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Title: UCSD, PCA


1
UCSD, PCA NEESBLIND PREDICTION
CONTESTIntroductory Remarks
Robert Bachman, S.E. Convener REBachman
Consulting Structural Engineers
2
Test Facility and Test Structure
  • 7 Story full-scale building slice
  • Reinforced concrete structural wall
  • NEES Large High- Performance Outdoor Shake Table
    at UCSDs Englekirk Structural Engineering Center

3
Outline of this Session
  • Description of Test Facility, Design of Test
    Structure and Testing Program and Discussion of
    Test Results
  • Overview of Blind Prediction Contest, Entries and
    the computer platforms they used
  • Comparison of Range of Predicted Values with
    Measured
  • Announcement of Winners
  • Presentation by Contest Winners of Approach Used

4
DESCRIPTION OF TEST PROGRAM Marios Panagiotou,
José I. Restrepo, Joel P. Conte and Robert
EnglekirkDepartment of Structural
EngineeringUniversity of California, San Diego
5
Acknowledgments
  • Two-phase Project funded by the Englekirk
    Structural Engineering Center Board of Advisors
  • Yehuda Bock, SIO, Payload Project Partner
  • J.E. Luco, SE UCSD, Payload Project Partner and
    Advisor
  • Ozgur Ozcelik, Graduate Strudent
  • Bobak Moaveni, Graduate Student
  • The assistance of NEESinc, NEESit, NSF and of
    Paul Somerville (URS Corp.) are greatly
    appreciated

6
Englekirk Board of Advisors
7
Objective
  • Verify the seismic performance of medium rise
    reinforced concrete residential wall building
    designed for lateral forces that are
    significantly smaller than those currently
    specified in building codes in United States
  • UBC 97 Seven story building
  • Residential, multi-wall structure
  • Sc soils
  • Site less than 2 km from B fault
  • Sv 55 in./sec.

Los Angeles
V 0.29 W Base Shear
8
Displacement-based Design
  • Two performance levels
  • Immediate occupancy in frequently occurring
    earthquakes
  • Limited yielding (1 tensile strain maximum)
  • Limiting interstory drift ratio
  • Life-safety in rare earthquakes (10 in 50)
  • Tensile strains less than 5 compressive strain
    less than 1

9
Displacement-based Design
  • Based on initial stiffness and an effective first
    mode mass
  • Direct use of the Displacement Response Spectra
    for elastic response
  • Considers the relationship between
    inelastic-elastic response of SDOF (Miranda 90
    percentile)
  • Definition of curvature and displacement
    ductility
  • Strain limits for concrete and reinforcement
  • Foundation flexibility

V 0.15 W Base Shear
10
Capacity Design
  • To guarantee the desired performance at the
    Life-prevention level
  • Explicit selection of a mechanism of inelastic
    deformation
  • Explicit recognition of effects caused higher
    modes of response
  • Larger than forces obtained from DBD analysis
    (1st mode!)
  • Larger floor accelerations

11
Test Structure
  • 7-story building slice with cantilever wall as
    the lateral force resisting system
  • Tallest building structure ever tested on a
    shaketable
  • Single axis of input ground motion in the plane
    of the wall

PT wall
Gravity columns
Flange wall
63-0 21 m
Cantilever web wall
  • Phase 1 Testing
  • 12 ft. long rectangular wall
  • Phase 2 Testing
  • 14 ft. 7 in. long T-wall

12
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13
Design Summary Detailing
Web Wall Level 1
8 (204 mm)
12-0 (3.6 m)
rl 0.44 rt 0.31 rv 1.36
Web Wall Level 2
6 (152 mm)
rl 0.60 rt 0.31 rv 0
14
Design Summary Detailing
  • Aimed at Construction optimization
  • 1 reinforcement curtain in the walls web on
    level 1
  • Well confined wall ends
  • High-strength Baugrid electro-welded confinement
    reinforcement at wall ends
  • 1 reinforcement curtain on levels 2-7
  • Tunnel form construction
  • Concrete with specified compressive strength of
  • fc 4 ksi (28 MPa)

15
Test Regime
  • Testing at the NEES_at_UCSD Large High-Performance
    Outdoor Shake Table between October 2005 and
    January 2006
  • Structure tested under increase intensity
    historical earthquake records and with
    low-intensity band-clipped white noise in between
    earthquake tests

Acceleration (g)
0
20
Time (sec)
16
Acceleration Response Spectra
Design spectra
x5
17
Sensors
  • 600 sensors deployed on the building, shake
    table and surrounding soil
  • DC Coupled Accelerometers
  • Displacement transducers
  • Strain gauges
  • Load cells
  • Oil pressure transducers
  • First time use of 50Hz, 3 mm resolution,
    real-time GPS displacement sensors
  • 17 videos feeds streamed through NEEScentral

18
EQ4
Test EQ4PGA 0.93g
19
EQ4
20
Buildings Response to Sylmar Earthquake EQ4
  • Performance levels anticipated were met
  • Cosmetic damage at the base of the wall
  • Reinforcement strains reached 2.7
  • Peak roof-drift ratio was 2.1
  • Residual crack widths less than 1/20th of an inch
  • Negligible residual displacements (1/2 in. at the
    roof )
  • The building slice could perhaps not be
    immediately occupied but only required minimum
    repairs

21
Data Curing Archiving
  • Significant amount of data has been collected and
    is being reduced
  • All data and metadata will be archived in the
    NEES Data Repository and will be made available
    to all NEES users and researchers

22
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23
BLIND PREDICTION CONTESTScoring, Comparison of
Predicted vs Measured Quantities and Winners
Robert Bachman, S.E. Convener REBachman
Consulting Structural Engineers
24
Overview of Contest
  • Web site set up included links to test
    structure data, test motions, contest rules,
    input sheet and questions/answers
  • NEES email addresses set up for Q/A and entries
  • Contest announced March 10th via electronic
    communications (PCA, NEES, the NSF EQ Centers,
    EERI), Structural Engineers Associations and
    personal communications
  • Q A posted periodically on web site
  • Entries were due electronically May 15th
  • Winners notified by May 25th

25
Basic Contest Rules
  • Goal predict responses by analysis - compare
    with measured
  • 3 Categories of teams Winner PCA Award of
    2500 per team
  • 1. Undergraduates
  • 2. Researchers/Academics
  • 3. Engineering Practitioners
  • Predict responses for 4 levels of earthquakes
    responses included displacements, drifts, shears,
    moments, accelerations throughout the structures
    and vertical strains near base.
  • Entries judged by determining error in each type
    of response Lowest error awarded points. Sum
    points. Largest sum winner
  • The entries were handled confidentially folks
    at UCSD did not know who submitted what entries.
    Relative ranking confidential.

26
Scoring Procedure - Mean Square root error index
Ai measured (actual) response quantity
Pi predicted response quantity
Team score



Interstory
Residual
Total points

d
Team i
M
V
ü
/ g
drift ratio
drift ratio
i
i
i
i
4
1
8
4
8
8
33
1




16

0
0
2
8
4
2
2






19


2
8
4
2
2
1
3





12
4
1
4
1
1
1
4





10
8
2
0
0
0
0
5





27
Entries / Computer Platforms
  • 21 total entries/ 8 countries
  • Undergraduates 2 teams / 2 countries
  • Countries Italy and US
  • Computer Platforms Etabs and
    SeismoStruct
  • Researchers/Academics 11 teams / 8 countries
  • Countries Canada, France, Italy,
    Mexico, New Zealand, Slovenia, Taiwan, US
  • Computer Platforms Abaqus, Canny,
    Column, Fedeas Lab, Narc2004, OpenSees,
    Ruaumoko, Sap 2000
  • Engineering Practitioners 8 teams / 2 countries
  • Countries New Zealand and US
  • Computer Platforms Adina, ANSR-II, Hand
    Calculator/code formulas, OpenSees, PC-ANSR,
    Ram Perform 3-D

28
Undergraduate Entries
  • Italy Laura Quaglini
  • Advisor Dr. Rui Pinho
  • University of Pavia
  • US Michael Billings, Soyoon Lee and
    Evan Peterman
  • Advisor Prof. Ansgar Neuenhofer
  • Cal Poly San Luis Obispo

29
Researcher/Academic Entries
  • Canada Alireza Ahmdina and Carlos Ventura
  • France Stephane Grane, Panagiotis Kotronis
    and Jacky Mazars
  • Italy/US Paolo Martinelli and Filip Filippou
  • Mexico Mario Rodriquez, Roque Sanchez and
    Miguel Torres
  • New Zealand Dion Marriot, Kam Yuen Yuen,
    Stefano Pampanin and Athol
    Carr
  • Slovenia Matej Fischinger, Peter Kante and
    Tatjana Isakovic
  • Taiwan Kuang-Yen Liu
  • US/SUNY Buffalo Methee Chiewanichakorn and
    Amjad Aref
  • US/Univ of Washington Blake Doekper, Laura
    Lowes and Dawn Lehman
  • US/Univ of Missouri at KC Kavitra Deshmukh,
    Ganesh Thiagarajan, Thomas Heausler
  • US/Iowa State University Jon Waugh and Sri
    Sritharan

30
Engineering Practitioner Entries
  • Nikolay Doumbalski, MMI, Oakland, CA
  • Rick Drake, JSDyer, Anaheim, CA
  • Mahmoud Hachem, Emeryville, CA
  • Jimin Huang, HDR Engr, Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Trevor Kelly, Holmes Consulting Group, New
    Zealand
  • Bruce Maison, EBMUD, El Cerrito, CA
  • David Nilles,PE. SE., Washougal, WA
  • Jianxia Zhong, Y.L. Mo, Paul Jacob and Turel Gur
    mostly from MMI in Houston, Texas

31
Selected Comparison of Selected Measured versus
Predicted Responses (Top 4 in Researcher/Academic
and Engineer Practitioner Categories)
32
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33
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36
Key Finding
  • The M Factor

37
And the Winners Are Drum Roll Please !
Undergraduate Team Winner 
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo  represented by Michael
Billings
Researcher/Academic Team winner
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia represented
by Matej Fischinger
and Engineer Practitioner winner
Mahmoud Hachem of Wiss, Janney, Elstner,
Emeryville, California
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