Wind and Structures

Volume 35, Number 4, 2022, pages 287-296

DOI: 10.12989/was.2022.35.4.287

Typhoon wind hazard analysis using the decoupling approach

Xu Hong and Jie Li

Abstract

Analyzing the typhoon wind hazards is crucial to determine the extreme wind load on engineering structures in the typhoon prone region. In essence, the typhoon hazard analysis is a high-dimensional problem with randomness arising from the typhoon genesis, environmental variables and the boundary layer wind field. This study suggests a dimension reduction approach by decoupling the original typhoon hazard analysis into two stages. At the first stage, the randomness of the typhoon genesis and environmental variables are propagated through the typhoon track model and intensity model into the randomness of the key typhoon parameters. At the second stage, the probability distribution information of the key typhoon parameters, combined with the randomness of the boundary layer wind field, could be used to estimate the extreme wind hazard. The Chinese southeast coastline is taken as an example to demonstrate the adequacy and efficiency of the suggested decoupling approach.

Key Words

decoupling approach; probability density evolution method; typhoon hazards; typhoon intensity; typhoon track

Address

Xu Hong:1)College of Civil Engineering, Hefei University of Technology, Tunxi Road 193, Anhui Province, 230009, China 2)Anhui Key Laboratory of Civil Engineering Structures and Materials, Tunxi Road 193, Anhui Province, 230009, China Jie Li:1)College of Civil Engineering, Tongji University, 1239 Siping Road, Shanghai 200092, China 2)State Key Laboratory of Disaster Reduction in Civil Engineering, Tongji University, 1239 Siping Road, Shanghai 200092, China