Effect on structural reliability of uncertain estimates of characteristic extreme wind loads


Abstract eng:
Structural design loads are often based on extreme values of time-varying loads estimated from limited amounts of data. Uncertainty in the estimation of the design loads inevitably leads to uncertainty in the resultant levels of structural reliability. In this paper, uncertainty is assessed for estimates of extreme wind loads calculated using statistical methods based on the Average Conditional Exceedance Rate (ACER), fitting of a Gumbel distribution and Peaks-Over-Threshold (POT). The ACER method gave the best results, but all the methods gave results which would normally be considered to be sufficiently accurate for engineering applications. However, for structures designed on the basis of the estimated values of V100 or V500, the uncertainty in the estimated design loads produced very uncertain probabilities of failure with a significant increase in their expected value. It is concluded that the uncertain distribution of the probabilities of failure must be taken into account when evaluating structural safety and a ‘fiducial confidence function’ is proposed for this purpose.

Contributors:
Publisher:
Taylor and Francis Group, London, UK
Conference Title:
Conference Title:
Sixth International Conference on Structural Engineering, Mechanics and Computation
Conference Venue:
Cape Town, South Africa
Conference Dates:
2016-09-05 / 2016-09-07
Rights:
Text je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.



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 Record created 2016-09-20, last modified 2016-09-20


Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, 108.pdf.:
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