4.6 Article

Ductility-dependent intensity measure that accounts for ground-motion spectral shape and duration

Journal

EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING & STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages 653-672

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eqe.2678

Keywords

ground motion intensity measure; ground motion record selection and scaling; spectral shape effects; ground motion duration effects; dynamic collapse analysis; single-degree-of-freedom analysis

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-1331412]

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The calculated nonlinear structural responses of a building can vary greatly, even if recorded ground motions are scaled to the same spectral acceleration at a building's fundamental period. To reduce the variation in structural response at a particular ground-motion intensity, this paper proposes an intensity measure (IMcomb) that accounts for the combined effects of spectral acceleration, ground-motion duration, and response spectrum shape. The intensity measure includes a new measure of spectral shape that integrates the spectrum over a period range that depends on the structure's ductility. The new IM is efficient, sufficient, scalable, transparent, and versatile. These features make it suitable for evaluating the intensities of measured and simulated ground motions. The efficiency and sufficiency of the new IM is demonstrated for the following: (i) elastic-perfectly plastic single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) oscillators with a variety of ductility demands and periods; (ii) ductile and brittle deteriorating SDOF systems with a variety of periods; and (iii) collapse analysis for 30 previously designed frames. The efficiency is attributable to the inclusion of duration and to the ductility dependence of the spectral shape measure. For each of these systems, the transparency of the intensity measure made it possible to identify the sensitivity of structural response to the various characteristics of the ground motion. Spectral shape affected all structures, but in particular, ductile structures. Duration only affected structures with cyclic deterioration. Copyright (c) 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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