4.7 Article

Seismic vulnerability assessment of tall pier bridges under mainshock-aftershock-like earthquake sequences using vector-valued intensity measure

Journal

ENGINEERING STRUCTURES
Volume 253, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.engstruct.2021.113732

Keywords

Tall pier bridges; Seismic fragility; Mainshock-aftershock sequence; Direct financial loss; Vector-valued intensity value

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51908348]

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This study investigates the seismic fragility and financial losses of tall pier bridges subjected to mainshock-aftershock (MA) sequences. The results show that while the mainshocks have a more substantial impact, neglecting the aftershocks underestimates the failure probability and financial loss of the bridge.
In most current seismic investigations on bridges with tall piers, only mainshock actions are considered without incorporating the effect of mainshock-aftershock (MA) sequences. This paper investigates the seismic fragility and the associated direct financial losses of tall pier bridges subjected to MA sequences using the vector-based intensity measure considering both main-and after-shocks. Numerical model of a typical RC tall pier bridge is developed and validated through shake table test results. Nonlinear time-history analyses are extensively conducted to obtain the seismic responses of the bridge under MA sequences, which are further utilized for the development of fragility surfaces. The analytical results show that in the MA sequences, the contribution of the aftershocks to the peak structural seismic demands is basically negligible unless their intensities exceeding critical values. While the structural vulnerabilities increase with both the intensities of main-and after-shocks, the role of mainshocks is observed more substantial. On the other hand, however, by totally neglecting the effect of the aftershocks, the failure probability and financial loss of the tall bridge would be underestimated, particularly when strong aftershocks occur following mainshocks.

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