Learn to design code-compliant, earthquake-resistant structures with this practical guide
Earthquake Engineering demonstrates how to design structural members and joints for seismic resistance. The text guides readers through dozens of structural designs, documenting how to perform each step, make the necessary calculations, and adhere to relevant design codes. Most other texts on seismic design focus on theory and the construction of idealized structures; this text is a radical departure, presenting actual tested design methodologies that protect structures from the devastation of earthquakes.
Preface.Acknowledgments.Notation.1. OVERVIEW.1.1.Introduction.1.2 Concepts, Terminology, and Source of Earthquakes.1.3 Wave Propagation and Velocities.1.4 Magnitude of Earthquakes.1.5 Building Damage.1.6 Structural Failures. Overall Failure.1.7 Component or Joint Failure.1.8 Code Design Forces. Reserve Strength to Counter Extreme Forces.2. SEISMIC DESIGN REGULATIONS.2.1 Building Codes.2.2 The 1997 UBC, A Model Code.2.3 Building Codes and Other Standards Interaction.2.4 IBC 2006.3. REINFORCED-CONCRETE STRUCTURES.3.1 Introduction.3.2 Shearing Resistance of RC Beams.3.3 Development Length.3.4 The Northridge Experience.3.5 Case 1. Reinforced Concrete Parking Garage.3.6 Case 2. Reinforced Concrete Retaining Wall System.4. SEISMIC STEEL DESIGN: SMRF.4.1 Design of a SMRF Structure, LRFD Method.4.2 Design Steps.4.3 Project Description. Four-Story Office Building.4.4 Project Layout and Typical SMRF Per UBC 94.4.5 The 1994 Design.4.6 Wind Analysis. 97 UBC Chapter 16, Div III.4.7 Wind Analysis of The Four-Story Building.4.8 Seismic Zones 3 and 4.4.9 Earthquake Analysis of the 4-Story Office Building.4.11 Significant Changes in The 1997 Design.4.12 1997 Vs 1994 Design.4.13 Summary of the Procedure.4.14 Design Strategies.4.15 Design of Beams. Code Requirements.4.16 Second-Floor Beam.4.17 Beam-To-Column Joint.4.18 Flexural Resistance of Beam-To-Column Joint.4.19 Shear Tab Design.4.20 Shear Tab-To-Beam Welded Connection.4.21 Second-Floor Panel Zone.4.22 Third-Floor Beam.4.23 Third-Floor Shear Tab Connection.4.24 Third-Floor Beam-To-Column Moment Connection.4.25 Third-Floor Panel Zone.4.26 Design of Columns.4.27 Column Final Design Data.4.28 First-Story Column Design for Compression.4.29 Column Design Flowchart.4.30 Design of Third-Story Column for Compression.4.31 Design of Third-Story Column Splice.5. SEISMIC STEEL DESIGN: BRACED FRAMES.5.1 Introduction.5.2 Project Description: Four-Story Library Annex.5.3 Wind Analysis.5.4 Earthquake Analysis.5.5 Wind and Earthquake Loads.5.6 Response of Braced Frames to Cyclic Lateral Loads.5.7 Code Provisions.5.8 Rules Applicable to Bracing Members.5.9 Column Strength Requirements.5.10 Design for Earthquake.5.11 Strategies for Brace Member Design.5.12 Brace Members 2 & 3.5.13 Brace Member 3, First Story.5.14 Design of Fillet Weld Connection.5.15 Design Of Gusset Plate, First & Second Story.5.16 Brace Member 13, Third Story.5.17 Fillet Weld Design. Third & Fourth Story Gusset Plates.5.18 Gusset Plate Design, Third & Fourth Story.5.19 The Vertical Component.5.20 Column Design.5.21 Column Splice Design, Third Floor.5.22 Design of Beams.5.23 Column Base Plate Design.5.24 Summary of The Design Procedures.5.25 The SEAOC Blue Book and the Code.6. IBC SEISMIC DESIGN OF SMRF STRUCTURES.6.1 IBC Setup of Seismic Design Forces.6.2 Design Example.6.3 IBC Building Categories.7. MASONRY STRUCTURES.7.1 Introduction.7.2 Case 1. Retaining Wall System.7.3 Case 2. Seismic Vs Wind.7.4 Case 3. Design of CMU Wall & Precast Concrete Plate.7.5 Case 4. Retail Store, Masonry & Steel.8. WOOD-FRAMED BUILDINGS.8.1 Introduction.8.2 The Northridge Lesson.8.3 Case 1. Steel-Reinforced Wood-Framed Building.8.4 Case 2. Wood-Framed 2-Story Home.8.5 Case 3. Steel-Reinforced 2-Story Duplex.8.6 Case 4. Wood-Framed Commercial.8.7 Case 5. Wood-Framed Residential Building.8.8 Wood-Frame Garage & Workshop.8.9 Light-Gauge Steel as Alternative to Wood Framing.8.9 Case 6. Light-Gauge Steel in a Multistory Project.Appendix to Chapter 8.9. MATRICES IN ENGINEERING.9.1 Use of Matrices in Engineering.9.2 Matrix Addition and Multiplication.9.3 Matrix Forms.9.4 Transposition.9.5 Minor and Cofactor Matrices.9.6 Determinant of a Matrix.9.7 Inverse of a Matrix.9.9 Elementary Row Operations.9.10 Summary of Matrix Operations.10. DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS.10.1 Basic Concepts.10.2 First-Order Differential Equations.10.3 Separation of Variables.10.4 Exact Equations.10.5 The Integrating Factor.10.6 Second-Order Linear Equations.10.7 Homogeneous Differential Equations.10.8 The Characteristic Equation.11. NUMERICAL METHODS AND ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS.11.1 Introduction to Dynamic Analysis.11.2 Equation of Motion.11.3 Damping. Damped Free Vibration.11.4 Free Vibrations. Two-Degree Systems.11.5 Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors.11.6 Modeling Actual Structures.11.7 Three-Degree Systems.11.8 Existence and Uniqueness Theory. Wronskian.11.9 Driving Functions (FT). Seismic Ground Motion as (FT).12. METHODS AND TOOLS TO UNRAVEL SECRETS OF EARTHQUAKES.12.1 The Works of an Earthquake.12.2 The Vertical Acceleration Component.12.3 A New Method of Dynamic Analysis.12.4 Background of the Research.12.5 The 1994 Earthquake in Santa Monica.12.6 Analysis of the Actual Structure.12.7 Results and Findings.12.8 Nature and Causes of Joint Failure.13. RECENT AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS IN SEISMIC DESIGN.13.1 Tests on Joints.13.2 The Dog-Bone Experiment.13.3 Joint Strain-Hardening, Speed Straining.13.4 The Mechanism of Joint Degradation.13.5 Conclusions.13.6 New Trends.13.7 Seismic Isolation.13.8 Engineered Damping.Acronyms.Glossary.Appendix. Computer Analysis.A. SMRF Project Part I.B. SMRF Project Part II.C. Braced-Frame Project.Index.
CHARLES K. ERDEY, Dr. - Ing., SE, PE, has taught structural engineering subjects at California State University, Long Beach, and Northern Arizona University, practiced consulting engineering and forensic engineering, and done extensive research, dating back to the 1960s, on limit state design and performance of structures. He has published numerous papers for international and U.S. periodicals and has been awarded patents on advanced structural systems and on improved testing equipment for high-strength nonmetallic engineering materials. He has been an active participant in the Joint Work Group on Seismic Connections of the International Institute of Welding, is a chartered member of the Structural Engineering Institute, member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and has conducted seminars and written manuals for the International Conference of Building Officials (ICBO) on seismic and wind design for steel structures.