Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures

Structures under seismic excitation undergo different inter-story drift levels that can be associated to damage of both structural and non-structural elements, and thus to the expected losses. The Modal-Displacement Based Design (DBD) procedure, in this regard, has been developed to fix major issues...

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Main Authors: Martina Sciomenta, Vincenzo Rinaldi, Chiara Bedon, Massimo Fragiacomo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3889
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spelling doaj-1f8035c635554eccbcfc0d17335c73a82020-11-25T03:22:14ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-06-01103889388910.3390/app10113889Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus StructuresMartina Sciomenta0Vincenzo Rinaldi1Chiara Bedon2Massimo Fragiacomo3Department of Civil, Architecture and Building and Environmental Engineering, University of L’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyDepartment of Civil, Architecture and Building and Environmental Engineering, University of L’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyDepartment of Engineering and Architecture, University of Trieste, 34127 Trieste, ItalyDepartment of Civil, Architecture and Building and Environmental Engineering, University of L’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyStructures under seismic excitation undergo different inter-story drift levels that can be associated to damage of both structural and non-structural elements, and thus to the expected losses. The Modal-Displacement Based Design (DBD) procedure, in this regard, has been developed to fix major issues of Force Based Design (FBD) approaches, thus to design multi-story buildings in which the inter-story drift can allow one to control damage mechanisms. In this paper, the conventional Modal-DBD methodology is applied to multi-story timber buildings constructed using the Blockhaus technology. Given their intrinsic geometrical and mechanical features (i.e., stacking of logs, door/window openings, gaps and friction mechanisms, etc.), dedicated methods of analysis are required for them, compared to other wooden structures. A three-story case-study Blockhaus system of technical interest is thus presented for the assessment of Modal-DBD calculation steps. As shown, special care must be spent for the selection of convenient inter-story drift limits that in general should reflect the characteristics of the examined structural typology. The backbone parameters are thus collected for each shear-wall composing the 3D Blockhaus building, based on refined Finite Element (FE) analyses of separate log-walls. The overall results of the Modal-DBD process are thus finally assessed by means of a Push-Over (PO) analysis, carried out on a simplified 3D FE model of the examined multi-story structure. The comparison of FE predictions, as shown, demonstrates that reliable estimates can be obtained when the Modal-DBD procedure is applied to timber Blockhaus systems. In particular, base shear loads can be estimated with good accuracy, while the corresponding top displacements are slightly overestimated (with up to +10%–14% the expected values, for the collapse prevention performance level).https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3889seismic designmodal-displacement based design (DBD)multi-story timber buildingsBlockhaus systemsfinite element (FE) numerical modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martina Sciomenta
Vincenzo Rinaldi
Chiara Bedon
Massimo Fragiacomo
spellingShingle Martina Sciomenta
Vincenzo Rinaldi
Chiara Bedon
Massimo Fragiacomo
Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
Applied Sciences
seismic design
modal-displacement based design (DBD)
multi-story timber buildings
Blockhaus systems
finite element (FE) numerical modeling
author_facet Martina Sciomenta
Vincenzo Rinaldi
Chiara Bedon
Massimo Fragiacomo
author_sort Martina Sciomenta
title Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
title_short Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
title_full Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
title_fullStr Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
title_full_unstemmed Application of Modal-Displacement Based Design Method to Multi-Story Timber Blockhaus Structures
title_sort application of modal-displacement based design method to multi-story timber blockhaus structures
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Structures under seismic excitation undergo different inter-story drift levels that can be associated to damage of both structural and non-structural elements, and thus to the expected losses. The Modal-Displacement Based Design (DBD) procedure, in this regard, has been developed to fix major issues of Force Based Design (FBD) approaches, thus to design multi-story buildings in which the inter-story drift can allow one to control damage mechanisms. In this paper, the conventional Modal-DBD methodology is applied to multi-story timber buildings constructed using the Blockhaus technology. Given their intrinsic geometrical and mechanical features (i.e., stacking of logs, door/window openings, gaps and friction mechanisms, etc.), dedicated methods of analysis are required for them, compared to other wooden structures. A three-story case-study Blockhaus system of technical interest is thus presented for the assessment of Modal-DBD calculation steps. As shown, special care must be spent for the selection of convenient inter-story drift limits that in general should reflect the characteristics of the examined structural typology. The backbone parameters are thus collected for each shear-wall composing the 3D Blockhaus building, based on refined Finite Element (FE) analyses of separate log-walls. The overall results of the Modal-DBD process are thus finally assessed by means of a Push-Over (PO) analysis, carried out on a simplified 3D FE model of the examined multi-story structure. The comparison of FE predictions, as shown, demonstrates that reliable estimates can be obtained when the Modal-DBD procedure is applied to timber Blockhaus systems. In particular, base shear loads can be estimated with good accuracy, while the corresponding top displacements are slightly overestimated (with up to +10%–14% the expected values, for the collapse prevention performance level).
topic seismic design
modal-displacement based design (DBD)
multi-story timber buildings
Blockhaus systems
finite element (FE) numerical modeling
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3889
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