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Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


CALCULATED vs MEASURED

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ENERGY DISSIPATION

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design
Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design
Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design
IMPLICIT NONLINEAR BEHAVIOR

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STEEL STRESS STRAIN RELATIONSHIPS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


INELASTIC WORK DONE!

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


CAPACITY DESIGN

STRONG COLUMNS & WEAK BEAMS IN FRAMES


REDUCED BEAM SECTIONS
LINK BEAMS IN ECCENTRICALLY BRACED FRAMES
BUCKLING RESISTANT BRACES AS FUSES
RUBBER-LEAD BASE ISOLATORS
HINGED BRIDGE COLUMNS
HINGES AT THE BASE LEVEL OF SHEAR WALLS
ROCKING FOUNDATIONS
OVERDESIGNED COUPLING BEAMS
OTHER SACRIFICIAL ELEMENTS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


MOMENT ROTATION RELATIONSHIP

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


IDEALIZED MOMENT ROTATION

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PERFORMANCE LEVELS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


IDEALIZED FORCE DEFORMATION CURVE

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ASCE 41 BEAM MODEL

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design 17


ASCE 41 ASSESSMENT OPTIONS

• Linear Static Analysis


• Linear Dynamic Analysis
(Response Spectrum or Time History Analysis)
• Nonlinear Static Analysis
(Pushover Analysis)
• Nonlinear Dynamic Time History Analysis
(NDI or FNA)

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRENGTH vs DEFORMATION

ELASTIC STRENGTH DESIGN - KEY STEPS

CHOSE DESIGN CODE AND EARTHQUAKE LOADS


DESIGN CHECK PARAMETERS STRESS/BEAM MOMENT
GET ALLOWABLE STRESSES/ULTIMATE– PHI FACTORS
CALCULATE STRESSES – LOAD FACTORS (ST RS TH)
CALCULATE STRESS RATIOS

INELASTIC DEFORMATION BASED DESIGN -- KEY STEPS


CHOSE PERFORMANCE LEVEL AND DESIGN LOADS – ASCE 41
DEMAND CAPACITY MEASURES – DRIFT/HINGE ROTATION/SHEAR
GET DEFORMATION AND FORCE CAPACITIES
CALCULATE DEFORMATION AND FORCE DEMANDS (RS OR TH)
CALCULATE D/C RATIOS – LIMIT STATES

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRUCTURE and MEMBERS

• For a structure, F = load, D = deflection.


• For a component, F depends on the component type, D is the
corresponding deformation.
• The component F-D relationships must be known.
• The structure F-D relationship is obtained by structural analysis.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


FRAME COMPONENTS

• For each component type we need :


Reasonably accurate nonlinear F-D relationships.
Reasonable deformation and/or strength capacities.
• We must choose realistic demand-capacity measures, and it must be
feasible to calculate the demand values.
• The best model is the simplest model that will do the job.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


F-D RELATIONSHIP

Force (F)
Ultimate
Strain
strength Ductile limit
Hardening
Strength loss
First yield
Residual strength
Initially
linear Complete failure

Deformation (D)
Stiffness, strength and ductile limit may
all degrade under cyclic deformation
Hysteresis loop

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DUCTILITY

LATERAL
LOAD

Brittle Partially Ductile Ductile

DRIFT

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ASCE 41 - DUCTILE AND BRITTLE

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


FORCE AND DEFORMATION CONTROL

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


BACKBONE CURVE

F Monotonic F-D relationship

Hysteresis loops
Relationship allowing
from experiment.
for cyclic deformation

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


HYSTERESIS LOOP MODELS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRENGTH DEGRADATION

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ASCE 41 DEFORMATION CAPACITIES

• This can be used for components of all types.


• It can be used if experimental results are available.
• ASCE 41 gives capacities for many different components.
• For beams and columns, ASCE 41 gives capacities only for the chord
rotation model.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


BEAM END ROTATION MODEL

Mi or Mj
i j
Mi
Mj

i or j
Zero length hinges
Elastic 
M Plastic (hinge) 
Elastic beam
Total
rotation Current 
Similar at
Plastic Elastic this end
rotation rotation 

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PLASTIC HINGE MODEL

• It is assumed that all inelastic deformation is concentrated in zero-


length plastic hinges.
• The deformation measure for D/C is hinge rotation.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PLASTIC ZONE MODEL

• The inelastic behavior occurs in finite length plastic zones.


• Actual plastic zones usually change length, but models that have
variable lengths are too complex.
• The deformation measure for D/C can be :
- Average curvature in plastic zone.
- Rotation over plastic zone ( = average curvature x plastic
zone length).

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ASCE 41 CHORD ROTATION CAPACITIES

IO LS CP
Steel Beam p/y = 1 p/y = 6 p/y = 8
RC Beam
Low shear p = 0.01 p = 0.02 p = 0.025
High shear p = 0.005 p = 0.01 p = 0.02

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


COLUMN AXIAL-BENDING MODEL

P
V
Mj
P P
or
M M
Mi
V
P

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STEEL COLUMN AXIAL-BENDING

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


CONCRETE COLUMN AXIAL-BENDING

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


SHEAR HINGE MODEL

Node
Zero-length
Elastic beam shear "hinge"

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PANEL ZONE ELEMENT

• Deformation, D = spring rotation = shear strain in panel zone.


• Force, F = moment in spring = moment transferred from beam to
column elements.
• Also, F = (panel zone horizontal shear force) x (beam depth).

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


BUCKLING-RESTRAINED BRACE

The BRB element includes “isotropic” hardening.


The D-C measure is axial deformation.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


BEAM/COLUMN FIBER MODEL

The cross section is represented by a number of uni-axial fibers.


The M-y relationship follows from the fiber properties, areas and locations.
Stress-strain relationships reflect the effects of confinement

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


WALL FIBER MODEL


Steel
fibers 

Concrete

fibers

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ALTERNATIVE MEASURE - STRAIN

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


NONLINEAR SOLUTION SCHEMES

iteration iteration
ƒ ƒ
1 2 1 2 3 4 56

∆ƒ ∆ƒ

∆u u ∆u u
NEWTON – RAPHSON CONSTANT STIFFNESS
ITERATION ITERATION

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


CIRCULAR FREQUENCY

+Y

Y

0 Radius, R

-Y

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


THE D, V & A RELATIONSHIP

u
.
Slope = ut1

t1 t
.
u
. ..
ut1 Slope = ut1

t1 t
..
u
..
ut1

t1 t

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


UNDAMPED FREE VIBRATION

&& + ku = 0
mu
ut = u0 cos(wt)

k
where w =
m

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


RESPONSE MAXIMA

ut = u0 cos(wt)

u&t = -wu0 sin(wt)

u&&t = -w u0 cos(wt)
2

&u& max = -w 2u max

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


BASIC DYNAMICS WITH DAMPING

Mu && + Cu& + Ku = 0 M
t C
Mu && + Cu& + Ku = - Mu &&
g K
&u& + 2xwu& + w2u = - u&&
g

&&
u
g

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


RESPONSE FROM GROUND MOTION

u + 2xwu& + w u = A + Bt = -&&
&& 2
ug
..
ug
.. 2
ug2

t1 t2
.. Time t
ug1
1

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DAMPED RESPONSE
- xwt B
u& t = e { [u& t - ] cos wd t
1 w2

1 B B
+ [A - w2ut - xw(u& t + 2 )] sin wd t } + 2
wd 1 1 w w
- xwt A 2xB
ut = e { [ut - + ] cos wd t
1 w 2 w 3

1 x A B(2x2 - 1)
+ [u& t + xwut - + ] sin wd t }
wd 1 1 w w2
A 2xB Bt
+[ - + ]
w 2
w3
w2

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


SDOF DAMPED RESPONSE

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


RESPONSE SPECTRUM GENERATION
Earthquake Record
0.40
GROUND ACC, g

0.20
16
0.00
14

DISPLACEMENT, inches
-0.20 12

-0.40 10
0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 8
TIME, SECONDS
6
4
T= 0.6 sec
4.00 2
DISPL, in.

2.00 0
0.00 0 2 4 6 8 10
-2.00 PERIOD, Seconds
-4.00
0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00
T= 2.0 sec
8.00
DISPL, in.

4.00
Displacement
0.00 Response Spectrum
-4.00 5% damping
-8.00
0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


SPECTRAL PARAMETERS
16
DISPLACEMENT, in.

PSV = w Sd
12

PSa = w PSv
8

0
0 2 4 6 8 10
PERIOD, sec
40 1.00

ACCELERATION, g
VELOCITY, in/sec

0.80
30

0.60
20
0.40

10
0.20

0 0.00
0 2 4 6 8 10 0 2 4 6 8 10
PERIOD, sec PERIOD, sec

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


THE ADRS SPECTRUM

Spectral Acceleration, Sa
RS Curve

0.5 Seconds

1.0 Seconds

2.0 Seconds
ADRS Curve
Spectral Acceleration, Sa

Period, T

Spectral Displacement, Sd

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


THE ADRS SPECTRUM

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ASCE 7 RESPONSE SPECTRUM

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PUSHOVER

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


THE LINEAR PUSHOVER

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


EQUIVALENT LINEARIZATION

How far to push? The Target Point!

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DISPLACEMENT MODIFICATION

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DISPLACEMENT MODIFICATION

Calculating the Target Displacement

d = C0 C1 C2 Sa Te / (4p )
2 2

C0 Relates spectral to roof displacement


C1 Modifier for inelastic displacement
C2 Modifier for hysteresis loop shape

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


LOAD CONTROL AND DISPLACEMENT CONTROL

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


P-DELTA ANALYSIS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


P-DELTA DEGRADES STRENGTH

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


P-DELTA EFFECTS ON F-D CURVES

P- effects may reduce the drift at which the


"worst" component reaches its ductile limit.
STRUCTURE P- effects will reduce the drift at
STRENGTH which the structure loses strength.

The "over-ductility" is reduced,


and is more uncertain.
DRIFT

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


THE FAST NONLINEAR ANALYSIS METHOD (FNA)

NON LINEAR FRAME AND SHEAR WALL HINGES


BASE ISOLATORS (RUBBER & FRICTION)

STRUCTURAL DAMPERS
STRUCTURAL UPLIFT

STRUCTURAL POUNDING
BUCKLING RESTRAINED BRACES

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


RITZ VECTORS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


FNA KEY POINT

The Ritz modes generated by the


nonlinear deformation loads are used
to modify the basic structural modes
whenever the nonlinear elements go
nonlinear.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ARTIFICIAL EARTHQUAKES

CREATING HISTORIES TO MATCH A SPECTRUM

FREQUENCY CONTENTS OF EARTHQUAKES

FOURIER TRANSFORMS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ARTIFICIAL EARTHQUAKES

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


MESH REFINEMENT

71 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


APPROXIMATING BENDING BEHAVIOR

This is for a coupling beam. A slender pier is similar.

72 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


ACCURACY OF MESH REFINEMENT

73 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PIER / SPANDREL MODELS

74 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRAIN & ROTATION MEASURES

75 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRAIN CONCENTRATION STUDY

Compare calculated strains and rotations for the 3 cases.

76 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


STRAIN CONCENTRATION STUDY

No. of Roof Strain in bottom Strain over story Rotation over


elems drift element height story height
1 2.32% 2.39% 2.39% 1.99%
2 2.32% 3.66% 2.36% 1.97%
3 2.32% 4.17% 2.35% 1.96%

The strain over the story height is insensitive to the number of elements.
Also, the rotation over the story height is insensitive to the number of elements.
Therefore these are good choices for D/C measures.

77 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DISCONTINUOUS SHEAR WALLS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


PIER AND SPANDREL FIBER MODELS

Vertical and horizontal fiber models

79 Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


RAYLEIGH DAMPING

• The aM dampers connect the masses to the ground. They exert


external damping forces. Units of a are 1/T.
• The bK dampers act in parallel with the elements. They exert internal
damping forces. Units of b are T.
• The damping matrix is C = aM + bK.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design 80


RAYLEIGH DAMPING

• For linear analysis, the coefficients a and b can be chosen to give essentially
constant damping over a range of mode periods, as shown.
• A possible method is as follows :
Choose TB = 0.9 times the first mode period.
Choose TA = 0.2 times the first mode period.
Calculate a and b to give 5% damping at these two values.
• The damping ratio is essentially constant in the first few modes.
• The damping ratio is higher for the higher modes.

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design 81


RAYLEIGH DAMPING

M &u& t + Cu& + Ku = 0
M &u& t + (a M + b K ) u
& + Ku = 0
&u& + Cu& +
K
u = 0
M M
&u& + 2x wu& + w2u = 0 ; 2x M w = C
x= C
= C = C
= aM + bK
2Mw 2M √K 2 √K M 2 √K M 2 √K M
M

x = aw + b w
2 2
Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design
RAYLEIGH DAMPING

Higher Modes (high w) = b


Lower Modes (low w) = a
To get z from a & b for any w = √M
K
; T = 2p
w
To get a & b from two values of z1& z2
z1 = a + b w1
2w 2
1 Solve for a & b
z2 = a + b w2
2w 2
2

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DAMPING COEFFICIENT FROM HYSTERESIS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


DAMPING COEFFICIENT FROM HYSTERESIS

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design


A BIG THANK YOU!!!

Nonlinear Analysis & Performance Based Design

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