Civil Engineering Association
IDENTIFYING CONFIGURATION AND CONNECTION DETAILS OF UNREINFORCED MASONRY STRUCTURES I - Printable Version

+- Civil Engineering Association (https://forum.civilea.com)
+-- Forum: eBooks (https://forum.civilea.com/forum-63.html)
+--- Forum: Journals, Papers and Presentations (https://forum.civilea.com/forum-74.html)
+--- Thread: IDENTIFYING CONFIGURATION AND CONNECTION DETAILS OF UNREINFORCED MASONRY STRUCTURES I (/thread-45430.html)



IDENTIFYING CONFIGURATION AND CONNECTION DETAILS OF UNREINFORCED MASONRY STRUCTURES I - TAFATNEB - 11-02-2013

IDENTIFYING CONFIGURATION AND CONNECTION DETAILS OF UNREINFORCED MASONRY STRUCTURES IN MID-AMERICA

Author: Ty A. Stokes University of South Carolina REU at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Advisor: Professor Y. K. Wen | Size: 0.84 MB | Format: PDF | Quality: Unspecified | pages: 16

[Image: 30291103681450663428.png]


[Image: info.png]



Experience from past earthquakes indicates that some structures perform better than others under similar ground motion conditions. This disparity leads to the conclusion that some structures will be safer, and thus less likely to require repair or cause harm, than others. In order to describe this phenomenon quantitatively, vulnerability functions are developed. Vulnerability functions describe a structure in terms of its likelihood (probability) of exceeding a certain limit state at a specified ground motion condition accounting for the uncertainty in both excitation and structural capacity. Indeed, there are several sources of uncertainty that cannot be eliminated, but in order to create the most accurate relationship possible, any uncertainty that can be reduced, should be reduced. Therefore, the goal of this particular part of this project is to remove some of the uncertainty in the nature of the buildings that are being modeled. By understanding better of a typical unreinforced masonry (URM) building, it is possible to accomplish this goal and create a vulnerability function which may better describe a larger percentage of the population of URM structures in
Mid-America.


[Image: download.png]
Code:
***************************************
Content of this section is hidden, You must be registered and activate your account to see this content. See this link to read how you can remove this limitation:

http://forum.civilea.com/thread-27464.html
***************************************