Publication | Open Access
Experimental investigation of the earthquake response of a model of a marble classical column
146
Citations
10
References
2002
Year
EngineeringMarble Classical ColumnMechanical EngineeringEarthquake HazardsGeotechnical EngineeringSeismic AnalysisResidual DisplacementsDeformation ModelingEarthquake ResponseGround MotionEarthquake EngineeringExperimental InvestigationInduced SeismicityMarble ModelSeismic ImagingEngineering GeologyExperimental TectonicsSeismologyCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsClassical ColumnRock MechanicsSeismic Hazard
Abstract Experimental results concerning the earthquake response of a marble model of a classical column are reported herein. The model was a 1: 3 scale replica of a column of the Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens, made from the same material as the original. Several earthquake motions, scaled appropriately in order to cause significant rocking but no collapse of the column, were used as the excitation. The base motion was applied in plane (in one horizontal and the vertical direction) or in space (in two horizontal and the vertical direction), using the shaking table facility at the Laboratory for Earthquake Engineering of the National Technical University of Athens. It was found that the column might undergo large deformations during the shaking, which are not necessarily reflected by the residual displacements at the end of it. For planar excitations, significant out‐of‐plane displacements can happen, triggered by the inevitable imperfections of the specimen. It was also verified that the response is very sensitive, even to small changes of the geometry or the input motion parameters. For this reason, the experiments were not repeatable and ‘identical’ experiments produced different results. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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