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Main Authors: Dhabu, Anjali C., Bernauer, Felix, Liao, Chun-Man, Niederleithinger, Ernst, Igel, Heiner, Hadziioannou, Celine
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.02203
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author Dhabu, Anjali C.
Bernauer, Felix
Liao, Chun-Man
Niederleithinger, Ernst
Igel, Heiner
Hadziioannou, Celine
author_facet Dhabu, Anjali C.
Bernauer, Felix
Liao, Chun-Man
Niederleithinger, Ernst
Igel, Heiner
Hadziioannou, Celine
contents Earthquakes cause catastrophic damage to buildings and loss of human life. Civil engineers across the globe design earthquake-resistant buildings to minimize this damage. Conventionally, the structures are designed to resist the translational motions caused by an earthquake. However, with the increasing evidence of rotational ground motions in addition to the translational ground motions due to earthquakes, there is a crucial need to identify if these additional components have an impact on the existing structural design strategies. In this regard, the present study makes a novel attempt to obtain the dynamic properties of a large-scale prototype prestressed reinforced concrete bridge structure using six component (6C) ground motions. The structure is instrumented with conventional translational seismic sensors, rotational sensors and newly developed six-component sensors under operating and externally excited conditions. The recorded data is used to carry out Operational Modal Analysis and Experimental Modal Analysis of the bridge. Modal analysis using the rotational measurements shows that the expected location of maximum rotations on the bridge differs from the maximum translations. Therefore, further understanding the behavior of rotational motions is necessary for developing earthquake-resistant structural design strategies
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_02203
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Characterizing Rotational Ground Motions: Implications for Earthquake-Resistant Design of Bridge Structures
Dhabu, Anjali C.
Bernauer, Felix
Liao, Chun-Man
Niederleithinger, Ernst
Igel, Heiner
Hadziioannou, Celine
Geophysics
Earthquakes cause catastrophic damage to buildings and loss of human life. Civil engineers across the globe design earthquake-resistant buildings to minimize this damage. Conventionally, the structures are designed to resist the translational motions caused by an earthquake. However, with the increasing evidence of rotational ground motions in addition to the translational ground motions due to earthquakes, there is a crucial need to identify if these additional components have an impact on the existing structural design strategies. In this regard, the present study makes a novel attempt to obtain the dynamic properties of a large-scale prototype prestressed reinforced concrete bridge structure using six component (6C) ground motions. The structure is instrumented with conventional translational seismic sensors, rotational sensors and newly developed six-component sensors under operating and externally excited conditions. The recorded data is used to carry out Operational Modal Analysis and Experimental Modal Analysis of the bridge. Modal analysis using the rotational measurements shows that the expected location of maximum rotations on the bridge differs from the maximum translations. Therefore, further understanding the behavior of rotational motions is necessary for developing earthquake-resistant structural design strategies
title Characterizing Rotational Ground Motions: Implications for Earthquake-Resistant Design of Bridge Structures
topic Geophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.02203