To gain insight into the inelastic behavior of piles, the response of a vertical pile embedded in dry sand and subjected to cyclic lateral loading was studied experimentally in centrifuge tests conducted in Laboratoir...To gain insight into the inelastic behavior of piles, the response of a vertical pile embedded in dry sand and subjected to cyclic lateral loading was studied experimentally in centrifuge tests conducted in Laboratoire Central des Ponts et Chaussees. Three types of cyclic loading were applied, two asymmetric and one symmetric with respect to the unloaded pile. An approximately square-root variation of soil stiffness with depth was obtained from indirect in-flight density measurements, laboratory tests on reconstituted samples, and well-established empirical correlations. The tests were simulated using a cyclic nonlinear Winkler spring model, which describes the full range of inelastic phenomena, including separation and re-attachment of the pile from and to the soil. The model consists of three mathematical expressions capable of reproducing a wide variety of monotonic and cyclic experimentalp-y curves. The physical meaning of key model parameters is graphically explained and related to soil behavior. Comparisons with the centrifuge test results demonstrate the general validity of the model and its ability to capture several features of pile-soil interaction, including: soil plastification at an early stage of loading, "pinching" behavior due to the formation of a relaxation zone around the upper part of the pile, and stiffness and strength changes due to cyclic loading. A comparison of the p-y curves derived from the test results and the proposed model, as well as those from the classical curves of Reese et al. (1974) for sand, is also presented.展开更多
This study examines the dynamic response of two adjacent 9-and 20-story benchmark steel buildings subjected to six near-fault earthquake records.Two-dimensional numerical models were employed to account for the comple...This study examines the dynamic response of two adjacent 9-and 20-story benchmark steel buildings subjected to six near-fault earthquake records.Two-dimensional numerical models were employed to account for the complexities of structure-soil-structure interaction(SSSI).The research focuses on the separation gap between the buildings and the effects of pounding while considering Fixed Base(FB)and SSSI models,evaluated according to UBC 94 and ASCE 7-16 seismic codes.Key findings reveal that pounding occurs with the UBC 94 separation gap when earthquake frequency aligns with system frequency,leading to increased column stresses in the 9-story building.In contrast,the ASCE 7-16 standard effectively prevents pounding in both the FB and SSSI models.Additionally,drifts and displacements of lower floors in SSSI models exceed the allowable limits of ASCE 7-16,underscoring the impact of soil-structure interaction on seismic response.展开更多
基金EU Fifth Framework Program: Environment, Energy and Sustainable Development Research and Technological Development Activity of Generic Nature: The Fight Against Natural and Technological Hazards, Research Project QUAKER Under Contract No. EVG1–CT–2002–00064
文摘To gain insight into the inelastic behavior of piles, the response of a vertical pile embedded in dry sand and subjected to cyclic lateral loading was studied experimentally in centrifuge tests conducted in Laboratoire Central des Ponts et Chaussees. Three types of cyclic loading were applied, two asymmetric and one symmetric with respect to the unloaded pile. An approximately square-root variation of soil stiffness with depth was obtained from indirect in-flight density measurements, laboratory tests on reconstituted samples, and well-established empirical correlations. The tests were simulated using a cyclic nonlinear Winkler spring model, which describes the full range of inelastic phenomena, including separation and re-attachment of the pile from and to the soil. The model consists of three mathematical expressions capable of reproducing a wide variety of monotonic and cyclic experimentalp-y curves. The physical meaning of key model parameters is graphically explained and related to soil behavior. Comparisons with the centrifuge test results demonstrate the general validity of the model and its ability to capture several features of pile-soil interaction, including: soil plastification at an early stage of loading, "pinching" behavior due to the formation of a relaxation zone around the upper part of the pile, and stiffness and strength changes due to cyclic loading. A comparison of the p-y curves derived from the test results and the proposed model, as well as those from the classical curves of Reese et al. (1974) for sand, is also presented.
文摘This study examines the dynamic response of two adjacent 9-and 20-story benchmark steel buildings subjected to six near-fault earthquake records.Two-dimensional numerical models were employed to account for the complexities of structure-soil-structure interaction(SSSI).The research focuses on the separation gap between the buildings and the effects of pounding while considering Fixed Base(FB)and SSSI models,evaluated according to UBC 94 and ASCE 7-16 seismic codes.Key findings reveal that pounding occurs with the UBC 94 separation gap when earthquake frequency aligns with system frequency,leading to increased column stresses in the 9-story building.In contrast,the ASCE 7-16 standard effectively prevents pounding in both the FB and SSSI models.Additionally,drifts and displacements of lower floors in SSSI models exceed the allowable limits of ASCE 7-16,underscoring the impact of soil-structure interaction on seismic response.