Abstract

Near-field earthquakes have been shown to have different effects on structures than far-field events. This study examines the dynamic response of a rectangular concrete liquid storage tank with tapered walls to near-field ground motions, with particular emphasis on the effect of higher sloshing modes. The tank’s numerical modeling, calibrated using experimental results, was performed considering the tank’s wall flexibility. Seven selected near-field records were applied in each case, and the effects of the first five sloshing modes on the tank response at three different locations, including the corner, middle of the long wall, and middle of the short wall, were investigated. The effect of the earthquake incident angle on the tank’s response was also studied by applying major and minor horizontal earthquake components once along the longer and shorter tank walls, respectively, and vice versa. Results show that the tank corner may have a sloshing height up to 50% greater than the middle of the walls and that the maximum sloshing response is substantially influenced by the spectral acceleration value at the first sloshing period. Higher sloshing modes are found to affect the sloshing response, with a maximum R2 score of 0.95, depending on the excitation’s incidence angle.

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