Abstract:
Reinforced Concrete (RC) framed buildings with Un-Reinforced Masonry (URM)
infills are the most popular structural systems for multistory buildings in India and
many other parts of the world. These buildings have shown poor performance during
past earthquakes and suffered severe damage or collapse, even under moderate
earthquakes. It is general practice to ignore the infills in design as the uncertainty in
infill-frame interaction results in complex modes of failure, rendering the simulation
of seismic behavior of infilled frames a challenging task. The behavior is further
affected by the construction sequence of infilled frames, as the infills are usually
added after completion of the frame, and it results in a gap between the infill and
soffit of the beam above. Despite significant research effort dedicated to such
buildings in the past decades, the understanding of seismic behavior of infilled frames
is still not adequate and guidelines for modeling and analysis are lacking in the design
codes. In this Thesis, a stock of available earthquake damage survey reports,
experimental studies, analytical models and design codes, is taken to identify various
failure modes of such buildings. A review of available models for estimating the
strength of infills and frame members in various failure modes is also presented with
an objective to identify the most reliable models.
A statistical exercise is carried out to select a representative building plan, based on
the analysis of 50 buildings selected from a field survey, conducted earlier (DEQ
2009). The effect of infills and their construction sequence, on the seismic
performance of generic RC buildings with the selected plan and designed as per
relevant Indian Standards is studied. A comparative study of the available 1-, 2-, and
3-strut models is performed to examine their capability to predict the failure modes
observed in post earthquake damage surveys and experimental studies. It is found that
the single eccentric diagonal strut model has higher reliability in predicting the
observed failure modes.
A macro-model is proposed to simulate the seismic behavior of URM infilled frames,
which can be easily implemented on available software. The infills are modeled as
eccentric diagonal struts connected to columns, with stiffness as defined in ASCE-41
(2007) and strength in various modes of failure is considered. Nonlinear ‘Gap’
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elements are used to simulate the gap between the infill and the beam and to release
the struts in tension. Sequential analysis is performed to take into account the
construction sequence of infill panels relative to frames. It is observed that
conventional simultaneous analysis ignoring the construction sequence may be highly
erroneous and can almost nullify the effect of infills in some cases.
The complex behavior of infilled frames under lateral loading gets further
complicated when infills are placed irregularly in plan and/or elevation to maximize
the usage of available space. Mixed occupancy, lack of enforcement, and inadequate
guidelines have resulted in a huge stock of seismically deficient irregular buildings
throughout India. A survey (DEQ 2009) of multistorey buildings in the New Okhla
Industrial Development Authority (NOIDA), a model township in the National
Capital Region (NCR) in India, revealed that 95% of the surveyed buildings have
ground storey open (without partitions) for parking and as many as 62% buildings
suffer torsion irregularity. Taking a note of the widespread failure of buildings having
irregularly placed infills, the seismic behavior and vulnerability of the three most
common configurations of RC frames with irregular placement of infills, viz. open
ground storey, front bay open in the ground storey, and three bays open in the ground
storey, are studied.
Nonlinear Static Pushover analysis is performed to compare the seismic performance
of Indian code designed RC frame buildings with and without URM infills. It is
observed that the buildings, designed for gravity loads only, as per Indian Standards
can generally survive seismic excitation up to MCE of Indian Seismic Zone IV (PGA
= 0.24g), without collapse. However, inclusion of infills deteriorates the performance
of RC frames significantly and the collapse of the gravity load designed infilled frame
buildings is caused by brittle shear failure of column. It is observed that the open
ground storey buildings designed for code (i.e. ground storey columns and beams
designed for 2.5 times the normal base shear) is able to attain the stiffness and
strength close to those of the corresponding uniformly infilled frame buildings and the
estimated performance of such buildings is slightly better than the uniformly infilled
frame buildings, indicating the adequacy of the code provisions for open ground
storey buildings.
To study the seismic performance of buildings with asymmetric placement of infills in
the ground storey, Incremental Dynamic Analysis is carried out using bi-directional
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ground motions with a wide range of source and site parameters. The static capacity
spectra are convoluted with the demand spectra to compare these with the dynamic
capacity spectra. The convoluted static and dynamic capacity spectra match well and
the ultimate drift ratio obtained from the two curves remain mostly the same,
indicating that the strength and displacement parameters derived from static pushover
curves, are comparable with IDA results.
Fragility curves of the studied buildings are developed using the different variabilities
defined in HAZUS. Capacity of structure against “Incipient Collapse” damage state
and variability in seismic demand are determined from the results of Incremental
Dynamic Analysis. The comparative study of the fragility curves and Damage
Probability Matrices suggest that URM infills result in significant increase in seismic
vulnerability of RC frames. The vulnerability of infilled frames is further increased
due to irregular placement of infills.
A comparative study of risk assessment methodologies based on macroseismic
intensity and response spectrum approaches is also carried out. To facilitate the
comparative study, a spreadsheet-based software tool ‘SeisVARA’ is developed using
the vulnerability functions for Indian RC frames buildings with and without URM
infills, developed in this Thesis. In this open software tool, seismic hazard can be
specified either in terms of macroseismic intensity, or Peak Ground Acceleration in
combination with the spectral shapes and soil amplification models of various
earthquake design codes, or in terms of inelastic response spectra using the ‘Next
Generation Attenuation Relationships’. A comparison of these different approaches is
conducted for a typical city in northern India. Effect of different parameters, e.g. level
of PGA, spectral shape, source-site parameters, and soil amplification models, on
estimated loss, is also studied. It is observed that not only the different approaches
result in widely varying damage and loss estimates, but also the variation of
parameters within a given approach can result in considerable differences.