4.7 Article

Automated detection of velocity pulses in ground motions based on adaptive similarity search in response spectrum

Journal

SOIL DYNAMICS AND EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soildyn.2021.106626

Keywords

Velocity pulse; Pulse detection; Near-fault ground motion; Dimensional analysis; Curve similarity

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program, Ministry of Science and Technology of P.R. China [2020YFC1511900, 2018YFE0206100]

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Strong pulse-like ground motions are a concern in structural engineering, with the detection and characterization of these features essential for seismic hazard analysis and structural response. A new method using response spectra associated with velocity waveforms has been developed, allowing for automatic detection of velocity pulses. This approach has shown to accurately capture impulsive effects in ground motions, providing a valuable supplement to existing pulse identification methods.
Ground motions with strong pulse-like features are of special concern for structural engineers. Detection and characterization of the pulse-like features are fundamental in seismic hazard analysis, ground motion selection/ simulation, and structural analysis. From the perspective of earthquake engineering, a pulse-like feature in a ground motion is of significance only if it dominates certain structural response to the ground motion. In order to identify such kind of pulse-like features, the current study establishes the so-called response spectra associated with various velocity waveforms through dimensional analysis of structural response to a generic velocity pulse. The congruence and the shifts between the pi PV and the pseudo-velocity response spectra associated with identical velocity waveform allow automatic detection of velocity pulses through adaptive similarity search in bilogarithmic spectrum curves. Following this approach, velocity pulses are detected and characterized in hundreds of historical ground motion records. The majority of the detection results are comparable to the velocity pulses identified through wavelet analysis in literature, while significant differences are noticed for a few cases. Further investigation shows our approach is able to capture the velocity pulse that retains the impulsive effect of the original ground motion on structures and thus provides a worthy supplement to the existing pulse identification methods.

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