TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS

Reinforced concrete (RC) buildings with openings in the masonry infill panels have shown superior performance to those without openings in the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. Understanding the effect of openings and the resulting tsunami force is essential for an economical and safe design of...

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Main Authors: P. Lukkunaprasit, A. Ruangrassamee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tsunami Society International 2009-01-01
Series:Science of Tsunami Hazards
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tsunamisociety.org/285LUKKUNSPASIT.pdf
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spelling doaj-6e71da5e042d4d1dbb8914ee17bd59a42021-04-02T05:25:19ZengTsunami Society InternationalScience of Tsunami Hazards8755-68392009-01-01285303310TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGSP. LukkunaprasitA. RuangrassameeReinforced concrete (RC) buildings with openings in the masonry infill panels have shown superior performance to those without openings in the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. Understanding the effect of openings and the resulting tsunami force is essential for an economical and safe design of vertical evacuation shelters against tsunamis. One-to-one hundred scale building models with square shape in plan were tested in a 40 m long hydraulic flume with 1 m x 1 m cross section. A mild slope of 0.5 degree representing the beach condition at Phuket, Thailand was simulated in the hydraulic laboratory. The model dimensions were 150 mm x 150 mm x 150 mm. Two opening configurations of the front and back walls were investigated, viz., 25% and 50% openings. Pressure sensors were placed on the faces of the model to measure the pressure distribution. A high frequency load cell was mounted at the base of the model to record the tsunami forces. A bi-linear pressure profile is proposed for determining the maximum tsunami force acting on solid square buildings. The influence of openings on the peak pressures on the front face of the model is found to be practically insignificant. For 25% and 50% opening models, the tsunami forces reduce by about 15% and 30% from the model without openings, respectively. The reduction in the tsunami force clearly demonstrates the benefit of openings in reducing the effect of tsunami on such buildings.http://tsunamisociety.org/285LUKKUNSPASIT.pdfTsunami loadingBuildingOpeningExperimentPressure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. Lukkunaprasit
A. Ruangrassamee
spellingShingle P. Lukkunaprasit
A. Ruangrassamee
TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
Science of Tsunami Hazards
Tsunami loading
Building
Opening
Experiment
Pressure
author_facet P. Lukkunaprasit
A. Ruangrassamee
author_sort P. Lukkunaprasit
title TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
title_short TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
title_full TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
title_fullStr TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
title_full_unstemmed TSUNAMI LOADING ON BUILDINGS WITH OPENINGS
title_sort tsunami loading on buildings with openings
publisher Tsunami Society International
series Science of Tsunami Hazards
issn 8755-6839
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Reinforced concrete (RC) buildings with openings in the masonry infill panels have shown superior performance to those without openings in the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. Understanding the effect of openings and the resulting tsunami force is essential for an economical and safe design of vertical evacuation shelters against tsunamis. One-to-one hundred scale building models with square shape in plan were tested in a 40 m long hydraulic flume with 1 m x 1 m cross section. A mild slope of 0.5 degree representing the beach condition at Phuket, Thailand was simulated in the hydraulic laboratory. The model dimensions were 150 mm x 150 mm x 150 mm. Two opening configurations of the front and back walls were investigated, viz., 25% and 50% openings. Pressure sensors were placed on the faces of the model to measure the pressure distribution. A high frequency load cell was mounted at the base of the model to record the tsunami forces. A bi-linear pressure profile is proposed for determining the maximum tsunami force acting on solid square buildings. The influence of openings on the peak pressures on the front face of the model is found to be practically insignificant. For 25% and 50% opening models, the tsunami forces reduce by about 15% and 30% from the model without openings, respectively. The reduction in the tsunami force clearly demonstrates the benefit of openings in reducing the effect of tsunami on such buildings.
topic Tsunami loading
Building
Opening
Experiment
Pressure
url http://tsunamisociety.org/285LUKKUNSPASIT.pdf
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