Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics, volume 43, issue 15, pages 2237-2259
Seismic design and testing of the bottom vertical boundary elements in steel plate shear walls. Part 1: design methodology
Keh-Chyuan Tsai
1
,
Chao-Hsien Li
2
,
Hung Chi Lee
1
2
National Center for Research on Earthquake Engineering; Taipei Taiwan
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2014-06-23
scimago Q1
SJR: 1.524
CiteScore: 7.2
Impact factor: 4.3
ISSN: 00988847, 10969845
DOI:
10.1002/eqe.2443
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Abstract
SUMMARY
This research investigates the seismic design method and the cyclic inelastic behavior of the bottom column, also called the vertical boundary element (VBE), in steel plate shear walls (SPSWs). This study consists of two parts. This Part 1 paper discusses the anticipated pushover responses for properly designed SPSWs and the possible inelastic responses of the bottom VBE at various levels of inter-story drift. Considering both the tension field action of the infill panel and the sway action of the boundary frame, this study develops a simplified method to compute the flexural and shear demands in the bottom VBE. Based on the superposition method, this approach considers various plastic hinge forming locations at different levels of inter-story drift. One of the key performance-based design objectives is to ensure that the top ends of the bottom VBEs remain elastic when the SPSWs are subjected to the maximum considered earthquake. This paper presents the comprehensive design procedures for the bottom VBE. Furthermore, this study conducted cyclic performance evaluation tests of three full-scale two-story SPSWs at the Taiwan National Center for Research on Earthquake Engineering in 2011 to validate the effectiveness of the proposed design methods. The experimental program, cyclic inelastic responses of the SPSWs and bottom VBEs, and numerical simulations are presented in Part 2. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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