Publication | Closed Access
Scaling Earthquake Ground Motions for Performance-Based Assessment of Buildings
99
Citations
12
References
2009
Year
EngineeringStructural DynamicsEarthquake ScenarioStructural SystemStructural EngineeringModal AnalysisVibrationsSeismic AnalysisStructural DynamicStructural VibrationGround MotionEarthquake EngineeringScaling MethodsStructural Health MonitoringEarthquake Ground MotionsScaling ProcedureSpectral ShapeSeismologyCivil EngineeringMechanical SystemsStructural MechanicsVibration Control
The impact of alternate ground-motion scaling procedures on the distribution of displacement responses in simplified structural systems is investigated. Recommendations are provided for selecting and scaling ground motions for performance-based assessment of buildings. Four scaling methods are studied, namely, (1) geometric-mean scaling of pairs of ground motions, (2) spectrum matching of ground motions, (3) first-mode-period scaling to a target spectral acceleration, and (4) scaling of ground motions per the distribution of spectral demands. Data were developed by nonlinear response-history analysis of a large family of nonlinear single degree-of-freedom (SDOF) oscillators that could represent fixed-base and base-isolated structures. The advantages and disadvantages of each scaling method are discussed. The relationship between spectral shape and a ground-motion randomness parameter, ε, is presented. A scaling procedure that explicitly considers spectral shape is proposed.
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