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ASCE/SEI 41 assessment of reinforced concrete buildings: Benchmarking linear procedures and FEMA P-2018 with empirical damage observations

The US consensus standard for seismic evaluation and retrofit of existing buildings, ASCE/SEI 41, establishes provisions for seismic analysis procedures that vary in complexity and fidelity. Although ASCE/SEI 41 provides detailed nonlinear dynamic procedures, most engineers rely on simpler methods to evaluate building seismic performance and retrofit, particularly the ASCE/SEI 41 linear procedures and, more recently, the FEMA P-2018 methodology for evaluating collapse potential. Under ideal conditions, these procedures identify similar structural deficiencies. However, evaluation outcomes in practice may differ due to the complexity of real building response, approximations used in modeling and analysis, and level of intentional conservativism that reflects the limitations of the procedures. To quantify these differences, this study considers six reinforced concrete buildings that sustained damage in real earthquakes or in shake table tests and compares the performance assessed by the ASCE/SEI 41 linear and nonlinear dynamic procedures, as well as the FEMA P-2018 seismic evaluation methodology. The results show that for these highly damaged buildings, the overall performance level estimated from the ASCE/SEI 41 linear procedures is consistent with observed damage. In general, the procedures also correctly identify the story with the most damage and the component failure mode. However, the ASCE/SEI 41 linear procedure generally underpredicts drift response and greatly overpredicts peak floor accelerations. Though these are not directly used to evaluate structural performance, they are related to component deformation and force demands, respectively. Moreover, the linear procedures predict damage in components that would be precluded by yielding or failure of other components in the load path. Results from the FEMA P-2018 methodology for the six buildings provide more distinction between buildings than the ASCE/SEI 41 Collapse Prevention performance level. The results also suggest the FEMA P-2018 limit-state mechanism analysis can provide supplemental information to support and improve the ASCE/SEI 41 linear procedures.

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ASCE/SEI 41 assessment of reinforced concrete buildings: Benchmarking nonlinear dynamic procedures with empirical damage observations

ASCE/SEI 41 is the consensus US standard for the seismic evaluation and retrofit of existing buildings. Although the performance-based engineering standard is based on decades of research and has been significantly vetted by ASCE and other committees, it is unclear how well the evaluations capture the seismic response of real building systems. This article examines six, primarily nonductile, reinforced concrete buildings, including four damaged in earthquakes and two experimental structures tested and damaged on shake tables, to compare the measured response and observed damage to simulated outcomes produced following ASCE/SEI 41 nonlinear dynamic procedure. The results show that the simulations are generally able to capture the story mechanism and peak transient story drift demands at the critical story (predicted values are typically within ±20% of the measured values). However, drifts at non-critical stories and floor accelerations at all stories show greater error relative to the measured responses. At the component level, the simulations, in most cases, correctly identify the location(s) of the critical component(s) and the failure mode (e.g. flexure vs shear). However, the extent of the damage is overestimated in some cases. These results form the basis for recommendations for column, beam, and wall modeling procedures that can be used to improve ASCE/SEI 41.

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Factors affecting the seismic collapse performance of realistic low‐rise braced frame buildings, including soil structure interaction and foundation flexibility

AbstractPrevious computational studies of short‐period buildings have shown increasing collapse probabilities with decreasing building period; a trend that has not been observed in past earthquakes. In this study, collapse performances of twelve short‐period steel special concentrically braced frame (SCBF) building archetypes were examined using dynamic analysis and the methods described in FEMA P‐695 to investigate this gap between analytically predicted and historically observed collapse rates. The archetypes varied key design and modeling parameters that could influence the behavior. These parameters included number of stories, level of design seismicity, redundancy, the inclusion of soil‐structure interaction (SSI) and foundation flexibility, and the removal of reserve moment frame resistance in modeling. Practicing engineers designed the archetypes resulting in realistic designs, including overstrength values representative of this building type. The calculated overstrength values were much higher than those found in previous studies, largely a result of the archetype building layouts, brace width‐to‐thickness ratio limitations, and the large differences between tension and compressive brace strength that occur when design demands are low. The higher overstrength values found in this study resulted in lower probabilities of collapse, relative to previous collapse studies and showed that probabilities of collapse decreased with decreasing period. Additionally, the probability of collapse increased significantly for the nonredundant archetype, but changed insignificantly for the archetype without reserve moment frame capacity. Inclusion of SSI and foundation flexibility resulted in a complete change in behavior where braces remained elastic and the braced frames rocked on their foundations, resulting in decreased collapse probabilities.

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ATC M<sub>w</sub>7.1 Puebla–Morelos earthquake reconnaissance observations: Seismological, geotechnical, ground motions, site effects, and GIS mapping

This article presents the Applied Technology Council (ATC) team’s observations following the 2017 Mw7.1 Puebla–Morelos, Mexico earthquake. The team was deployed in Mexico City to collect seismological, geotechnical, structural, and overall performance information. The focus was on non-ductile concrete structures, to support implementation of recently published FEMA P-2018 procedures and to identify study buildings for incorporation into NIST-funded ATC-134 ongoing project. This article presents seismological data with 71 strong-motion records processed and ready for use in engineering analysis, geotechnical observations, and characterization of sites visited. Analyses of the response of representative soil profiles are presented in the form of acceleration response spectra and seismic amplification at the ground surface. A comparison of the same analysis using records from the 1985 Michoacán Ms8.1 (approximately Mw8.0) earthquake is also discussed. The ATC team composed GIS maps with structural and geotechnical characteristics of the inspected sites, including color-coded damage of inspected buildings and estimated soil fundamental period to correlate observed behavior with potential soil–structure interaction resonance effects. Recommendations on further detailed studies based on this comprehensive set of case histories are proposed.

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