Effect of Near-Fault Ground Motions on Seismic Response of Deep Basement Walls


Abstract eng:
The current state of practice for seismic design of basement walls in British Columbia is using the Mononobe-Okabe (M-O) method, which is based on the Peak Ground Acceleration (PGA). Preliminary results from a recent study of the authors show that the designed walls based on the M-O method with the code mandated PGA for Vancouver are too conservative. This conclusion was achieved by designing the basement wall for the earth pressures derived from the M-O method with different fraction of the code PGA, then subjecting the designed walls to ground motions matched to the UHS of Vancouver in a series of dynamic analyses, and monitoring the performance of the walls from results of the analyses. It was found that walls designed for the M-O pressures based on 50-60% PGA in Vancouver result in satisfactory performance in terms of moment, shear capacity, and drift ratio along the height of the wall, when subjected to ground motions with a 2% exceedance rate in 50 years. This conclusion was based on the use of far-fault motions for analysis. The objective of the present study is to check whether such walls would be safe when subjected to near-fault motions of approximately similar intensity.

Contributors:
Publisher:
National Technical University of Athens, 2013
Conference Title:
Conference Title:
COMPDYN 2013 - 4th International Thematic Conference
Conference Venue:
Island of Kos (GR)
Conference Dates:
2013-06-12 / 2013-06-14
Rights:
Text je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.



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 Record created 2016-11-15, last modified 2016-11-15


Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, section: CD-MS 13 DYNAMIC SOIL STRUCTURE INTERACTION MODELING AND SIMULATION .:
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