Abstract

The progressive collapse of the structure caused by the partial failure of the structure will cause severe consequences and massive losses, and structural progressive collapse resistance has always been a hot topic of current research. In order to study the progressive collapse mechanism of base-isolated structures, the test study and numerical simulation of the base-isolated structures were carried out based on the vertical Pushover method and analysis of the variation rule of the capacity of the remaining structure and influence mechanism. The isolation bearing failure position, the size of the beam of the seismic isolation layer, the type of the isolation bearing, and the horizontal stiffness of the seismic isolation layer on the capacity of the remaining structure were compared and analyzed. The results show that the non-uniformity of the beams and the concentrated loading at the nodes were easy to form a linear catenary mechanism, resulting in more severe beam end damage than mid-span damage. In the case of side isolation bearing failure, due to the lack of sufficient lateral restraint, the capacity was significantly lower than other conditions, which were more likely to cause partly collapse. Therefore, setting more transfer paths to improve the structure’s resistance to progressive collapses was necessary. Increasing the size of the beam of the seismic isolation layer could improve the capacity of the remaining structure of the alternate load path in the base-isolated structure. The changes in the horizontal stiffness of the seismic isolation layer and the type of the isolation bearing have little effect on the progressive collapse resistance capacity of the remaining structure.

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