Earthquakes and Structures
Volume 3, Number 6, 2012, pages 869-887
DOI: 10.12989/eas.2012.3.6.869
Effects of ground motion scaling on nonlinear higher mode building response
R.L. Wood and T.C. Hutchinson
Abstract
Ground motion scaling techniques are actively debated in the earthquake engineering community. Considerations such as what amplitude, over what period range and to what target spectrum are amongst the questions of practical importance. In this paper, the effect of various ground motion scaling approaches are explored using three reinforced concrete prototypical building models of 8, 12 and 20 stories designed to respond nonlinearly under a design level earthquake event in the seismically active Southern California region. Twenty-one recorded earthquake motions are selected using a probabilistic seismic hazard analysis and subsequently scaled using four different strategies. These motions are subsequently compared to spectrally compatible motions. The nonlinear response of a planar frameidealized building is evaluated in terms of plasticity distribution, floor level acceleration and uncorrelated
acceleration amplification ratio distributions; and interstory drift distributions. The most pronounced response variability observed in association with the scaling method is the extent of higher mode participation in the nonlinear demands.
Key Words
earthquake engineering; nonlinear analysis; ground motion scaling; geometric mean; spectrally compatible; structural engineering
Address
R.L. Wood and T.C. Hutchinson: Department of Structural Engineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA