A simple procedure to estimate drift and ductility demands of regular steel frame buildings subjected to ordinary (i.e., without near fault effects) ground motions is described. Given the strength reduction (or behavior) factor, the procedure provides reliable estimates of the maximum roof displacement, the maximum interstorey drift ratio and the maximum rotation ductility along the height of the structure. The strength reduction factor refers to the point of the development of the first plastic hinge in the building and thus, pushover analysis and estimation of the overstrength factor are not required. This important feature enables both the rapid seismic assessment of existing structures and the direct deformation-controlled seismic design of new ones. The derivation of the proposed relations is based on regression analysis of the results of thousands of nonlinear time history analyses of steel frames. A comparison of the proposed method with the procedures adopted in current seismic design codes reveals the efficiency of the former.
An alternative and efficient procedure to estimate the maximum inelastic roof displacement and the maximum inelastic interstorey drift ratio along the height of regular multi-storey steel MRF subjected to pulse-like ground motions is proposed. The method and the normalized response quantities emerge from formal dimensional analysis which makes use of the distinct time scale and length scale that characterize the most energetic component of the ground shaking. Such time and length scales emerge naturally from the distinguishable pulses which dominate a wide class of strong earthquake records and can be formally extracted with validated mathematical models published in literature. The proposed method is liberated from the maximum displacement of the elastic single-degree-of-freedom structure since the self similar master curve which results from dimensional analysis involves solely the shear strength and yield roof displacement of the inelastic multi-degree-of-freedom system in association with the duration and acceleration amplitude of the dominant pulse. The estimated inelastic response quantities are in superior agreement with the results from nonlinear time history analysis than any inelastic response estimation published previously.
This paper summarizes the results of an extensive study on the inelastic seismic response of X-braced steel buildings. More than 100 regular multi-storey tension-compression X-braced steel frames are subjected to an ensemble of 30 ordinary (i.e. without near fault effects) ground motions. The records are scaled to different intensities in order to drive the structures to different levels of inelastic deformation. The statistical analysis of the created response databank indicates that the number of stories, period of vibration, brace slenderness ratio and column stiffness strongly influence the amplitude and heightwise distribution of inelastic deformation. Nonlinear regression analysis is employed in order to derive simple formulae which reflect the aforementioned influences and offer a direct estimation of drift and ductility demands. The uncertainty of this estimation due to the record-to-record variability is discussed in detail. More specifically, given the strength (or behaviour) reduction factor, the proposed formulae provide reliable estimates of the maximum roof displacement, the maximum interstorey drift ratio and the maximum cyclic ductility of the diagonals along the height of the structure. The strength reduction factor refers to the point of the first buckling of the diagonals in the building and thus, pushover analysis and estimation of the overstrength factor are not required. This design-oriented feature enables both the rapid seismic assessment of existing structures and the direct deformation-controlled seismic design of new ones. A comparison of the proposed method with the procedures adopted in current seismic design codes reveals the accuracy and efficiency of the former.
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