Abstract

System and measurement uncertainties play a key role in finding the reliability of complex and safety-critical structural systems such as buildings and bridges. Current mainstream techniques in structural reliability analysis use an iterative first-order reliability method that performs an indirect uncertainty evaluation by finding the most probable failure point. However, such an approach could lead to high computational time due to slower convergence, and in some cases, poor convergence that leads to unreliable results. In order to address the shortcomings, this paper applies a new high-order moment propagation technique (that was initially developed for the measurement uncertainty analysis) to structural reliability analysis problems aiming to obtain results that are simultaneously accurate and computational efficient. The proposed approach was implemented on a three-story elastic frame structure, and the presented results prove that the application of a technique from the field of measurement uncertainly can indeed be applied to complex problems in the structural reliability analysis in order to reduce the trade-off between accuracy and computational efficiency.

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