Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4920404 Engineering Structures 2017 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
Traditional civil structures with yielding systems can be subjected to damage and permanent deformation through major earthquakes, which may induce substantial post-earthquake repair costs and is a critical issue for performance-based seismic design. A novel capped column with an elastic buckling mode jump (BMJ) mechanism is introduced as an economical passive alternative for obtaining flag-shaped hysteretic damping, self-centering and reusability in seismic design. A simple analytical model for the BMJ mechanism is derived and verified with finite element model simulation results for a variety of capped column geometric configurations. Using the validated analytical model, a parametric study is conducted on the geometric properties to provide design guidance. A practical passive self-centering hysteretic damping brace design is also provided in this paper, based on a combination of multiple BMJ mechanisms. The seismic performance of a 3-story frame building under a suite of 20 earthquake ground motions with BMJ brace is compared with a buckling-restrained brace (BRB) frame system as well as a conventional brace (CB) frame system. The results demonstrate the potential of a brace system utilizing BMJ mechanisms to outperform BRB and CB by achieving acceptable inter-story drift response without sustaining residual drift.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
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