4.7 Article

Prediction of failure modes, strength, and deformation capacity of RC shear walls through machine learning

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUILDING ENGINEERING
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jobe.2022.104145

Keywords

Machine learning; Reinforced concrete shear walls; Failure modes; Strength capacity; Deformation capacity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52108429]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFC1511000]
  3. Beijing Nova Program [Z211100002121097]

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This study introduces a technique for predicting the seismic performance of reinforced concrete walls using machine learning methods. The XGBoost and GB algorithms accurately predicted the failure modes of RC walls, while the gradient boosting and random forest algorithms performed best in predicting the lateral strength and ultimate drift ratio of RC walls. The flexure-to-shear strength ratio and shear-to-span ratio of RC walls had a greater influence on the failure modes of RC walls.
Shear walls are typically the major lateral load-carrying components in high-rise buildings owing to their high lateral strength and stiffness. This study introduces a technique for predicting the seismic performance of reinforced concrete (RC) walls using machine learning (ML) methods. Based on various ML algorithms, predictive models were developed using a database containing experimental data of 429 RC walls collected from the literature. The performance of each pre-dictive model was discussed in detail. The results indicated that the XGBoost and GB algorithms accurately predicted the failure modes of RC walls with an accuracy of 97%. The gradient boosting and random forest algorithms performed best in predicting the lateral strength and ul-timate drift ratio of RC walls, with a mean predicted-to-tested strength ratio of 1.01 and a predicted-to-tested ultimate drift ratio of 1.08. The flexure-to-shear strength ratio and shear-to-span ratio of RC walls had a greater influence on the failure modes of RC walls, with a relative importance factor of 54.1% for these two characteristics. Boundary longitudinal reinforcement, shear-to-span ratio, and distributed reinforcement had an obvious influence on the lateral strength of RC walls with summation of relative important factors of over 80%. The greatest influence on the ultimate drift ratio of RC walls is shear-to-span ratio, with a relative importance factor of 34.1%. The comparisons indicate that the model developed in this study can predict the shear strength and flexural strength of RC walls more accurate and efficient than the existing design formulas. Furthermore, a brief boundary that could separate flexure-shear failure from other failure modes is provided based on the ML models. Finally, a graphical user interface (GUI) platform is created to facilitate the practical design of RC walls.

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