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    Effects of Rayleigh-Damping Approach on the Elastic and Inelastic Seismic Performance of Fixed- and Flexible-Base Structural Systems

    Source: Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction:;2021:;Volume ( 026 ):;issue: 003::page 04021021-1
    Author:
    Moatez M. Alhassan
    ,
    Tim Huff
    ,
    Daniel R. VandenBerge
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)SC.1943-5576.0000596
    Publisher: ASCE
    Abstract: The commonly-used viscous damping approach, Rayleigh damping, has been shown to develop excessive damping forces in the nonlinear response history analysis (RHA) of fixed-base structural systems. These forces are referred to as the initial stiffness. While the incorporation of foundation flexibility plays an important role on the seismic performance of the structures, this effect has been ignored in past studies that examined Rayleigh damping. In this study, the elastic and inelastic RHA were applied on fixed- and flexible-base structural systems to (1) address the effect of foundation flexibility on the resulting Rayleigh damping ratios; and (2) evaluate the effect of various damping formulations on the structural response. A structural analysis was performed on 10-story steel special moment-resisting frames. The results showed that the incorporation of the flexibility of the foundation increased the stiffness proportional ratio of Rayleigh damping, which, in turn, increased the total damping ratio compared to the fixed base condition ratios. Mass proportional damping was not affected by foundation flexibility. Consequently, initial stiffness-based proportional damping resulted in the largest dynamic response compared to the other damping approaches for the fixed base systems. Per contra, the structure was heavily damped when stiffness proportional damping was in control for the flexible-base system. In contrast, mass proportional damping produced the largest lateral deflection and interstory drift for the flexible-base systems. The flexible-base story shear was not significantly affected for the different components of Rayleigh damping.
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      Effects of Rayleigh-Damping Approach on the Elastic and Inelastic Seismic Performance of Fixed- and Flexible-Base Structural Systems

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    contributor authorMoatez M. Alhassan
    contributor authorTim Huff
    contributor authorDaniel R. VandenBerge
    date accessioned2022-01-31T23:44:35Z
    date available2022-01-31T23:44:35Z
    date issued1/1/2021
    identifier other%28ASCE%29SC.1943-5576.0000596.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4270276
    description abstractThe commonly-used viscous damping approach, Rayleigh damping, has been shown to develop excessive damping forces in the nonlinear response history analysis (RHA) of fixed-base structural systems. These forces are referred to as the initial stiffness. While the incorporation of foundation flexibility plays an important role on the seismic performance of the structures, this effect has been ignored in past studies that examined Rayleigh damping. In this study, the elastic and inelastic RHA were applied on fixed- and flexible-base structural systems to (1) address the effect of foundation flexibility on the resulting Rayleigh damping ratios; and (2) evaluate the effect of various damping formulations on the structural response. A structural analysis was performed on 10-story steel special moment-resisting frames. The results showed that the incorporation of the flexibility of the foundation increased the stiffness proportional ratio of Rayleigh damping, which, in turn, increased the total damping ratio compared to the fixed base condition ratios. Mass proportional damping was not affected by foundation flexibility. Consequently, initial stiffness-based proportional damping resulted in the largest dynamic response compared to the other damping approaches for the fixed base systems. Per contra, the structure was heavily damped when stiffness proportional damping was in control for the flexible-base system. In contrast, mass proportional damping produced the largest lateral deflection and interstory drift for the flexible-base systems. The flexible-base story shear was not significantly affected for the different components of Rayleigh damping.
    publisherASCE
    titleEffects of Rayleigh-Damping Approach on the Elastic and Inelastic Seismic Performance of Fixed- and Flexible-Base Structural Systems
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume26
    journal issue3
    journal titlePractice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)SC.1943-5576.0000596
    journal fristpage04021021-1
    journal lastpage04021021-13
    page13
    treePractice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction:;2021:;Volume ( 026 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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