It is typically assumed that accelerograms obtained from ground motion recording instruments adequately installed inside a building can be considered as representative of free-field conditions if the structure is less than 2-3 storeys high and does not feature a basement or a massive foundation system. In this work, such an assumption is verified through nonlinear soil-block finite element analyses, considering the induced seismicity Groningen gas field as a case-study and both types of structures. The capability of the numerical model in adequately reproducing nonlinear soil response and capturing interaction between soil and structure is first verified through a number of analyses and cross-checks. Considering soil profiles at the locations of different recording stations in the Groningen field, together with accelerograms from recent events in the region, the results obtained with the numerical model confirm that recordings from instruments located at the base of lightweight structures are not affected by Soil-Structure Interaction (SSI) effects, neither kinematic nor inertial. Heavy structures with a basement, however, do exhibit recordings with variations with respect to the free-field; these are identified and possible corrections to the recordings are analysed. Another set of analyses then demonstrates that soil consolidation prior to the construction of lightweight structures resting on shallow foundations may instead lead to foundation-level recordings that feature high-frequency ground motion amplitudes slightly lower than their free-field counterparts. Additional simplified analyses show the dependency of the recordings on inertial SSI effects due to deformability of the ground supporting the structure.

Variations between foundation-level recordings and free-field earthquake ground motions: numerical study at soft-soil sites

Cavalieri F.;Pinho R.
2021-01-01

Abstract

It is typically assumed that accelerograms obtained from ground motion recording instruments adequately installed inside a building can be considered as representative of free-field conditions if the structure is less than 2-3 storeys high and does not feature a basement or a massive foundation system. In this work, such an assumption is verified through nonlinear soil-block finite element analyses, considering the induced seismicity Groningen gas field as a case-study and both types of structures. The capability of the numerical model in adequately reproducing nonlinear soil response and capturing interaction between soil and structure is first verified through a number of analyses and cross-checks. Considering soil profiles at the locations of different recording stations in the Groningen field, together with accelerograms from recent events in the region, the results obtained with the numerical model confirm that recordings from instruments located at the base of lightweight structures are not affected by Soil-Structure Interaction (SSI) effects, neither kinematic nor inertial. Heavy structures with a basement, however, do exhibit recordings with variations with respect to the free-field; these are identified and possible corrections to the recordings are analysed. Another set of analyses then demonstrates that soil consolidation prior to the construction of lightweight structures resting on shallow foundations may instead lead to foundation-level recordings that feature high-frequency ground motion amplitudes slightly lower than their free-field counterparts. Additional simplified analyses show the dependency of the recordings on inertial SSI effects due to deformability of the ground supporting the structure.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1404554
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 10
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 8
social impact