1 / 37

NEES Small-Group Research Project: Seismic Behavior, Analysis and Design of Complex Wall Systems

University of Illinois. NEES Small-Group Research Project: Seismic Behavior, Analysis and Design of Complex Wall Systems (NSF Grant CMMI-0421577). Laura Lowes, Dawn Lehman, Anna Birely, Joshua Pugh, UW Dan Kuchma, Chris Hart, Ken Marley, UIUC. Research Objective.

nuri
Download Presentation

NEES Small-Group Research Project: Seismic Behavior, Analysis and Design of Complex Wall Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. University of Illinois NEES Small-Group Research Project: Seismic Behavior, Analysis and Design of Complex Wall Systems (NSF Grant CMMI-0421577) Laura Lowes, Dawn Lehman, Anna Birely, Joshua Pugh, UW Dan Kuchma, Chris Hart, Ken Marley, UIUC

  2. Research Objective • Establish the seismic performance of modern reinforced concrete walls and develop the response and damage-prediction models required to advance performance- based design of these systems • Photo courtesy of MKA Seattle

  3. Research Activities to Date • Experimental testing: • Testing of four planar walls completed in 2008 • Testing of a planar coupled wall to be completed Nov. 2010 • Testing of three c-shaped walls to be completed in 2011 • Simulation: development, calibration and evaluation of • Elastic, effective stiffness models • Fiber-type beam-column models w/ and w/o flexure-shear interaction • Two-dimensional continuum models • Performance-prediction models: • Development of data relating damage and demand • Development of fragility functions for walls

  4. Experimental Testing Of Planar Walls

  5. Experimental Test Program • Prototype structure • Experimental test matrix Core Wall under Construction (Courtesy of MKA, Seattle)

  6. NEES Experimental Testing • Bottom three stories of 10-story of a planar prototype wall. • Shear and moment applied to simulate lateral load distribution in 10-story prototype • Target axial load of 0.1Agfc’.

  7. Planar Wall Test Specimens • 1/3-scale with details reflecting modern construction practice. Boundary Elements (3.5%) Full Scale: 12’ high/18 in. thick Lab: 4’ high/ 6 in. thick Splice atBase of Wall

  8. Planar Wall Test Matrix Moment-to Shear Ratio Distribution of Reinforcement Splices? STUDY PARAMETERS Mb= 0.71hVb Vb= 2.8f’c = 0.7Vn BE at EDGE Wall 1 YES Mb = 0.50hVb Vb= 4.0f’c= 0.9Vn Wall 2 YES BE at EDGE Mb = 0.50hVb Vb= 4.0f’c= 0.9Vn Wall 3 UNIFORM YES Mb = 0.50hVb Vb= 4.0f’c= 0.9Vn BE at EDGE Wall 4 NO

  9. Global Response: Base Moment v. 3rd Floor Drift M, k-ft M, k-ft Mn Mn % Drift % Drift M, k-ft M, k-ft Mn Mn % Drift % Drift

  10. Response of PW 4: No Splice

  11. Final Damage States for Planar Walls Wall 1: Vb = 3.6f’c 1.5% drift (3rd story) 2.1% drift (10th story) Wall 2: : Vb = 5.0f’c 1.5% drift (3rd story) 1.8% drift (10th story) Wall 3: Vb = 4.5f’c 1.25% drift (3rd story) 1.6% drift (10th story) Wall 4: Vb = 4.6f’c 1.0% drift (3rd story) 1.4% drift (10th story)

  12. Experimental Testing of a Coupled Wall

  13. Objective: To determine what is the seismic behavior of a modern coupled wall • Review inventory of modern coupled walls • 17 buildings with coupled-core wall systems designed for construction in CA or WA in last 10 years. • Information collected included geometry, aspect ratios, reinforcement ratios, degree of coupling, shear demand-capacity ratio, pier wall axial demand-capacity ratio, etc. • Review previous experimental tests • Numerous tests of coupling beams with different reinforcement layouts, ratios and confinement details. • Only seven (7) coupled-wall tests found in the literature. • Coupled wall test specimens are not representative of current design practices. • Design and evaluate multiple 10-story planar coupled walls • Design walls following the recommendations of the SEAOC Seismic Design Manual, Vol. III, using ASCE 7-05, and meeting requirements of ACI 318-08. • Progression of yielding and failure mechanism was evaluated via continuum finite-element analysis using VecTor2. • Design was updated to ensure yielding of coupling beams and wall piers.

  14. Coupled Wall Test Specimen • Specimen is bottom three stories of a 10-story planar coupled wall. • Coupling beams have aspect ratio of 2.0 and diagonal reinforcement. • Seismic loading results in yielding in coupling beams and wall piers. • Pier walls are capacity-designed for shear. • Boundary Element • rlong = 3.5% • rtrans = 1.4% • Web • rlong = 0.27% • rhorz = 0.27% • Coupling beams: • aspect ratio = 2.0 • rdiag = 1.25% • Vn =

  15. Construction

  16. Testing of the Coupled Wall Specimen Fz,total My,total Dx,Fx,total • ∆x • - prescribed (i.e. disp. control) • Fz,total = constant • - chosen as 0.1fcAg • My,total = k*Fx,total • - k is defined by chosen lateral load dist. • - Fxmeasured in lab for given Dx (edited image)

  17. Testing of the Coupled Wall Specimen • ∆x = (∆x1 + ∆x2)/2 • - prescribed (i.e. disp. control) • Fz1 + Fz2 = constant • - chosen as 0.1fcAg • My,total = k*(Fx1 + Fx2) • - k is defined by chosen lateral load dist. • Fx2 – Fx1 = f(Fx,tot) • - f(Fx,tot) is determined by analysis before testing • θy1 = n*∆x1; θy2 = n*∆x2 • - n is determined by analysis before testing (edited image)

  18. Validation of the Loading Protocol • Compare simulated response of 10-story prototype and 3-story laboratory test specimen 3rd story load versus displacement response prototype specimen

  19. Validation of the Loading Protocol • Compare simulated response of 10-story prototype and 3-story laboratory test specimen Principal concrete compressive strain field at 0.75 in. lateral displacement bottom 3 stories of 10-story prototype 3-story test specimen

  20. Simulation: Model Development and Evaluation

  21. Experimental Database • 66 wall tests from 13 different test programs • 60% are slender (AR > 2); 40% are squat (AR < 2) • 78% tested cyclically; 22% tested monotonically • Failure modes • Slender walls: 85% in flexure; 10% in shear; 5% in flex-shear • Squat walls: 40% in flexure; 60% in shear • Design parameters:

  22. Simulation Models and Software • OpenSees fiber-type beam-column models • Force-based, distributed plasticity element without flexure-shear interaction1 and with linear, calibrated shear flexibility2 • Displacement-based, lumped-plasticity with flexure-shear interaction3 • Two-dimensional continuum model • Modified compression field theory as implemented in VecTor24 Neuenhofer and Filippou (1997, 1998), Taucer et al. (1991), Spacone and Filippou (1992) Oyen (2006) Massone et al. (2006), Massone (2006) http://www.civ.utoronto.ca/vector/, Wong and Vecchio (2003)

  23. Ratio of Simulated-to-Observed Response

  24. Initial spalling Steel fracture Spalling at base Damage Prediction Models

  25. Experimental Database • 66 wall tests from 18 different test programs • 100% are slender with AR > 2 • 83% tested cyclically; 17% tested monotonically • 92% tested uni-directionally, 8% tested bi-directionally • Design parameters:

  26. Damage States / Method of Repair

  27. Engineering Demand Parameters • Maximum Drift • displacement at top of specimen / specimen height • Maximum 1st Story Drift • Assume full-scale is a story height of 10 ft. and wall thickness of 12 in. • Assume stiffness above the 1st of the wall is defined by 0.10GcAcv (shear) and average EcIg for the entire wall. • 1st story drift is then calculated using displacement measured at the top of the wall specimen and above assumptions. • Maximum Rotation Demand for a Lumped-Plasticity Model • Hinge at base of the wall has a hinge length of ½ Lw • Assume stiffness of the remaining height of the wall is defined by 0.50EcIg (flexure) and 0.10GcAcv (shear) • Hinge rotation is then calculated using displacement measured at the top of the wall specimen and above assumptions.

  28. Fragility Functions for Slender Walls • Damage state – demand data are used to calibrate lognormal CDF Lognormal Distribution Parameters

  29. Investigation of the Impact of Design Parameters on Damage Progression • Objective: Develop suites of fragilities for walls with different design parameter values DS versus drift with data grouped by axial load ratio * Too few test specimens with bi-directional displacement histories

  30. Conclusions • Laboratory testing of rectangular planar walls • Drift capacity of rectangular concrete walls with modern detailing and representative load distributions ranges from 1.0% to 1.5% (1.4% to 2.0% at roof of 10-story structure). • Damage was concentrated in the first story; other stories cracked but otherwise pristine. • Drift was due to base rotation (15-25%), flexure (55-60%), and shear (~25%). Flexural deformation of 3rd floor was much smaller than 1st and 2nd.

  31. Conclusions • Simulation • Strength • Planar walls: All models provide accurate and precise simulation of strength • The continuum model also provides acceptable accuracy and precision for flanged, squat walls • Stiffness to yield • For rectangular, slender walls the models provide reasonably accurate and precise simulation of stiffness: error in simulated stiffness ranges from 23% to 2% with a cov of approximately 20% • The continuum model provides the best accuracy and precision for all of the wall configurations considered • Displacement capacity • None of the models does a particularly good job of simulating displacement capacity for all of the wall configurations considered • The continuum models provides acceptable accuracy and precision for slender walls; errors are less than 15% with a cov of approx. 30%

  32. Conclusions • Performance-based design • For slender walls, the median drift at which wall replacement is required is 1.6%

  33. THANK YOU! Questions?

  34. NEESR Wall Coupling Beam Reinforcement Ratio

  35. Evaluation of Response Using Local Instrumentation Data

  36. Krypton and Disp. Transducer Data Wall 2 Wall 1 Cracking Yielding Yielding Cracking Contribution to total drift (%) 3rd floor shear 2nd floor shear 1st floor shear 3rd floor flexural 2nd floor flexural 1st floor flexural Base rotation Base slip Cracking Yielding Yielding Cracking Wall 4 Wall 3 Contribution to total drift (%) Drift at top of specimen Drift at top of specimen

  37. Wall 4 Shear Strain from Krypton Data

More Related