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P-wave

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Particle motion perpendicular to direction of wave propagation Three Dimensional Elastic Solids or Two types of waves can exist in an infinite body p-waves s ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: P-wave


1
P-wave
Particles oscillate back and forth Wave travels
down rod, not particles Particle motion parallel
to direction of wave propagation
S-wave
Particles oscillate back and forth Wave travels
down rod, not particles Particle motion
perpendicular to direction of wave propagation
2
Boundary Effects
3
Boundary Effects
4
Boundary Effects
2
5
Boundary Effects
At centerline, displacement is always zero Stress
doubles momentarily as waves pass each other
6
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
7
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
8
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
2
9
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
10
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
Response at boundary is exactly the same as for
case of two waves of same polarity traveling
toward each other At fixed end, displacement is
zero and stress is momentarily doubled.
Polarity of reflected wave is same as that of
incident wave
11
Boundary Effects (Fixed End)
Displacement
Response at boundary is exactly the same as for
case of two waves of same polarity traveling
toward each other At fixed end, displacement is
zero and stress is momentarily doubled.
Polarity of reflected stress wave is same as that
of incident wave. Polarity of reflected
displacement is reversed.
12
Boundary Effects
s 0
13
Boundary Effects
s 0
14
Boundary Effects
s 0
15
Boundary Effects
s 0
16
Boundary Effects
s 0
At centerline, stress is always zero Particle
velocity doubles momentarily as waves pass each
other
17
Boundary Effects (Free End)
s 0
18
Boundary Effects (Free End)
s 0
19
Boundary Effects (Free End)
s 0
20
Boundary Effects (Free End)
s 0
21
Boundary Effects (Free End)
Displacement
s 0
Response at boundary is exactly the same as for
case of two waves of opposite polarity traveling
toward each other At free end, stress is zero
and displacement is momentarily doubled.
Polarity of reflected stress wave is opposite
that of incident wave. Polarity of reflected
displacement wave is unchanged.
22
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
transmitted
incident
reflected
23
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
At material boundary, displacements must be
continuous Ai Ar At equilibrium must be
satisfied si sr st
24
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Using equilibrium and compatibility,
25
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Soft
Stiff
r2 r1 v2 v1/2
26
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Soft
Stiff
Ar Ai / 3 At 4Ai / 3
Displacement amplitude is reduced
Displacement amplitude is increased
27
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Soft
Stiff
sr - si / 3 st 2si / 3
Stress amplitude is reduced, reversed
Displacement amplitude is reduced
28
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Consider limiting condition v2 ? 0
az 0
Soft
Stiff
29
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Consider limiting condition v2 ? 0
az 0
Soft
Stiff
Ar Ai At 2Ai
Displacement amplitude is unchanged
Displacement amplitude at end of rod is doubled
- free surface effect
30
Boundary Effects (Material Boundaries)
Consider limiting condition v2 ? 0
az 0
Soft
Stiff
sr - si st 0
Polarity of stress is reversed, amplitude
unchanged
Stress is zero - free surface effect
31
Wave Propagation ExampleDr Layer
32
Three Dimensional Elastic Solids
Displacements on left Stresses on right
33
Three Dimensional Elastic Solids
Using 3-dimensional stress-strain and
strain-displacement relationships
34
Three Dimensional Elastic Solids
  • Two types of waves can exist in
  • an infinite body
  • p-waves
  • s-waves

35
Waves in a Layered Body
Waves perpendicular to boundaries
p-waves
36
Waves in a Layered Body
Waves perpendicular to boundaries
SH-waves
37
Waves in a Layered Body
Inclined Waves
Incident P
Incident p-wave
38
Waves in a Layered Body
Inclined Waves
Incident SV
Incident SV-wave
39
Waves in a Layered Body
Inclined Waves
When wave passes from stiff to softer material,
it is refracted to a path closer to being
perpendicular to the layer boundary
Incident SH-wave
40
Waves in a Layered Body
Waves are nearly vertical by the time they reach
the ground surface
Vs500 fps
Vs1,000 fps
Vs1,500 fps
Vs2,000 fps
Vs2,500 fps
41
Waves in a Semi-infinite Body
  • The earth is obviously not an infinite body.
  • For near-surface earthquake engineering problems
  • the earth is idealized as a semi-infinite body
    with
  • a planar free surface

42
Surface Waves
  • Rayleigh-waves
  • Love-waves

43
Rayleigh-waves
Comparison of Rayleigh wave and body wave
velocities
Rayleigh waves travel slightly more slowly than
s-waves
44
Rayleigh-waves
Horizontal and vertical motion of Rayleigh waves
Rayleigh wave amplitude decreases quickly with
depth
45
Attenuation of Stress Waves
The amplitudes of stress waves in real
materials decrease, or attenuate, with distance
Two primary sources
Material damping
Radiation damping
46
Attenuation of Stress Waves
Material damping
A portion of the elastic energy of stress
waves is lost due to heat generation
Specific energy decreases as the waves travel
through the material
Consequently, the amplitude of the stress
waves decreases with distance
47
Attenuation of Stress Waves
Radiation damping
The specific energy can also decrease due to
geometric spreading
Consequently, the amplitude of the stress
waves decreases with distance even though the
total energy remains constant
48
Attenuation of Stress Waves
Both types of damping are important, though one
may dominate the other in specific situations
49
Transfer Function
  • The transfer function determines how each
    frequency
  • in the bedrock (input) motion is amplified, or
    deamplified
  • by the soil deposit.
  • A Transfer function may be viewed as a filter
    that acts upon
  • some input signal to produce an output signal.

50
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
u
z
H
At free surface (z 0),
Aei(wtkz)
Bei(wt-kz)
u(z, t) 2Acos kz eiwt
51
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
u
z
Transfer function relates input
H
to output
Amplification factor
52
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
Amplification is sensitive to frequency
For undamped systems, infinite amplification can
occur
Extremely high amplification occurs over narrow
frequency bands
53
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
1 damping
Amplification is still sensitive to frequency
Very high, but not infinite, amplification can
occur
Degree of amplification decreases with increasing
frequency
54
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
2 damping
55
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
5 damping
56
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
10 damping
57
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
20 damping
Amplification sensitive to fundamental frequency
Maximum level of amplification is low
58
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
All damping
Amplification
De-amplification
59
Transfer Function
Linear elastic layer on rigid base
10 damping
Stiffer, thinner
60
Transfer Function example
61
Transfer Function
  • How is it used?
  • Input motion convolved with transfer function
    multiplication in freq domain
  • Steps
  • Express input motion as sum of series of sine
    waves (Fourier series)
  • Multiply each term in series by corresponding
    term of transfer function
  • Sum resulting terms to obtain output motion.
  • Notes
  • Some terms (frequencies) amplified, some
    de-amplified
  • Amplification/de-amp. behavior depends on
    position of transfer function
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