Earthquakes and Structures
Volume 23, Number 2, 2022, pages 115-128
DOI: 10.12989/eas.2022.23.2.115
Impact of target spectra variance of selected ground motions on seismic response of structures
Liuyun Xu and Zhiguang Zhou
Abstract
One common method to select input ground motions to predict dynamic behavior of structures subjected to seismic
excitation requires spectral acceleration (Sa) match target mean response spectrum. However, dispersion of ground motions,
which explicitly affects the structural response, is rarely discussed in this method. Generally, selecting ground motions matching
target mean and variance has been utilized as an appropriate method to predict reliable seismic response. The goal of this paper
is to investigate the impact of target spectra variance of ground motions on structural seismic response. Two sets of ground
motions with different target variances (zero variance and minimum variance larger than inherent variance of the target
spectrum) are selected as input to two different structures. Structural responses at different heights are compared, in terms of
peak, mean and dispersion. Results show that increase of target spectra variance tends to increase peak floor acceleration, peak
deformation and dispersions of response of interest remarkably. To short-period structures, dispersion increase ratios of seismic
response are close to that of Sa of input ground motions at the first period. To long-period structures, dispersions of floor
acceleration and floor response spectra increase more significantly at the bottom, while dispersion increase ratios of IDR and
deformation are close to that of Sa of input ground motions at the first period. This study could further provide useful
information on selecting appropriate ground motion to predict seismic behavior of different types of structures.
Key Words
dispersion increase ratio; floor acceleration; floor response spectra structural deformation; inter-storey drift ratio (IDR); target spectra variance
Address
Liuyun Xu and Zhiguang Zhou: Department of Disaster Mitigation for Structures, College of Civil Engineering, Tongji University,
1239 Siping Road, Shanghai, 200092, China