Abstract
The seismic response of base-isolated structures with supplemental inertial devices subjected to stationary and real earthquake excitation is presented. Three types of devices, namely inertial mass damper (IMD), tuned mass damper-inerter (TMDI), and clutching inerter damper (CID), are considered. The seismic response of the base-isolated structure with and without inertial devices is compared to assess their effectiveness. Under stationary white-noise excitation, the optimum parameters of these devices were obtained. The criterion selected for optimality is the minimization of the mean-square relative displacement and absolute acceleration of the isolated structure. An equivalent linearization method was used for base-isolated structures with CID under stochastic excitation. It was observed that the IMD is not very effective in controlling the response of base-isolated structures. Optimally designed TMDI, on the other hand, was found to be effective in controlling the displacement and acceleration response of the isolated structure, with the effectiveness increasing as the inertance mass ratio increased. The CID involved in the base-isolated structure reduces the structural natural frequency and increases structural damping, thereby reducing isolator displacement and structural acceleration. The high-frequency components were present in the absolute acceleration of base-isolated structure with inertial devices (more pre-dominating for IMD and CID), which may have detrimental effects on installed high-frequency sensitive equipment.
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