Abstract

This study evaluates the progressive collapse resistance performance of steel moment frames, individually designed with different connection details. Welded unreinforced flange-bolted web (WUF-B) and reduced beam section (RBS) connections are selected and applied to ordinary moment frames designed as per the Korean Building Code (KBC) 2016. The 3-D steel frame systems are modeled using reduced models of 1-D and 2-D elements for beams, columns, connections, and composite slabs. Comparisons between the analyzed results of the reduced models and the experimental results are presented to verify the applicability of the models. Nonlinear static analyses of two prototype buildings with different connection details are conducted using the reduced models, and an energy-based approximate analysis is used to account for the dynamic effects associated with sudden column loss. The assessment on the structures was based on structural robustness and sensitivity methods using the alternative path method suggested in General Services Administration (GSA) 2003, in which column removal scenarios were performed and the bearing capacity of the initial structure with an undamaged column was calculated under gravity loads. According to the analytical results, the two prototype buildings satisfied the chord rotation criterion of GSA 2003. These results were expected since the composite slabs designed to withstand more than 3.3 times the required capacity had a significant effect on the stiffness of the entire structure. The RBS connections were found to be 14% less sensitive to progressive collapse compared to the WUF-B ones.

Highlights

  • Building structures are designed to resist loading combinations specified in building codes

  • The alternative path (AP) method was applied to the steel moment frames individually designed with WUF-B and reduced beam section (RBS) connections and progressive collapse resistance performance was evaluated for allowable rotation limits θ = 0.025 rad and θ = 0.035 rad

  • This study evaluated the progressive collapse resistance performance of steel moment frame systems under column loss scenarios

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Summary

Introduction

Building structures are designed to resist loading combinations specified in building codes. In many cases, structures fail due to progressive collapse. The following cases are representative examples of progressive collapse: the collapse of the Ronan Point Apartment in London caused by a gas explosion, the collapse of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in the U.S caused by a truck bomb attack, the collapse of the World Trade Center caused by the impact of large passenger jets in the U.S, and the collapse of the Sampung Department Store in Republic of Korea caused by the punching shear failure of a flat plate system Based on these catastrophic accidents, the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 7, the GSA 2003, and the U.S

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