? Examples: {Sa1, M}, {Sa1, Sa2}, … · PSHA: λ(Sa1, M) = λ(Sa1) f(M| Sa1) (from “Deagg”) λ(Sa1, Sa2) Requires Vector PSHA (SCEC project)

PEER Vector-Based Response Prediction Vector-Valued PSHA

PEER Future Interface Needs Engineers: Need to identify “good” scalar IMs and IM vectors. In-house issues: what’s “wrong” with current candidates? When? Why? How to fix? How to make fast and easy, i.e., professionally useful.

PEER Future Interface Needs (con’t ) Help from Earth scientists: Guidance (e.g., what changes frequency content? Non- ”random” phasing? ) · Earth Science problems: How likely is it? λ(X) λ(X) = ∫P(X \ Y) dλ(Y) X = ground motion variables (ground motion prediction:empirical, synthetic) Y = source variables (e.g., RELM)

PEER Future Needs (Cont’d) Especially λ(X) for “bad” values of X (Or IM). · Some Special Problems: Nonlinear Soils, Strong Directivity, Aftershocks, Spatial Fields of X.

PEER

PEER

PEER Residual-residual plot: drift versus magnitude (given S a ) for 4-second, fracturing-connection model of SAC LA20. Ductility range: 0.2 to 1.5. Same records.

PEER Non-Linear MDOF Conclusion: (Given S a (T 1 ) level) the median (displacement) EDP is apparently independent of event parameters such as M, R, …*. Implications: (1) the record set used need not be selected carefully selected to match these parameters to those relevant to the site and structure. Comments: Same conclusion found for transverse components. More periods and backbones and EDPs deserve testing to test the limits of applicability of this illustration. *Provisos: Magnitudes not too low relative to general range of usual interest; no directivity or shallow, soft soil issues.