Abstract

Double concave surface slider (DCSS) is considered as an effective solution for baseisolation of existing structures located in a near-fault site, because of its capacity to notably increase horizontal displacements that can be accommodated in comparison to a single concave surface slider (SCSS) of identical in-plan dimensions. However, unexpected torsional pounding of in-plan irregular adjacent structures may be induced by variability of friction force and lateral stiffness of SCSS and DCSS, depending on the axial load and friction coefficient changes during an earthquake. Effectiveness of supplemental viscous damping at the base is studied in this work with the aim to analyse its effectiveness for limiting base displacement, so avoiding too large seismic gap requirement. Structural pounding between fixed-base and baseisolated L-shaped buildings, placed adjacent to form Tand C-shaped plans, is analysed. A simulated design of the original reinforced concrete (RC) fixed-base framed structure is preliminarily carried out in accordance to a former Italian code, for a medium-risk seismic zone. Then, seismic retrofitting with SCSSs is carried out, in order to attain performance levels imposed by the current Italian code in a high-risk seismic zone, while DCSSs have radius of curvature equal to half the SCSSs and the same friction coefficient. The insertion of additional fluid viscous dampers (FVD) at the base is examined, following damping distribution inversely proportional to the distance between the stiffness centre of the base-isolation system and the plane frame where each FVD is placed. Nonlinear modelling of SCSSs and DCSSs considers variable axial load combined with friction coefficient at breakaway and stick-slip and as function of the sliding velocity, axial pressure and rising temperature at the sliding interface. Attention is focused on the pulse-type nature of near-fault earthquakes generally observed in the velocity time-histories but largely overlooked in the acceleration ones. Automated classification algorithms using wavelet analysis are adopted to compile three datasets of seismic input rotated in the range 0°-360°, with a constant step of 15°. Distinction is made between no-pulse and velocity-pulse, the latter further categorised into non-acceleration and acceleration-pulses.


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Published on 06/07/22
Submitted on 06/07/22

Volume 900 Structural Mechanics, Dynamics and Engineering, 2022
DOI: 10.23967/wccm-apcom.2022.066
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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