AJDBD-4 fardis

download AJDBD-4 fardis

of 24

Transcript of AJDBD-4 fardis

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    1/24

    EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICSEarthquake Engng Struct. Dyn. 2001; 30:14391462 (DOI: 10.1002/eqe.71)

    A displacement-based seismic design procedure for RC

    buildings and comparison with EC8

    T. B. Panagiotakos and M. N. Fardis

    Structures Laboratory; Department of Civil Engineering; University of Patras; Patras; Greece

    SUMMARY

    A procedure for displacement-based seismic design (DBD) of reinforced concrete buildings is described

    and applied to a 4-storey test structure. The essential elements of the design procedure are: (a) propor-tioning of members for gravity loads; (b) estimation of peak inelastic member deformation demands inthe so-designed structure due to the design (life-safety) earthquake; (c) revision of reinforcement andnal detailing of members to meet these inelastic deformation demands; (d) capacity design of membersand joints in shear. Additional but non-essential steps between (a) and (b) are: (i) proportioning ofmembers for the ULS against lateral loads, such as wind or a serviceability (immediate occupancy)earthquake; and (ii) capacity design of columns in exure at joints. Inelastic deformation demands instep (b) are estimated from an elastic analysis using secant-to-yield member stinesses. Empirical ex-pressions for the deformation capacity of RC elements are used for the nal proportioning of elementsto meet the inelastic deformation demands. The procedure is applied to one side of a 4-storey teststructure that includes a coupled wall and a two-bay frame. The other side is designed and detailedaccording to Eurocode 8. Major dierences result in the reinforcement of the two sides, with signicantsavings on the DBD-side. Pre-test calculations show no major dierence in the seismic performance ofthe two sides of the test structure. Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

    KEY WORDS: displacement-based design; deformation capacity; Eurocode 8; equal displacement rule; RCbuildings

    1. INTRODUCTION

    In displacement-based procedures for the seismic design of new structures or the evaluation ofexisting ones, seismic displacements are the primary response variables for the design or theevaluation. This means that design or acceptance criteria and capacity-demand comparisonsare expressed in terms of displacements rather than forces. Since their introduction in the early

    1990s [1; 2], displacement-based concepts have found their way more into seismic evaluation

    Correspondence to: M. N. Fardis, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Patras, P.O. Box 1424, UniversityCampus, Patras GR-26500, Greece.

    Received 16 November 1999Revised 15 July 2000 and 9 January 2001

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Accepted 7 February 2001

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    2/24

    1440 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    or assessment of existing structures [36], than into the design of new ones [714]. For exist-ing structures, application of displacement-based concepts is more straightforward in that thegeometry of the structure and the reinforcement are known and can be used as input to eithersimple or advanced analysis procedures for the estimation of member inelastic displacement

    and deformation demands throughout the structure, to be compared with the correspondingdeformation capacities [3; 4].

    The state-of-the-art of displacement-based design (DBD) for new structures is reectedin Appendix I (Tentative Guidelines for Performance-Based Seismic Engineering)Part B(ForceDisplacement Approach) of the 1999 SEAOC Blue Book [15]. Appendix I refers to aDirect DBD procedure and an Equal-displacement-based (EBD) one. The former, proposedand advocated by Priestley and co-workers [712], uses a substitute elastic structure to relatedisplacement demands to the eective period at peak response. The EBD procedure usesinstead the equal displacement rule to relate peak displacements to the period of the crackedelastic structure. These DBD procedures hold great promise for seismic design codicationand practice, especially after feedback from their application to real cases is received and afterthe code-specied drift limits, global ductility factors and damping values are further renedand rationalized.

    In this paper, another DBD approach is briey described and exemplied through its ap-plication to a 4-storey dual test structure. It has evolved from earlier proposals of the au-thors [16; 17] for RC frames and diers from most other DBD procedures (e.g. References[711; 15]) mainly in that: (a) (displacement-based) seismic design is integrated with ultimatelimit state (ULS) and serviceability (SLS) design for other loads, such as factored gravityand wind; and (b) local seismic displacement and deformation demands are used directly formember proportioning and detailing, without conversion to strength demands and recourse toforce-based proportioning.

    2. DESIGN PROCEDURE2.1. Overview of the design procedure

    The proposed DBD procedure comprises the following steps:

    (1) Proportioning of longitudinal and transverse reinforcement of all members on the basisof: (a) ULS and SLS design in exure and shear for factored gravity (and wind) loadsand for a serviceability (operational level) earthquake combined with the simultane-ously acting (arbitrary-point-in-time) gravity loads; (b) capacity design of columnsin exure at beam-column joints and of all members in shear; and (c) minimum rein-forcement for structures without earthquake resistance.

    (2) Estimation of inelastic chord rotation demands at member ends under the life-safety

    earthquake, through a 5 per cent-damped elastic analysis with yield point memberstiness for antisymmetric bending.(3) Revision of reinforcement and of detailing, so that member chord rotation capacities

    exceed the (possibly factored) seismic demands computed in step 2.(4) Capacity design of joints in shear and reevaluation of capacity design of: (a) columns

    in exure at joints; and (b) of all members in shear, on the basis of the nal memberlongitudinal reinforcement from step 3.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    3/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1441

    In step 1, the usual sequence of seismic design is followed. Beams are designed for exureconsidering minimum reinforcement and taking into account bar development within jointsfor the selection of longitudinal bar sizes; beams are capacity designed in shear; columns arecapacity designed for exure at joints considering minimum reinforcement; columns are ca-

    pacity designed for shear; walls are designed for exure considering minimum reinforcement;walls are capacity designed in shear for overstrength over exural hinge formation at the base.Capacity design of joints in shear is left for step 4.

    Completion of step 1 is necessary for step 2, as the eective stiness at yielding of mem-bers depends on their longitudinal reinforcement. In step 3, normally only the compressionsteel and the stirrups of members may need to be revised. An increase in the compressionreinforcement may require that the capacity design calculations in step 4 be repeated. Nor-mally, changes in reinforcement from steps 3 and 4 will not have a major eect on membereective stinesses used in step 2. Even if they do, any increase in member stinesses willreduce chord rotation demands from step 2 and increase the safety margin provided by step3 in the rst round. Therefore, unless chord rotations demands from step 2 cannot be met instep 3 through changes in the reinforcement but require also revision of member dimensions,iterations are not needed.

    Step 1 is similar to the current design of RC structures for nonseismic and (reduced) seismicloads. The only dierence is that the stringent detailing imposed by current seismic codes formember ductility is replaced by normal detailing for non-earthquake-resistant structures. Inlieu of prescriptive detailing for member ductility the procedure provides in step 3 for explicitmember verication against the seismic chord rotation demands.

    Design for a serviceability earthquake in step 1a is not an essential part of the procedure,especially if the structure is designed for wind. Its inclusion results in a two-level seismicdesign procedure, in-between: (1) the current codied seismic design (e.g. Reference [18])

    based on: (a) ULS proportioning of members for a rare earthquake including a force reduc-tion factorR and (b) drift limits for damage limitation under a frequent earthquake, and (2)

    the full four-level seismic design of performance-based seismic engineering [4 ; 15; 19].Capacity design of columns in exure at beam=column joints is not an essential componentof the proposed procedure. It can be replaced by explicit verication of the deformationcapacity of columns under a very rare [19] or maximum considered [15] earthquake alongthe lines of Section 2.3. In the absence of such an explicit verication, capacity design ofcolumns in exure at joints is used here to ensure the formation of a controlled and stableinelastic mechanism and prevent collapse under such large-magnitude events.

    2.2. Estimation of inelastic displacement and deformation demands underthe design level earthquake

    A procedure was proposed in Reference [20] for the estimation of peak inelastic chord rotation

    demands at member ends in RC frame structures. It is similar to the coecient-method inReference [4] and the EBD procedure in Part B of Appendix I in Reference [15], as ituses linear elastic analysis and the 5 per cent-damped elastic spectrum of the design levelearthquake. The analysis can be equivalent static, with lateral forces from a postulatedlinear mode shape, or preferably multimodal (dynamic) with CQC combination of modalcontributions. Member stinesses, EI, are taken equal to the secant stiness at yielding at bothmember ends in antisymmetric bending. With such member stinesses the fundamental period

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    4/24

    1442 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    lies in the velocity-controlled part of the spectrum and the equal-displacement rule applies,giving on the average good approximation of the peak inelastic chord rotations at memberends.

    Results in Reference [20] do not include an overall period-dependent correction as in Ref-

    erences [4; 15], but multiplicative factors on chord rotations from the linear analysis, forconversion to a mean (expected) value, Em, or to a 95 per cent-fractile, Ek;0:95, of peakinelastic chord rotations. These factors are dierent for beams and columns and depend onwhether the linear analysis is equivalent static or multimodal. They increase linearly fromthe base to the top of the structure and are on the average around 1 forEm or 1.5 forEk;0:95.The dierence between the mean and the 95 per cent-fractile reects scatter due to: (a) detailsof a ground motion conforming to a smooth elastic spectrum; and (b) model uncertainty dueto estimation of inelastic deformations from elastic analysis.

    The secant-to-yield stiness of a member in antisymmetric bending is

    EI=L

    6

    My

    y

    (1)

    in which L denotes the clear length of the member and My, y, the yield moment and thecorresponding chord rotation at the member end. For elements with unsymmetric section(beams) two values of EI are calculated from Equation (1) at each end, one for positivemoment and another for negative. The slab width considered to be eective as ange on eachside of the beam and contributing with its reinforcement is taken to be equal to one-quarterthe beam span, L or half the distance to the nearest parallel beam, whichever is smaller. Thetwo values computed from Equation (1) at the two ends are averaged into a single EI-valueof the member.

    The moment My at yielding of the tension steel can be computed from rst principles. Thecorresponding chord rotation, y, can be estimated from a semiempirical relation such as [21]

    y=yL

    6 + 0:0025 + 0:25db

    f2y

    Es(d d)fc

    (2)

    In Equation (2) y is the yield curvature (computed from rst principles), h the depth ofthe member, db the mean diameter of tension reinforcement, d d

    the distance between thetension and compression steel and fy, Es and f

    c (all in MPa) the yield strength and elasticmodulus of longitudinal steel and the concrete strength. The second term accounts for theeects of shear and the last one reects the end rotation due to reinforcement slip from itsanchorage beyond the member end.

    It is clear from Equations (1) and (2) that knowledge of the longitudinal reinforcement

    from step 1 of the design procedure is essential for the calculation of the eective stinessof members for input to step 2.

    The procedure was developed in Reference [20] on the basis of over one thousand non-linearanalyses of RC frame buildings from three to twelve storeys, all fairly regular in plan andelevation. At beam-column joints the sum of column exural capacities was greater or slightlyless than that of beam capacities. The capacities of all members were controlled by exurerather than shear and brittle failures were unlikely. Under these conditions, not uncommon in

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    5/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1443

    earthquake-resistant buildings, signicant concentrations of inelasticity were not observed inany single storey, even under motions exceeding the design earthquake by a factor of 2.

    2.3. Detailing of RC members on the basis of inelastic deformation demands

    In step 3, the longitudinal and transverse reinforcement at member ends is revised and detailedso that the corresponding chord-rotation capacity, u, exceeds the demand from step 2. Tothis end an expression is needed for the ultimate chord rotation of members in terms of theirgeometric and mechanical characteristics (including the reinforcement). Well-known expres-sions based on section curvature and the notion of plastic hinge length (as e.g. in References[13; 14] for walls), or empirical expressions foru, such as those in References [22; 23] may

    be used to this end. At this instance, the proposed procedure employs the following expres-sion foru, found to t best a total of 878 tests to failure (242 monotonic, 636 cyclic tests)of beam (288, unsymmetrically reinforced, without axial force), column (526, symmetricallyreinforced, with or without axial force) or wall (64) specimens [21]:

    um= astacyc

    1 + asl2:3

    awall(0:2

    )

    max(0:01; !2)

    max(0:01; !1)fc

    0:275 Lsh

    0:451:1100!wx 1:3d (3)

    with ast being the coecient for the steel of longitudinal bars, equal to 0.015 for ductile hot-rolled steel, 0.0125 for heat-treated tempcore steel, or 0.008 for brittle cold-worked steel,acyc the coecient for the type of loading, equal to 1 for monotonic and 0.6 for cyclicloading, asl the coecient for the slip of longitudinal bars, equal to 1 if there is slip of thelongitudinal bars from the anchorage beyond the member end, or 0 if there is not, awall acoecient, equal to 2=3 for shear walls or 1 for beams or columns, =N=Acf

    c the axial loadratio, positive for compression, !1; !2 the mechanical reinforcement ratios, fy=f

    c , of the

    tension and compression longitudinal steel not including any diagonal bars; (in walls all thevertical web reinforcement is included as tension steel), fc uniaxial concrete strength (MPa),Ls=h=M=Vh the shear span ratio at the member end, !wx= (Asx=bwsh)fyw=f

    c the mechanicalratio of transverse steel parallel to the direction (x) of loading, the connement eectivenessfactor, equal to sn, with s= (1sh=2b0)

    2 and n= 1 (b0=nhh0 +h0=nbb0)=3 for hoops withnb legs or cross-ties parallel to side b0 of the conned core and nh legs or cross-ties parallelto side b0 and d(%) the steel ratio of any reinforcement placed in each diagonal directionof the member.

    As it represents an average t to the data, the ultimate chord rotation given by Equation (3)is considered as an expected value and denoted by um. Owing to the large scatter, in theverication of chord rotations 5 per cent-fractile of the deformation capacity is used insteadofum. This lower characteristic value is:

    uk;0:05= 0:4um (4)

    The proposed verication of members at the life-safety performance level is

    Ek;0:956uk; 0:05 (5)

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    6/24

    1444 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    The value of in Equation (5) can be related to the probability of member failure conditionedon occurrence of the life-safety earthquake. For the present quantication of the scatter in thesupply and demand values of chord rotation, u andE, this failure probability is approximatelyequal to 1 per cent for = 1:4 or 2 per cent for = 1.

    Exhaustion of deformation capacity at the level of the individual member does not neces-sarily imply failure of the system. For this reason verication according to Equation (5) isconsidered appropriate for the life-safety performance level, instead of the collapse preven-tion level.

    Equation (5) needs to be veried at each member end, separately for positive or negativemoments. Transverse gravity loads between the two ends of a beam aect the verication bygiving a (small) contribution to Em and by aecting the value of the shear span, Ls=M=V,in Equation (3). Ls should be computed from the values ofM and Vat the member end dueto the superposition of gravity loads and seismic loading according to linear analysis.

    It is clear from Equation (3) that if the member design from step 1 does not satisfy Equation(5), in step 3 the designer may do one or more of the following: (a) For any type of element,increase the conning reinforcement in the compression zone to increase!wx. (b) For elementswith unsymmetric cross-section and reinforcement, like beams and vertical elements with T-,L- or channel-section, increase the amount of longitudinal reinforcement on the side which isin compression when Equation (5) is violated, without increasing its tension reinforcement.(c) For walls, reduce the amount of web vertical reinforcement between the edges of thecross-section, to reduce the total tension reinforcement ratio !1. (d) For short elements, likecoupling beams or short columns, add diagonal reinforcement at a steel ratio d(%). If thesemeasures are not enough to full Equation (5), the designer may have to modify the cross-sectional dimensions. This will change the shear span ratio, Ls=h, and (for vertical elements)the axial load ratio, =N=Acfc. Note that such changes may require repeating the entire design

    procedure, starting again from step 1.

    3. APPLICATION TO A 4-STOREY DUAL TEST STRUCTURE

    3.1. Description and design of the test structure

    The proposed DBD procedure is applied to one side of the dual 4-storey structure shown inFigure 1. Each side consists of a 3-bay frame with two shear walls, one with a 1:0m 0:5m0:25 m L-shaped section and the other with a 1:0 m 0:25 m rectangular one, coupled througha 0:45 m-deep and 1:0 m-long beam. The two columns of the frame have a depth of 0 :4 mand a width of 0:25 m. The test structure has two such frames at an axial distance of 4:0 mand has been constructed for pseudodynamic (PsD) testing parallel to the frames at the ELSA

    reaction wall facility of the European Commission in Ispra (I). These frames were designedand tested (through additional masses) as if each one had a tributary slab width of 5:0 m,instead of 2:0 m in the test structure. Nominal (5 per cent-fractile) strengths of 25 MPa forconcrete and 500 MPa for steel were specied.

    The two sides of the test structure were designed for unidirectional earthquake in thedirection of testing. One side was designed according to Eurocode 8 (EC8) [18] for a design

    peak ground acceleration (PGA) of 0:4 g, soil class B (medium dense sands or medium sti

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    7/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1445

    Figure 1. Four-storey dual test structure (member cross-sectional dimensions in cm).

    clays, see Figure 4 for spectral shape) and ductility class high (DCH). For this ductility class,the force reduction factorR for dual structures dominated by coupled walls is taken in EC8to be equal to 5.0. To achieve this value of R strict detailing rules and capacity design ofcolumns in bending at joints and of all elements in shear are prescribed in Reference [18].As mentioned above, the design of the other side is according to the proposed procedure.As the testing is within a framework of research on the structures designed according tothe Eurocodes, this design follows minimum reinforcement and detailing rules of Eurocode 2

    (EC2) [24] for non-earthquake-resistant structures. Nevertheless, the procedure may be appliedalong with any set of modern detailing rules for non-earthquake-resistant structures.Tables IIII compare the detailing rules applied to the two sides (a dash in the last column

    means that there is no provision for the corresponding rule).To allow comparison of the two designs in step 3 the design level earthquake for which

    Equation (5) is veried is taken to be the same as in the EC8-design. Moreover, the ser-viceability earthquake in step 1 is taken to be equal to the design level earthquake divided

    by R= 5. Then the ULS proportioning of members is performed for the same seismic loadeects in both designs, corresponding to a base shear coecient of 0.2 from the spectrum, orof 0.188 from the multimodal analysis. Moreover, the capacity design of columns in bend-ing and of beams, columns and walls in shear is performed in both cases with the capacityoverstrength factors specied in Reference [18] for ductility class H (1.25 for beams, 1.35

    for columns, 1.25 for walls).In both the EC8 design and step 1 of the proposed procedure the analysis uses uncracked

    gross section stinesses and considers the length of beams within joints as rigid. With thesestiness assumptions the fundamental period is equal to 0:51 s and the interstorey drift ratiosat the design level earthquake are fairly uniform: 0.51, 0.53, 0.5 and 0.47 per cent, from theground storey to the top. Despite the small depth of the coupling beam, the moment of thecouple of axial forces in the two walls according to the elastic analysis is about 1.1 times

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    8/24

    1446 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    TableI.MinimumrequirementsofEC8(DCH)andEC2

    =DBD;beams.

    Beamprovisions

    EC8-DCH

    DBDfollowing

    EC2

    &capacitydes

    ign

    Criticalendregions,length

    2h

    1:5h

    Longitudinalbars

    (L)

    min

    (%)tensionange

    0:15;

    50fc

    t=fy

    0.15

    max

    (%)criticalregions

    0:15+27fc=f

    y

    =

    3.0

    As;mintop&bottom

    (mm

    2)

    308

    As;mintop-span

    0:25A

    s;top-supports

    As;mintop-supports

    0:25A

    s;bottom-span

    0:25A

    s;bottom-span

    As;mincr.r

    egions-bottom

    0:5A

    s;top-supports

    db=h

    c-barcrossingjointfor

    columndepthh

    can

    d=N=A

    cfc

    (i)Interiorjoint:

    7(1+1:2)f

    ct=(1+

    =

    max

    )fy

    8:5(1+1:2)f

    ct=(1+0:5

    =

    max

    )fy

    (ii)Exteriorjoint:

    7(1+1:2)f

    ct=f

    y

    8:5(1+1:2)fc

    t=f

    y

    Transversereinforc

    ement(w)

    sw;m

    axoutsidecritic

    alregions

    0:8d

    ,0:3m

    0:8d

    ,0:3m

    db;w

    criticalregions

    6mm

    sw;m

    axcriticalregio

    ns

    5dbL;h

    =4;2

    4dbw,

    0.15m

    0:8d

    ,0.3m

    Sheardesign

    VEd,

    EQ

    1:25M

    Rd;ends=1+V

    simplysupp:b

    eam

    1:25M

    Rd;ends=1+Vsi

    mplysupp:b

    eam

    Vccriticalregions,EQ

    0

    fullVc

    Couplingbeams

    Diagonalreinforcem

    ent

    if2M=13V

    c

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    9/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1447

    TableII

    .MinimumrequirementsofEC8(DCH)andEC2=DBD;columns.

    Columnprovisions

    EC8-DCH

    DBDfollowingEC2

    &capacity

    design

    Criticalendregions,height

    1:5max(h

    c;b

    c);0:6m;lc=

    5

    (increasedby50%inlowertwostoreys)

    Longitudinalbars

    (L)

    min

    (%)

    1.0

    1.0

    max

    (%)

    4.0

    4.0

    db;min

    12mm

    12mm

    Minimumbarsper

    side:

    3

    3

    Dist.ofbarsrestrainedbyhoops

    150mm

    orcross-ties6

    Transversereinforc

    ement(w)

    dbw;m

    inoutsidecriticalregion

    6mm;0:2

    5dbL

    6mm;0:2

    5dbL

    sw;m

    axoutsidecritic

    alregion

    12dbL;m

    in(h

    c;b

    c);0:3m

    12dbL;m

    in(hc;bc);0:3m

    sw;m

    axinsplices

    7:2d

    bL;0:6

    min(h

    c;b

    c);0:1

    8m

    7:2d

    bL;0:6

    min(h

    c;b

    c);0:1

    8m

    dbw;m

    incriticalregions

    0:4d

    bL

    sw;m

    axcriticalregio

    ns

    5dbL;0:2

    5bo;0:1m

    (Asw=s

    wb

    c)(f

    y=f

    c)criticalregions

    0.5

    (A

    sw=s

    wb

    c)(f

    y=f

    c)

    crit

    .regions

    1:7875(fy=E

    s)(0:3

    +0:7A

    g=A

    o)

    0:0175

    =N=A

    cfc6

    0.37

    Capacitydesignat

    joints:

    1:35MRb6

    MRc

    1:35MRb6

    MRc

    Sheardesign:

    VEdseismic(EQ)

    1:35MRc=lc

    1:35MR

    c=lc

    VcforEQ

    fullVc

    fullV

    c

    Theconnementeectivenessfactorequalssn,

    with

    sequalto(1

    s=2b

    o)2andn

    equalto

    1

    (bo=nhh

    o+h

    o=nbb

    o)=3forhoopsw

    ithnb

    legsor

    cross-tiesparallelto

    sideb

    oofthecoreandnh

    legsorcross-tiesparalleltosideb

    o.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    10/24

    1448 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    TableIII.MinimumrequirementsofEC8(DCH)andEC2=DBD;walls

    .

    Wallprovisions

    EC8-DCH

    DBC(EC2&capacitydesign)

    Boundaryelements:

    1.Incriticalregion

    :

    Lengthlcfrom

    edge

    0:15lw;

    1:5b

    w

    bw

    Verticalreinforcement

    Minimumbarsper

    side

    3

    3

    minoverA

    c=lcb

    w

    (%)

    1.0

    0.5

    max

    overA

    c=lcb

    w

    (%)

    4.0

    4.0

    db;min

    12mm

    12mm

    Conninghoops(w)

    dbw;m

    in

    6mm;0:4

    dbL

    6mm;0:4

    dbL

    sw;m

    ax

    5dbL;0:2

    5bo;0:1m

    9dbL;0:5

    bo;0:2m

    (Asw=s

    wb

    c)(f

    y=f

    c)

    0.05

    (A

    sw=s

    wb

    c)(f

    y=f

    c)

    0:1375(fy=E

    s)(0:3

    +0:7A

    c=A

    o)

    0:0175

    2.Restofwall

    Verticalreinforcement

    min

    (%)

    0.5

    0.4

    max

    (%)

    4.0

    4.0

    Web:

    Verticalbars(v)

    v;min

    (%)

    0.2,butsuchthatv

    ofentirewallsection0:4

    0.2

    v;max

    (%)

    0.4

    4.0

    dbv;m

    in

    8mm

    8mm

    dbv;m

    ax

    bw=8

    sv;m

    ax

    0:2d

    bv;0:2m

    0:2d

    bv;0:

    2m

    Horizontalbars

    (h)

    h;min

    (%)

    0:2;0:5

    v

    0:2;0:5

    v

    dbh;m

    in

    8mm

    8mm

    dbh;m

    ax

    bw=8

    sh;m

    ax

    20dbh;0:2m

    0:3m

    Fortheeectiveness

    factor,

    seefootnoteofTableII

    .Therequiredvalueofthewallcurvatureductilityfactor,,

    isR2fornon-coupledwallsand0:8R2

    forcoupled;theee

    ctiveaxialloadratiooftheboundary

    elementcanbetakenequalto0:75(N

    Sd=2+MSd=z)=A

    cfc,

    whereNSd;M

    Sdand

    z=

    0:8l

    w

    are

    theaxialforce,bend

    ingmomentandinternalleverarmoftheentirewallcross-section.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    11/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1449

    the sum of bending moments at the base of the individual walls, allowing for these walls toqualify as coupled. According to the elastic analysis the walls take more than 70 per cent ofthe seismic base shear.

    In both designs the load combinations are according to EC2 [24] and EC8 [18], i.e. (a)

    1:35 dead load+1:5 live load for factored gravity and (b) earthquake+dead load+0:3 liveload for the seismic combination.

    The designs according to EC8 or step 1 of the DBD procedure follow the sequence outlinedin Section 2.1, as described in detail below:

    (a) Beams were proportioned in exure for the envelope of the moments from the loadcombinations: (i) of factored gravity loads; and (ii) of earthquake plus arbitrary-point-in-timegravity loads (dead-load+0:3 live-load according to EC8). As the serviceability earthquakeof the DBD frame and the reduced by R= 5 design earthquake of the EC8 frame are the same,longitudinal steel requirements for the beams of both frames are the same.

    The upper limit to the diameter of beam bars passing through beam-column joints, asdetermined by bar development within the joint (lines 11 and 12 in Table III) is 12 mm inthe EC8 frame and 14mm in the DBD one. Bar development within the beam-wall joints sets

    practically no limit to the beam bar diameter.The minimum reinforcement ratio is 0:5fct=fy= 0:26 per cent for the EC8 beams, but 0.15

    per cent for the DBD ones. So the minimum reinforcement is three 12 mm bars for the EC8beams and two 12 mm beams for the DBD ones.

    EC8 allows counting in the top beam reinforcement any slab bars which are parallel to thebeam and up to a distance bf from it equal to twice the slab depth hf on each side of thebeam, for exterior columns with transverse beams or interior ones without such beams, orup to bf= 4hf on each side of the beam, for interior columns with transverse beams. In the

    prototype structure, with the slab extending to both sides of the beams, this rule gives a slabcontribution to the top beam reinforcement of 560 or 200 mm2 at the face of the interior or

    the exterior column, respectively, or of 170 mm

    2

    at the face of the walls.Over the interior column supports the minimum steel suces as top reinforcement in bothdesigns, without any contribution from the slab reinforcement. Over beam supports at theexterior column and at the interior wall the minimum reinforcement plus the above quantitiesof slab steel barely meet the requirements for beam top reinforcement in the three loweroors. As a matter of fact, the reinforcement there meets the requirements with some decitin the DBD frame, which has less minimum beam reinforcement than the EC8 one. Theminimum reinforcement suces throughout the bottom of all beams, except those of the twolower storeys of the DBD frame, where it needs to be increased to two 14 mm bars.

    The minimum longitudinal reinforcement of two 14 mm bars in the EC8 design or two12 mm bars in the DBD one suces in the coupling beams. The maximum shear in the EC8coupling beams (from the analysis or from capacity design, see (b) below, including 170mm 2

    of slab steel in the calculation of the beam exural capacity), barely reaches the EC8 limitfor placement of bars along the two diagonals of the beam.(b) Beam stirrups were proportioned for capacity design shears calculated on the basis of

    overstrength exural capacities 1:25MRb at beam ends, plus transverse arbitrary-point-in-timegravity loads. Beam exural capacities were determined including some slab reinforcementaccording to EC8, i.e. up to a distance bf= 2hf on each side of the beam, except at the faceof interior columns, where bf= 4hf on each side of the beam can be taken.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    12/24

    1450 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    Over 1:5hb= 0:675 m-long critical end regions of the DBD beams, where the concretecontribution to shear resistance Vc is neglected, 8 mm stirrups at 225 centres are required inthe two upper oors or at 210 mm centres in the two lower oors. This stirrup spacing isrequired on both sides of the joint with the interior column, where the slab contribution to

    the beam exural capacity is the largest and penalizes the capacity design shears the most.This spacing could be increased a little at the other end of these DBD beams, but it was keptthe same at both ends for simplicity.

    Over the 2hb= 0:9 m-long critical end regions of EC8 beams the antibuckling requirementsw;max= 5dbL= 60 mm controls the stirrup spacing.

    In-between the critical end regions the maximum stirrup spacing of 0 :3 m controls in bothdesigns.

    Stirrup spacing in the coupling beams of the DBD frame is controlled by the capacity designshear force. It is equal to 120 mm in the two upper oors and 105 mm in the other two. Inthe coupling beams of the EC8 frame the stirrup spacing required to resist the capacity designshear is 95 mm, but the antibuckling requirement sw;max= 5dbL= 50 mm controls. Since theEC8 coupling beams were at the limit of requiring diagonal reinforcement, the stirrup spacingwas reduced to 50 mm in the coupling beam of the (most critical) 1st oor.

    The (nal) beam reinforcement shown in Figure 2 diers from what is given above onlyin the coupling beams of the DBD frame, because there step 3 of the DBD procedure resultsin more closely spaced stirrups and in placement of some diagonal bars.

    (c) Columns were proportioned in exure, so that the sum of their factored exural capac-ities at beam column joints, MRc, exceeds the sum of overstrength capacities of the beams,1:35MRb. The values of 1:35MRb listed in Table IV are calculated on the basis of threealternative considerations for the slab width bf contributing with its tension steel to the hog-ging exural capacity of the beam: (1) forbf according to the EC8 values quoted above andconsidered on both sides of the beam (i.e. as in the prototype structure); (2) forbf accordingto the more realistic estimate of the New Zealand code, i.e. equal to one-quarter of the beam

    span Lb, but only on one side of the beam, i.e. as in the test structure; and (3) for bf equalto the physical upper bound of one-half of the clear distance Ls of the two frames in the teststructure. Beam exural capacities resulting from consideration (1) are practically the sameas those from (2) at the interior column joint, but are 2025 per cent lower at the exteriorcolumn joint. Beam exural capacities from the upper bound consideration (3) are 4050 percent higher than the ones from (2).

    To meet the limitations on minimum number and maximum distance of bars around thecolumn section, a minimum of 10 or 8 bars is required in the EC8 and the DBD columns,respectively. With these numbers 12 or 14 mm bars would be enough in the EC8 and theDBD columns, respectively, to supply the minimum reinforcement ratio of 1 per cent. (Theminimum reinforcement ratio for EC2 columns is 0.3 per cent, but the 1 per cent value ofEC8 is considered here necessary for earthquake-resistant columns and adopted in the DBD

    approach.) In the interior columns of the EC8 and the DBD frames ten 14mm bars and eight16 mm ones, respectively, are needed to meet or exceed the beam overstrength capacitiesfrom considerations (1) and (2), for the minimum column axial force in the seismic loadcombinations. Vertical reinforcement in the exterior column of the EC8 frame is the same asin the interior one, because ten 12mm bars are barely enough in the weak direction of bendingagainst factored gravity loads in the test structure. At the interior column of the DBD framethe bar diameter can be reduced to 14 mm at the 4th oor, where capacity design of columns

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    13/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1451

    Figure2.Beamreinforcem

    entoftheDBDandEC8sidesof

    theteststructure.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    14/24

    1452 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    TableIV

    .Comparisonofthesumofcolumn(factored)

    exuralcapacitiesMRc,

    tothesumofbeam(overstrength)capacities

    1:35MRb

    atbeam-columnjoints.

    EC8

    Floor

    Interiorcolumn

    Exteriorcolumn

    MRc

    (kN

    m)

    1:35MRb

    (kN

    m)

    MRc

    (kNm)

    1.35MRb

    (kNm)

    bf=

    4h(1)

    f

    bf=Lb=4(2)

    bf=L

    s=2(3)

    bf=

    2h(1)

    f

    bf=Lb=4(2)

    bf=L

    s=2(3)

    4th

    117

    278

    272

    376

    109

    120

    150

    216

    3rd

    244

    278

    272

    376

    222

    120

    150

    216

    2nd

    262

    278

    272

    376

    228

    120

    150

    216

    1st

    277

    278

    272

    376

    233

    120

    150

    216

    DBD

    Floor

    Interiorcolumn

    Exteriorcolumn

    MRc

    (kN

    m)

    1:35MRb

    (kN

    m)

    MRc

    (kNm)

    1:35MRb

    (kNm)

    bf=

    4h(1)

    f

    bf=Lb=4(2)

    bf=L

    s=2(3)

    bf=

    2h(1)

    f

    bf=Lb=4(2)

    bf=L

    s=2(3)

    4th

    99

    228

    221

    302

    91

    95

    125

    190

    3rd

    236

    228

    221

    302

    186

    95

    125

    190

    2nd

    284

    246

    240

    319

    193

    95

    125

    190

    1st

    301

    246

    240

    319

    199

    95

    125

    190

    (1)Beamcapacitiescalculatedforaneectiveslabwidthequal

    totheEC8value:bf=

    4hfoneachsideofthebeamatcentralcolumns;bf=2hfatexterior

    ones.

    (2)Beamcapacitiescalculatedforaneectiveslabwidthequalto:bf=Lb=4ononesideofthebeam

    (Lb=clearspanofthebeam).

    (3)Beamcapacitiescalculatedforaneectiveslabwidthequaltotheupperboundvalue:bf=L

    s=2ononesideofthebeam(L

    s=spanofslabbetween

    beams).

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    15/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1453

    in exure is not required. The same reinforcement, of eight 14 mm bars, is enough for theexterior column of the DBD frame. Exterior columns of both frames meet the capacity designrequirements at the joints, even in the upper bound case (3) of beam exural capacities.

    (d) The transverse reinforcement of columns is proportioned for capacity design shear

    forces computed on the basis of column exural overstrengths, 1:35MRc, at the maximum axialcompression in the seismic load combinations. Capacity design shears range from 105 kN inthe top storey to 155 kN in the 2nd storey of the DBD columns (the range is narrower in theEC8 frame). These shears can be easily resisted by the minimum transverse reinforcement,as the contribution of concrete to shear, Vc, ranges from 55 to 105 kN. In both frames hoopspacing is controlled by the maximum spacing sw;max= 7dbL outside critical end regions in theEC8 design, or sw;max= 7:2dbL in such regions or in splicing zones in the DBD one. Withinthe critical end regions of EC8 columns hoops and cross-ties are controlled by the maximumspacing of one-quarter of the minimum dimension of the conned concrete core, bo=4=45mm.

    The column vertical and transverse reinforcement given above is the same as the nal onein Figure 3.

    (e) Wall vertical reinforcement should resist design moments from a linear envelope of thewall bending moments from the elastic analysis, shifted upwards by the wall length dimensionlw. Design moments are equal to 135 and 195kNm at the base of the L-shaped exterior wall orof the interior rectangular wall, respectively (despite its smaller cross-section the interior wallattracts larger seismic forces due to its connectivity with beams). The range of axial forcesfor the earthquake plus arbitrary-point-in-time gravity load is 460 to 20 kN (tension) in theL-shaped exterior walls and 505 to 270kN in the interior ones. The couple of wall axial forcesgives a moment of 370kNm at the base, larger than the sum of wall moments there, 330kNm,implying signicant coupling action of the connecting beam despite its limited depth.

    Throughout the height of the walls conned boundary zones are provided at the ends of thesection, according to the rules of Table III. A 500 mm 250 mm boundary zone is providedover the full ange of the L-shaped wall section in both designs. Boundary zones at the ends

    of the rectangular webs of the walls have a length of lc= 1:5bw= 380 mm in the EC8 designor of lc= bw= 250 mm in the DBD one. The vertical reinforcement of these boundary zoneswas selected to meet the minimum requirements in Table III regarding maximum distance andminimum number of bars and the minimum reinforcement ratio over the boundary zone itself(1 or 0.5 per cent) and the entire section (0.4 per cent). As an exception, the intermediate12 mm bar along the 250 mm side of the DBD wall section (normally needed as intermediatevertical reinforcement in the beamwall joint in the weak direction of the wall) was removed;the ve 12mm bars of each 250mm 250mm boundary zone in the DBD walls were replaced

    by four 14 mm corner bars, providing about the same section exural capacity. As anotherexception, each boundary zone of the EC8 interior rectangular wall was provided with threeadditional 12 mm bars, to make up (through dowel action) for a decit in resistance againstsliding shear according to EC8. This arrangement was preferred over the placement of two

    additional bars through the wall base at each storey, at

    45

    .Hoops are provided around corner bars of all boundary zones and cross-ties connect in-termediate bars on opposite sides of boundary zones of the EC8 walls. In the critical 1ststorey of the EC8 walls the spacing of these hoops and cross-ties has to satisfy the minimumrequirements of Table III for connement of the core of the boundary zone and for preventionof buckling of vertical bars. Anywhere else on the walls of both sides the spacing of hoopsand cross-ties is equal to the minimum dimension of the boundary zone, i.e. to bw= 250 mm.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    16/24

    1454 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    Figure3.ReinforcementofverticalelementsofDBDandEC8sidesoftheteststructure.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    17/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1455

    Figure 4. Five per cent-damped acceleration spectra and time-history of syntheticinput motion after Kobe=Port Island.

    The vertical and hoop reinforcement determined as described above is shown in Figure 3throughout the height of the EC8 walls and at the top storey of the DBD ones (in the otherthree storeys the reinforcement of at least one DBD wall was modied in step 3 of the

    proposed procedure).The vertical reinforcement determined from minimum measures provides signicant exural

    overstrength. For the maximum compression=minimum compression (maximum tension) at thewall base the factored exural capacity MRw is equal to 515=430 kNm or 605=585kNm in theL-shaped exterior or the rectangular interior walls of the EC8 design, giving correspondingoverstrength ratios with respect to the elastic seismic moments of 3:85=3:2 or 3:1=3:0, respec-tively. On the DBD side the corresponding values ofMRw are 395=290kNm and 415=390kNmfor the L-shaped and the rectangular walls, respectively, while those of the overstrength ratio

    are 2:95=2:15 and 2:1=2:0.(f) Walls were designed in shear for capacity design shears determined by magnifying

    the shears from the analysis by a factor which is derived according to EC8, neglecting thecoupling of the two walls, from 1.25 times the moment overstrength ratios quoted at the endof the previous paragraph, plus a semi-empirical factor accounting for inelastic higher-modeeects. The nal magnication factor applied to wall shear forces from the analysis is equal to5.0 in both L-shaped exterior walls and to 4.3 or 3.2 for the rectangular interior walls of the

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    18/24

    1456 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    EC8 and the DBD side, respectively. After this magnication design shears in the 1st storey ofthe L-shaped walls for the extremes of compression and tension are equal to 280 and 215kN,respectively, on the EC8 side or to 265 and 150 kN on the DBD side. In the rectangularinterior walls, which do not develop tensile axial forces under the seismic load combination,

    design shear forces at the 1st storey are equal to 370 or 275 kN on the EC8 and the DBDside, respectively. Design shears at the 2nd storey are 85 or 75 per cent respectively, of thevalues above for the L-shaped exterior walls and the interior rectangular ones, respectively.

    At all storeys of the EC8 and DBD walls the minimum horizontal reinforcement of 8 mmbars at 160 mm centres (20 times the bar diameter), or at 200 mm centres (giving a webreinforcement ratio of 0.2 per cent) was, respectively, provided. For a 45-truss these rein-forcements give factored shear capacities of 220 or 175 kN, respectively. These capacitiessuce against the design shear of the exterior L-shaped walls under tensile axial load, i.e.when at the critical 1st storey the contribution of concrete to shear resistance, Vc, is neglected.For compressive axial forces the factored shear capacity of concrete, Vc, is equal to 85 or80 kN in the 1st storey of the EC8 or the DBD wall, respectively; then the total factoredshear capacity exceeds the design shear force only in the L-shaped exterior walls of the EC8side. Everywhere else in the 1st storey under peak axial compression there is a shear strengthdecit ranging from 19 per cent in the rectangular wall of the EC8 side, to 7 :5 or 4 per centin the rectangular and L-shaped walls of the DBD side. Nevertheless, as the EC8 rules forthe shear force magnication in walls are deemed to be overly conservative, these decitsmay be considered acceptable.

    The vertical reinforcement in the webs of the DBD walls was selected to be the same asthe horizontal (i.e. equal to the minimum). The two 8 mm bars placed on each side of theweb of the EC8 walls between the two boundary zones provide 50 per cent more verticalweb reinforcement than the minimum. For the value of the shear span ratio M=Vlw prevailingin these walls (around 1.6) wall axial compression is considered to assist the web verticalreinforcement in shear; hence, there is a surplus of web vertical steel in all four walls,

    especially in those of the EC8 side.It is clear that both the EC8 design and that from step 1 of the DBD procedure arenot controlled by ULS proportioning for the serviceability earthquake. They are controlledinstead by capacity design, minimum reinforcement and detailing rules and sometimes byfactored gravity loads.

    The changes in the reinforcement of the DBD side eected within step 3 of the proposedapproach (with = 1:2 in Equation (5)) to meet the chord rotation demands from step 2 arethe following:

    (i) The spacing of stirrups in the coupling beams was reduced from 120 to 80 mm in thetwo upper oors and from 105 to 50mm in the two lower ones, while two 20mm barswere placed along each diagonal of the coupling beam of the 1st oor.

    (ii) In the 1st storey of the interior rectangular wall and in the three lower storeys of theexterior L-shaped ones, hoop spacing in the boundary zones was reduced from 250 to60 mm and the diameter of the four corner bars in all boundary zones other than thatof the ange of the L-shaped wall was increased from 14 to 16 mm.

    The increase in the vertical reinforcement of the DBD walls increases their exural capacityand in turn the overstrength ratio over the elastic moments at the base from the analysis for

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    19/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1457

    Table V. Comparison of steel quantities per frame (kg) in the two designs.

    Floor Longitudinal Transverse Total

    EC8 DBD Dierence EC8 DBD Dierence EC8 DBD Dierence

    (%) (%) (%)

    Beams and coupling beams4 66 41 38 45 22 51 111 63 433 66 41 38 45 22 51 111 63 432 66 48 27 45 26 42 111 74 331 66 48 27 46 26 44 112 74 34Total 264 178 33 181 96 47 445 274 38

    Columns4 74 59 20 84 51 39 158 110 303 87 80 8 84 49 42 171 129 252 87 80 8 100 49 51 187 129 311 128 118 8 117 57 51 245 175 29Total 376 337 10 385 206 45 761 543 29

    Walls4 110 70 36 74 54 27 184 124 333 130 88 32 74 56 24 204 144 292 160 88 32 74 56 24 204 144 291 191 146 24 167 66 61 358 212 41Total 561 392 30 386 232 40 950 624 34

    maximum=minimum axial compression from 2:95=2:15 and 2:1=2:0 in the L-shaped exteriorwall and the interior rectangular one, respectively, to 4:2=2:15 and 3:0=2:85. The new exuraloverstrength ratios are similar to those of the EC8 walls. The increase in exural overstrengthat the base increases also capacity design shears in the DBD walls. In the rectangular interior

    wall the design shear increases to 350 kN at the 1st storey and to 265 kN at the 2nd. Theavailable shear strength of the 2nd storey is marginal, while that of the 1st storey is decientby about 35 per cent. Correction of this deciency requires reduction of the spacing of thehorizontal reinforcement from 200 to 110 mm. Nevertheless, as the capacity design shears ofEC8 are considered overconservative, it was decided to keep the shear reinforcement in theDBD walls unchanged.

    Horizontal reinforcement in the joints, consisting of perimeter hoops alone, was determinedat this stage according to EC8 rules on the basis of the cross-sectional area of beam barscrossing the joints. As the beam longitudinal reinforcement was not revised in step 3, pro-

    portioning of the joint reinforcement could have been accomplished at the end of step 1.Indeed, as the longitudinal reinforcement in the EC8 and the DBD beams is similar, jointreinforcement in both designs is the same.

    The nal reinforcement of the DBD design is compared in Figures 2 and 3 to that ofthe EC8 design. Table V compares the weight of steel required for one frame according tothe two designs, per type of element and oor and separately for the longitudinal and thetransverse reinforcement. For all types of elements the DBD frame requires signicantly lesssteel than the EC8 one. Overall the dierence amounts to one-third of the EC8 requirements.The dierence is largest in the transverse reinforcement, where the DBD frame requires almosthalf the reinforcement of the EC8 design.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    20/24

    1458 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    3.2. Nonlinear dynamic analyses of the test structure

    In the actual 4-storey test structure one of the two frames has been constructed according tothe EC8 design and the other according to the DBD one. In the PSD test the two frames are

    subjected to the same horizontal displacement time-histories at oor levels.Non-linear dynamic response analyses were performed for the structure as tested, i.e. with

    the one side according to DBD and the other according to EC8, using as input ve syntheticmotions conforming to 1.5 times the elastic spectrum of the design earthquake. Each mo-tion was applied with a positive or negative sign (direction). The ve motions, drawn fromReference [25], have phasing and intensity envelopes after some well-known historic records,namely that of Kobe=Port Island, Hollister (1961), San Fernando=Alhambra and FairmontReservoir (1971) and Imperial Valley=El Centro (1940). The synthetic motion after Kobewas selected for the PSD test. Its time-history and the corresponding 5 per cent-damped elasticspectra are shown in Figure 4, including the 1.5 scale factor over the design earthquake.

    The nonlinear analyses employ simple lumped-inelasticity member models, of the one-component type with bilinear skeleton curve and modied-Takeda hysteresis laws. The mod-elling used has been presented in more detail elsewhere [26; 27]. Material strengths wereassumed to be equal to their expected values: fcm=fc+8 MPa= 33 MPa and fym= 1:15fy=575 MPa.

    Figure 5 shows the average ratio of member peak inelastic chord rotations from the non-linear dynamic analyses to the corresponding supply from Equation (3). As this ratio can beconsidered as a damage ratio, it is presented as a percentage, with a value of 100 per centmeaning exhaustion of expected member deformation capacity. Averaging is over the 10 non-linear dynamic analyses, with the ve synthetic motions applied in the positive and negativedirections at intensity 1.5 times the design motion. The same gure presents the average andthe extreme values of the interstorey and top drift ratios obtained in the 10 analyses. Despiteits signicantly lower amount of steel the DBD frame is predicted to experience similar mem-

    ber damage levels as the EC8 one and to fare on the average better than the EC8 frame inthe coupling beams.Figure 6 presents analysis results for the motion of Figure 4 applied in the PSD test. Floor

    displacement time-histories and peak interstorey drifts from pre-test calculations based onassumed mean material strengths consistent with the specied nominal values, are comparedwith test results. The test results may have been aected by the damage inicted to the teststructure by previous testing at the design motion intensity.

    In the analyses summarized in Figures 5 and 6 the DBD-side coupling beams of the 2ndoor were predicted to fail under 1.5 times the design earthquake. At rst sight this issurprising, as for= 1:2 the combination of Equations (4) and (5) seems to provide a safetyfactor against attainment of Ek;0:95 equal to 1:2=0:4 5 = 2:67, which should not be exhausted

    by the application of the design motion at a scale factor of 1:5. To investigate the origin

    of this apparent discrepancy, the member inelastic chord rotations, E;in, from the non-linearanalyses of the response of the two structures designed herein (i.e. of the EC8 and theDBD building) to 10 input motions (5 motions applied with a plus or minus sign), arecompared to the elastic values, Em, computed in step 2 of the proposed procedure accordingto Reference [20]. Mean standard deviation ranges and the 95 per cent-fractile of the ratioE;in=Em are shown in Figure 7. The m range and the dierence of the 95 per cent-fractile from the mean reect not only the inuence of the details of the input motion, but

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    21/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1459

    Figure 5. Average damage ratio (per cent) at member ends, computed as ratio of peakinelastic chord rotation to capacity from Equation (3), and mean and maximum=minimumdrifts from non-linear dynamic analyses to 10 spectrum-compatible synthetic motions

    with intensity 1.5 times the life-safety design motion.

    also dispersion between the DBD and the EC8 design and the dierent members of the samestorey.

    The results in Figure 7 show that the method developed in Reference [20] and appliedherein in step 2 of the DBD procedure estimates well the inelastic chord rotation demandsin the members of the test structure except in the coupling beams. In walls and columns themean and the 95 per cent-fractile value in Figure 7(c) and (d) are not far from the valuesin Reference [20] of 0.85 at ground level and 1.0 at the top for the mean, or 1.05 at groundlevel and 1.65 at the top forEk;0:95 (the only dierence is in Ek;0:95 at the top storeys, withno eect though on the design and detailing of the present case). For the beams, the values

    in Reference [20] of 1.2 at ground level and 1:25 at the top for the mean, or of 1.65 and 1.7,respectively, for the 95 per cent-fractile, are not very dierent from those in Figure 7(a). Withthe exception of the rst oor, they are signicantly lower, though, from those of Figure 7(b)for the coupling beams. This means that in the top three oors the values ofuk;0:95 in coupling

    beams are underestimated by the procedure in Reference [20] by approximately 15 per cent.This explains only partly the high damage ratio values predicted in the DBD coupling beamsat the second oor of the test structure.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    22/24

    1460 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    Figure 6. Computed and measured oor displacement time-histories and interstorey driftsand computed damage ratio (per cent) at member ends for test structure subjected to

    Kobe-like motion at intensity 1.5 times the life-safety motion, Figure 4.

    4. CONCLUSIONS

    The key elements of the proposed procedure for displacement-based seismic design of RCframe-wall dual building structures are the following: (i) a preliminary proportioning of mem-

    ber reinforcement on the basis of the ULS for factored gravity loads, capacity design of allelements in shear and detailing provisions for non-earthquake-resistant design; and (ii) nal

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    23/24

    DBD PROCEDURE FOR RC BUILDINGS 1461

    Figure 7. Mean standard deviation range and 95 per cent-fractile value of the ratio of inelastic chordrotation demand to value from elastic multimodal analysis with 5 per cent damping, for the EC8 and

    DBD structures subjected to 10 motions with intensity 1.5 times the life-safety design motion.

    detailing of members and possible revision of member proportioning to meet the inelasticchord rotation demands of the design (life safety) earthquake, as these are determined fromthe 5 per cent-damped spectrum and a linear analysis with secant-to-yield member stinesses.ULS design of members for a frequent or occasional serviceability earthquake and capacitydesign of columns in exure at joints may be added to element (i) of the procedure. Themain dierence between a structure designed along these lines and one which follows currentdesign codes such as EC8 is that the reinforcement which is additional to that proportionedfor non-seismic loads is concentrated only where it is needed to meet the seismic deforma-tion demands in the DBD structure, rather than being placed indiscriminately in all membersaccording to prescriptive detailing rules. This dierence may allow overall savings in steel

    which amount to about 33 per cent for the 4-storey dual test structure considered in this paper.Despite these savings, according to pre-test calculations the performance of the DBD structureunder a ground motion representative of the maximum considered earthquake (namely upto 1.5-times the 475 year motion) is not inferior to that of an EC8-design.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    This research is partly supported by the European Commission, within its Training and Mobility forResearchers (TMR) network ICONS (Innovative seismic design concepts for new and existing struc-tures), Contract No. FMRX-CT96-0022 (DG 12 - RSRF). The construction and PSD testing of the4-storey dual structure at the ELSA Laboratory of the JRC in Ispra (I) is supported by the EuropeanCommission under a TMR-Large-Scale Facilities contract to the JRC.

    REFERENCES

    1. Moehle JP. Displacement-based design of RC structures subjected to earthquakes. Earthquake Spectra 1992;8(3):403428.

    2. Moehle JP. Displacement-based seismic design criteria. Proceedings of the 11th World Conference EarthqukeEngineering, Acapulco, Mexico, 1996.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462

  • 7/24/2019 AJDBD-4 fardis

    24/24

    1462 T. B. PANAGIOTAKOS AND M. N. FARDIS

    3. New Zealand National Society for Earthquake Engineering. The assessment and improvement of the structuralperformance of earthquake risk buildings.Draft for General Release, 1996.

    4. ATC. NEHRP Guidelines for the seismic rehabilitation of buildings. FEMA Report No. 273. Applied TechnologyCouncil, for the Building Seismic Safety Council and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Washington,DC, 1997.

    5. Priestley MJN. Displacement-based seismic assessment of reinforced concrete buildings. Journal of EarthquakeEngineering 1997; 1(1):157192.

    6. Fardis MN. Seismic assessment and retrot of RC structures. Invited State-of-the-Art Lecture. 11th EuropeanEarthquake Engineering Conference, Paris, 1998.

    7. Priestley MJN. Myths and fallacies in earthquake engineeringconicts between design and reality. Proceedingsof the T. Paulay Symposium: Recent Developments in Lateral Force Transfer in Buildings, La Jolla, CA,1993.

    8. Kowalsky, MJ, Priestley MJN, MacRae GA. Displacement-based design of RC bridge columns in seismicregions. Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics 1995; 24(12):16231643.

    9. Calvi GM, Kingsley GR. Displacement-based seismic design of multi-degree-of-freedom bridge structures.Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics 1995; 24(9):12471266.

    10. Calvi GM, Pavese A. Displacement based design of building structures. In Proceedings of the 5th SECEDConference on European Seismic Design PracticeResearch and Application, Elnashai AS (ed.). Balkema:Rotterdam, 1995; 127132.

    11. Priestley MJN. Calvi GM. Concepts and procedures for direct displacement-based design and assessment. InSeismic Design Methodologies for the Next Generation of Codes. Fajfar P, Krawinkler H (eds). Balkema:

    Rotterdam, 1997; 171182.12. Priestley MJN. Displacement-based approaches to rational limit states design of new structures. Closing Lecture,

    11th European Earthquake Engineering Conference, Paris, 1998.13. Wallace JW. Seismic design of RC structural walls. Part I: new code format. Journal of Structural Engineering

    ASCE1995a; 121(1):7587.14. Wallace JW. Seismic design of RC structural walls. Part II: applications. Journal of Structural Engineering

    ASCE1995b; 121(1):88100.15. SEAOC. Recommended lateral force requirements and commentary. Structural Engineers Association of

    California, Sacramento, 1999.16. Fardis MN, Panagiotakos TB. Displacement-based design of RC buildings: proposed approach and application.

    In Seismic Design Methodologies for the Next Generation of Codes. Fajfar P, Krawinkler H (eds). Balkema:Rotterdam; 1997:195206.

    17. Panagiotakos TB, Fardis MN. Deformation-controlled earthquake resistant design of RC buildings. Journal ofEarthquake Engineering 1999; 3(4):495518.

    18. CEN. Design provisions for earthquake resistance of structures. Part 1: General rules. Part 11: Seismic actionsand general requirements for structures; Part 12: general rules for buildings; Part 13: specic rules for variousmaterials and elements. ENV1998-1-1, 12 and 13, Brussels, 1994.

    19. SEAOC. Vision 2000, Performance Based Seismic Engineering of Buildings. Structural Engineers Associationof California, Sacramento, 1995.

    20. Panagiotakos TB, Fardis MN. Estimation of inelastic deformation demands in multistorey RC frame buildings.Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics 1999; 28:501528.

    21. Panagiotakos TB, Fardis MN. Deformations of RC members at yielding and ultimate. ACI Structural Journal,2001; 98(2).

    22. Park YJ, Ang AMS. Mechanistic seismic damage model of reinforced concrete. Journal of StructuralEngineering ASCE1985; 111(4):722739.

    23. Park YJ, Ang AH-S, Wen YJ. Damage-limiting aseismic design of buildings. Earthquake Spectra 1987; 3:1.24. CEN. Design of concrete structures. Part 1: general rules and rules for buildings. ENV1992-1-1, Brussels, 1991.25. Pecker A. Generaccprogramme de generation d accelerogrammes. Geodynamique et Structure Report, Paris,

    February 1994.26. Fardis MN, Panagiotakos TB. Seismic design and response of bare and inlled reinforced concrete buildings.

    Part I: bare structures. Journal of Earthquake Engineering 1997; 1(1):219256.

    27. Fardis MN, Bousias SN, Franchioni G, Panagiotakos TB. Seismic response and design of RC structures withplan-eccentric masonry inlls. Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics 1999; 28:173191.

    Copyright ? 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Earthquake Engng Struct. Dyn.2001; 30:14391462