Title: University of Washington
1University of Washington Seattle
2Pedro Arduino
Computational GeoMechanics Geotechnical
Engineering University of Washington
3Outline
- Behavioral characteristics of coarse materials
under general loading conditions - 3-D contact elements
- A demonstration of the NEES system for studying
soil-foundation-structure interaction - Introduction to performance based design
4Behavioral Characteristics of Coarse Materials
under General Loading Conditions
- ChangHo Choi, Michael Harney, and Pedro Arduino
5Need for robust constitutive models
(Shin, 2003)
(Petek, 2003)
Constitutive
- Require robust implementation scheme
- Appropriate representation of mathematical
expressions for material behavior
6True Triaxial Apparatus
- Add one more degree of freedom
- Able to simulate general 3-D stress conditions
- Type of TTAs
?1
?2
?3
Cylindrical triaxial test
Truly triaxial device
Rigid Boundary TTA (Pearce 1971) Strain Control
Flexible Boundary TTA (Sture and Desai 1979)
Stress Control
Mixed Boundary TTA (Green 1971, Lade and Duncan
1973)
7Various TTAs developed worldwide
Inherited from
Specimen size (inches)
Material
Location
Designer
Rigid boundary type
N/A
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Kaolin clay
Cambridge University (England)
Pearce(1971)
Pearce(1971)
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Kaolin clay
Cambridge University (England)
Airey and Wood(1988)
Pearce(1971)
3.9 ? 3.9 ? 3.9
Dry sand
Institute de Mecanique de Genoble (France)
Lanier(1988)
Pearce(1971)
2.8 ? 2.8 ? 2.8
Clay and air-pluviated sand
Aalborg University (Denmark)
Ibsen and Praastrup(2002)
Fexible boundary type
N/A N/A
2.4 ? 4.0 ? 4.0 4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
German standard sand Ottawa sand
Vattenbyggnadsbyran (Sweden) University of
Boulder (US)
Kjellman(1936) Ko and Scott(1967)
Ko and Scott(1967)
3.9 ? 3.9 ? 3.9
Leighton Buzzard sand
University College (England)
Arthur and Menzies(1972)
N/A
3.9 ? 3.9 ? 3.9
Fuji river sand
University of Tokyo (Japan)
Yamada and Ishihara(1979)
Ko and Scott(1967)
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Crushed basalt and clay
Virginia Polytechnic Institute (US)
Sture and Desai(1979)
Sture and Desai(1979)
1.75 ?1.75?1.75
Clay
University of Boulder (US)
Brends and Ko(1980)
N/A
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Balast and rock
University of Arizona (US)
Desai, et al.(1982)
Sture and Desai(1979)
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Railroad ballast
Virginia Polytechnic Institute (US)
Janardhanam and Desai (1983)
Sture and Desai(1979)
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Kaolinite/silt mixture
Purdue University (US)
Sivakugan, et al(1988)
Ko and Scott(1967)
4.0 ? 4.0 ? 4.0
Cemented sand
Illinois Institute of Technology (US)
Reddy, et al(1992)
N/A
3.9 ? 3.9 ? 3.9
Silty sand
Georgia Institute of Technology (US)
Hoyos and Macari(2000)
Sture and Desai(1979)
9.5 ? 9.5 ? 9.5
Sand and gravel
University of Washington (US)
Anderson(1993) and Choi(2003)
Mixed boundary type
N/A
3.3 ? 3.2 ? 2.1
Ham river sand
Imperial College (England)
Green(1971)
N/A
3.0 ? 3.0 ? 3.0
Air-dry sand
University of California, Los Angeles (US)
Lade and Duncan(1973)
N/A
2.0 ? 3.1 ? 3.9
Undisturbed clay
Queens University (Canand)
Mitchell(1973)
N/A
2.8 ? 3.8 ? 2.8
Toyora sand
Kyoto University (Japan)
Matsuoka(1974)
Lade and Duncan(1973)
3.0 ? 3.0 ? 3.0
Sand and clay
University of California, Los Angeles (US)
Lade(1978)
N/A
2.0 ? 2.0 ? 3.9
Rock
National Technical University of Athens (Greece)
Michelis(1985)
N/A.
2.0 ? 1.5 ? 3.9
Natural and artificial clays
McGill University (Canada)
Sivestri, et al.(1988)
N/A.
2.5 ? 1.6 ? 3.1
Seto sand
Osaka City University (Japan)
Mochizuki, et al.(1988)
...
Sydney sand
University of New South Wales (Australia)
Lo. et al.(1994)
8UW-TTA Setup (Components)
Main Frame
Bottom Plate
Side Wall Parts
Control Box
Side Wall Assembly
During Testing
9UW-TTA Control System
Driving Variables
Response Variables
LVDT SS-107
Three Principal Stresses
Displacement
Digital Computer LabView
Back Pressure
Field Point
Pressure Transducer PT-302/150
Pore Pressure
Sample
E-P Transducer T7800
Pressure Transducer PT-302/150
Principal Stresses
10Materials Tested
GSD UNIMIN 4060
3/4"
4
10
40
200
3"
100
UNIMIN 4060 Pea Gravel
USGS SP GP
Gs 2.65 2.72
D50(in) 0.021 0.26
Cu 1.4 1.6
Cc 1.1 1.0
90
80
70
Percent Passing ()
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0.001
0.010
0.100
1.000
10.000
100.000
Grain Size (mm)
Pea Gravel
3/4"
4
10
40
200
3"
100
90
80
70
60
Percent Passing ()
50
40
30
20
10
0
0.001
0.010
0.100
1.000
10.000
100.000
Grain Size (mm)
11Stress Paths in the Deviatoric Plane
?A
Specimen preparation direction
?A
TC0 (?0?)
CCT (?0360?)
SS30 (? 30?)
?
?C
TC240 (?240?)
TC120 (?120?)
TE180 (?180?)
?B
?B
?C
DT and DR stress paths
CCT stress path
Specimen Preparation Direction
?A
SS
? 30?
? 0?
UCTC (?0, 180?)
UCSS30 (?30, 210?)
UCSS90 (?90, 270?)
?B
?C
UCTC stress path
UCSS30 stress path
UCSS90 stress path
12Monotonic Test Result 1
Undrained TC, TE, and SS at p010 psi
Effect of Stress Path direction
- Effect of Stress path direction (?)
- Different volumetric response
- Willam-Warnke approxiamtion
13Monotonic Test Result 2
Phase Transformation Lines from Monotonic tests
- State of Phase Transformation
14Undrained Unidirectional Cyclic Test
UCSS90
UCTC
UCSS30
- Understand the mechanism of pore-water and volume
change response - Identify cyclic mobility, or liquefaction behavior
15Unidirectional Cyclic Test Result 1
CT9, UCSS90
16Unidirectional Cyclic Test Result 2
Effect of CSR (Cyclic Stress Ratio)
17- Rotational Stress Path Test Example
18- Rotational Stress Path Test Example
19- Rotational Stress Path Test Example
20- Rotational Stress Path Test Example
21Manzari-Dafalias Model (1997)
Surface in ? plane
Yield surface
22Dr Constitutive
23Manzari-Dafalias Model Parameters
Elastic parameters value
4691
0.25
0.86
Critical state parameters
1.62/1.13
0.018
0.59
148 psi
Model parameters
4.3/2.3
6.0/3.8
1500
0.0
0.05
0.25
330
150
24Monotonic Test Model Simulation
Undrained monotonic test p0 10 psi (DT1, 2, 3)
25UCSS Model Simulation
Unidirectional cyclic SS test UCSS90, CT9
26CCT Model Simulation
Circular cyclic test
27CCT Model Simulation 2
Circular cyclic test strain vectors at 1st and
7th cycles
28UW-TTA Experimental Results
293-D Contact Elements
- Kathy Petek, Peter MacKenzie, Pedro Arduino
30Contact Problem using 3D Full Continuum Element
Models
31Contact Element Formulation
- Contact element applies a geometric constraint to
the system that relates a slave node to a master
contact line segment or surface.
- Using the method of Lagrange Multipliers, the
element utilizes the Hertz-Signori-Moreau
conditions for contact
g
tn
32Example 2 Friction Pile
33Example 2 Friction Pile
34Example 2 Pushover Analysis with Plastic Soil
35Example 3 Pushover Analysis with Plastic Soil
36Objective 2 Program3D Mixed Beam-Column Element
Models
37Beam-to- Soil Contact Element
38Beam-to- Soil Contact Element
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40(No Transcript)
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43Collaborative Research Demonstration of NEES for
Studying SFSI
- Numerical Analysis of Seismic Soil-Pile-Structure
Interaction Problem Using OpenSees - HyungSuk Shin, Tyler Ranf
- Marc Eberhard, Steve Kramer, Pedro Arduino
- Lanka, Bruce Kutter
44Collaborative research A demonstration of the
NEES system for studying soil-foundation-structure
interaction
Perdue University
University of California, Davis
University of Nevada, Reno
University of Texas, Austin (Vibration mobile)
45Centrifuge Test 1
1 / 52 scale
46NEES Project (Centrifuge Test )
47Centrifuge Test
Shaking direction
48Centrifuge Test
Shaking direction
49Soil
50Pile
51Input motion
52Interaction model
53OpenSees - Pressure Dependent MultiYield Material
Const. Model
Requires definition of 10 material parameters
Correletions to N1(60) Or Dr have been proposed
54Experimental Numerical Results(freefield
response - 0.25g event)
55Experimental Numerical Results(freefield
response 0.25g event)
56Bent Model Simplification
57Experimental Numerical Results(A single bridge
bent 0.25g event)
58Single Pile Model Results (0.25g event)
59Bridge Model Simplification
60Bridge Model Simplification
61Bridge Model Simplification
62Experimental Numerical Results(A bridge)
1(S)
2(L)
3(M)
63Experimental Numerical Results(A bridge)
1(S)
2(L)
3(M)
64Experimental Numerical Results(A bridge)
0.25g event
bent 3
bent 2
bent 1
1(S)
2(L)
3(M)
0.74g event
bent 3
bent 2
bent 1
65Experimental Numerical Results(A bridge)
(a) bent 1 short
(b) bent 2 long
(c) bent 3 medium
0.25g event
0.74g event
66Centrifuge Test 2
67Oriented Bent Model Simplification
683D Bent Structure Soil
axbase cos(?)
axbase sin(?)
69Experimental Numerical Results(free field
motion)
2.6 m depth
0.5 m depth
21.1 m depth
5.9 m depth
70Experimental Numerical Results(Oriented Bents
0o, 30o, 60o, 90o)
0o
30o
ax
ay1
60o
90o
y
x
z
71Experimental Numerical Results(Oriented Bents
0o, 30o, 60o, 90o)
0o
30o
ax
60o
90o
y
x
z
72Experimental Numerical Results(Oriented Bents
0o, 30o, 60o, 90o)
0o
30o
ay1
60o
90o
y
x
z
73Experimental Numerical Results(Oriented Bents
0o, 30o, 60o, 90o)
-z
0.78g event
?zz
?xx
?yy
y
x
74Experimental Numerical Results(Oriented Bents
0o, 30o, 60o, 90o)
0o
30o
60o
90o
75Centrifuge Test 3
76(No Transcript)
77Performance Based Eq. Eng. Motivation
- General
- State/federal agency wants to optimize use of
resources in structural design retrofitting
(e.g. buildings/bridges). - Addresses the problem from a performance based
approach (priority to retrofit related to
likelihood a certain level of response/damage
will be achieved) - Which bridge must be retrofitted first?
- Case Specific
- A bridge needs earthquake retrofitting
- Total estimated cost is 80 million dollars
- Only 20 million available
- Which structural aspects should be considered??
Where to put the money?
78Performance Based Eq. Eng. Must evaluate
performance
79Performance Based Eq. Eng. Earthquake Intensity
? Damage
Need to understand physical processes
Develop terminology for phenomena of interest
RESPONSE OF SYSTEM OF INTEREST
DAMAGE TO SYSTEM OF INTEREST
GROUND MOTION
EARTHQUAKE
PGA PGV PGD Sa(T0) Ia CAV
Cracks, fracture, collapse Flow slide, lateral
spreading, settlement Slope movement, ground
cracking, structural distress
Ductility, m Settlement, dv Lateral displacement,
dh Pore pressure ratio, ru
80Performance Based Eq. Eng. PEER Framework
- Performance Based Earthquake Engineering (PBEE)
framework developed by PEER to describe this
process
Intensity Measure (IM) measure of ground
motion Engineering Demand Parameter (EDP) -
measure of system response Damage Measure (DM)
measure of physical damage
RESPONSE OF SYSTEM OF INTEREST
DAMAGE TO SYSTEM OF INTEREST
GROUND MOTION
IM
EDP
DM
EARTHQUAKE
PGA PGV PGD Sa(T0) Ia CAV
Cracks, fracture, collapse Flow slide, lateral
spreading, settlement Slope movement, ground
cracking, structural distress
Ductility, m Settlement, dv Lateral displacement,
dh Pore pressure ratio, ru
81Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering
Covers range of hazard (ground motion)
levels Accounts for uncertainty in parameters,
relationships
82Hazard Curves
Annual rate of exceedance
hazard curve for IM
f
1/T
1/Return Period
event
83Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering
Covers range of hazard (ground motion)
levels Accounts for uncertainty in parameters,
relationships
84Fragility Curves
Cumulative probability a certain EDP value will
be reached given a IM
CDF disp
IM
Fragility curve permanent displacement given IM
85Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering
Covers range of hazard (ground motion)
levels Accounts for uncertainty in parameters,
relationships
PEER extends analysis to include decision
variables (DV) related to loss, downtime,
fatalities, etc.
86Relation between ground motion and damage
Response Model
EDP
DM
IM
What is a good IM?
-- An efficient parameter
What is efficiency?
87Relation between ground motion and damage
Response Model
EDP
DM
IM
What is a good IM?
-- An efficient parameter
What is efficiency?
88Relation between ground motion and damage
Response Model
EDP
DM
IM
What is a good IM?
-- An efficient parameter
What is efficiency?
An efficient IM predicts response accurately
89Relation between ground motion and damage
Damage Model
Response Model
EDP
DM
IM
90Performance-Based Evaluation
PEER PBEE framework Modular approach from
ground motion to cost Recognizes different
participants, stakeholders
91Performance-Based Liquefaction Evaluation
1.0
PEDPgtEDP IM
lEDP proportional to sum of thick red lines
Fragility curve
0.0
IM
lIM
Hazard curve
IM
92Fragility Curves
IM-EDP fragility curve Conditional
Probability Probability a certain EDP
value will be reached
IM-EDP fragility curves must be created for
general and specific situations
Development of fragility curves for earthquake
engineering problems require the use of advanced
numerical tools
93OpenSees
- Open System for Earthquake Engineering Research
Simulation by Pacific Earthquake Engineering
(PEER) Center - OpenSees is a software framework (FEM) for
developing applications to simulate the
performance of structural and geotechnical
systems subjected to earthquakes. - The goal of the OpenSees development is to
improve the modeling and computational simulation
in earthquake engineering through open-source
development.
94OpenSees
95OpenSees
96OpenSees - Pressure Dependent MultiYield Material
Const. Model
Requires definition of 10 material parameters
Correletions to N1(60) Or Dr have been proposed
97- Lets go back to the problem of fragility curves.
- Caltrans (California State Department of
Transportation) is very interested in fragility
curves for bridges - Using OpenSees it is possible to develop them.
- Must consider full bidge including structure and
soil.
98Bridge System on Liquefiable Soils
99Bridge and soil geometry
- Five-span bridge
- Approach embankments
- Variable thickness of liquefiable soil
100Soil Conditions
101GiD-OpenSees - Soil Layers
102Loose Sand N1(60) Proposed vs. OpenSees
103Clay - Undrained Strength
53.9
46.7
surface clay
39.5
57.5
Su (kPa)
57.5
35.9
55.7
50.3
44.9
deeper clay
58.4
Su (kPa)
39.7
104reinforce conc column (column A 4 ft)
prestressed reinforced conc bridge (type 1
22ft)
spring connection
abutment
3 x 2 pile group (3 ft diameter)
simplified abutment (roller or spring)
105OpenSees Bridge Idealization
106P-y curve Pult
107P-y curve y50
108Spring Abutment (Mackie et al.)
109Soil deformation measurement
Soil 1
Right toe
Soil 2
Soil 3
Soil 4
Left toe
110Soil deformation profiles
50 in 50 years
Small shaking
2 in 50 years
10 in 50 years
111Preliminary Comparison of IMs
40 input motions, four hazard levels
112Preliminary Comparison of IMs
40 input motions, four hazard levels
113Preliminary Comparison of IMs
40 input motions, four hazard levels
114EDP vs. IM (max. bridge column drift)
115EDP vs. IM (max. soil surface horizontal movement)
116EDP vs. IM (max. bridge column bending moment)
117EDP vs. IM (max. pile bending moment)
118Summary Conclusions
- The performance based design methodology provides
an excellent framework to consider hazards in
earthquake engineering. - OpenSees provides a good tool for the development
of fragility curves. - Preliminary results show the framework could be
applied for the performance based design of
typical bridges.
119Acknowledgements
- Korea Water Resources Corporation
- Dong-Hoon Shin
- Hyung-Suk Shin
- Wookuen Shin
- Changho Choi
- NSF, PEER, NEES
120Thanks You!!