1 - Introduction To Earthquake Engineering (August 20, 2022)
1 - Introduction To Earthquake Engineering (August 20, 2022)
1 - Introduction To Earthquake Engineering (August 20, 2022)
Earthquake
Engineering
Instructor:
ENGR. KELVIN ROSS A. HOLGADO, GMICE, BSc, M.PICE
OUTLINE
01 EARTHQUAKE
General Introduction about
Earthquake
02 TYPES OF EARTHQUAKE
Tectonic, Volcanic, Induced, &
Collapse
03 DAMAGING EFFECTS OF
EARTHQUAKE
Ground Failure, Indirect Effects,
Ground Shaking
3
Types of Earthquake
TECTONIC, VOLCANIC, INDUCED, & COLLAPSE
4
Types of Earthquake
VOLCANIC EARTHQUAKE
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Types of Earthquake
COLLAPSE EARTHQUAKE
INDUCED EARTHQUAKE
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TECTONIC EARHQUAKE JULY 2022, M7.0 ABRA EARTHQUAKE
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VOLCANIC EARTHQUAKE TAAL VOLCANO ERUPTION (JANUARY 12, 2020 )
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COLLAPSE EARTHQUAKE CRANDALL CANYON COAL MINE COLLAPSE
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INDUCED EARTHQUAKE M7.9 Earthquake, Sichuan, China (2008)
• In 2008, an estimated
80,000 people died or
went missing following a
7.9 earthquake in China's
Sichuan province.
Scientists believe it was
triggered by the weight of
320 million tons of water
that had been collected in
the Zipingpu Reservoir—
over a well-known fault
line. (National Geographic)
10
The city of Rikuzentakata, Iwate Prefecture, is flooded after an earthquake-triggered tsunami swept away the area on March 11, 2011, in
this supplied photo. The meteorological agency's initial warning was criticized after the disaster for underestimating the size of the
tsunami. (https://www.japantimes.co.jp/) 11
Ground Failure
each other.
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Ground subsidence occurs as loose soils rearrange and settle
into a denser state during vibrations caused by earthquakes.
In some cases, the compaction effect may amount to
Ground Failure result of slope failure or liquefaction, all of which cause the
ground to lose its support and sink, with the ground surface
breaking up into fissures, scarps, horsts, and grabens.
GROUND CRACKING
HORST HORST
GRABEN GRABEN
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Ground Failure Soil liquefaction occurs when loose, saturated granular soils
temporarily change from a solid to a liquid state, losing their
shear strength, which corresponds to a loss in effective stress
SOIL LIQUEFACTION between soil particles.
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Sloped land that is
marginally stable under
static conditions is most
susceptible to sliding
during the intense shaking
BEFORE AFTER
One of the worst cases happened
in Peru during the 1970 Ancash (or
Great Peruvian) earthquake
(magnitude 7.9) off the Pacific
Ocean coast, which produced what
is considered the world’s deadliest
earthquake-induced land-slide
(20,000 fatalities).
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Indirect Effects
TSUNAMIS
• Tsunamis are long-period sea waves that
are generated when an earthquake
causes the vertical movement of the
seafloor.
• Tsunamis travel far, at high speeds (over
500 mph) in the open ocean and are
difficult to detect because of their small
crest-to-trough height, and long
wavelengths, which typically, are
hundreds of miles long.
• Unobstructed, these waves can travel
around the world and dissipate all their
energy without causing damage.
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Seiches
• These are long-period oscillating
waves generated by distant
earthquakes in enclosed bodies of
water such as bays, lakes, reservoirs,
and even swimming pools
• Occurs when the natural frequency of
a water body matches the frequency
of the incoming earthquake waves
2015 Nepal Earthquake
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Indirect Effects
FIRES
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GROUND SHAKING
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Ground Shaking
• Ground shaking is the result of
rapid ground acceleration. It can
vary over an area as a result of
factors such as topography,
bedrock type and the location
and orientation of the fault
rupture.
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GROUND SHAKING
• Ground displacement is how far the surface moves during the earthquake. It
can cause the ground to change position in both horizontal and vertical
directions and move relative to objects or other areas of land nearby.
• Ground velocity is a measure of how quickly the ground was displaced – the
speed and direction that the ground moved to get from its original location
to its new location. Ground that moves with a higher velocity is also
displaced more quickly.
• Ground acceleration is a measure of how quickly the ground changes
velocity during the earthquake. Ground acceleration is responsible for the
classic earthquake shaking effect where the ground rapidly changes direction
in a violent back and forward and up and down motion.
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The largest recorded earthquake in the world was a
magnitude 9.5 (Mw) in Chile on May 22, 1960. (USGS)
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The world’s deadliest recorded earthquake occurred in 1556 in central China. It
struck a region where most people lived in caves carved from soft rock.
• Earthquake Engineering is an
interdisciplinary branch of
engineering that designs and
analyzes structures, such as
buildings and bridges, with
earthquakes in mind. It is a subset
of Structural Engineering, a
specialization in Civil Engineering.
• The primary goal of an Earthquake
Engineer is to mitigate hazards
resulting from seismic events.
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Mitigating Earthquake Hazards
• It is very challenging to mitigate the effects of tsunamis, landslides,
and fires; however, mitigating the effects of ground shaking on
structural systems using sound engineering judgment has made
great advances in the last century.
• This is known as earthquake-resistant design and has been
successfully applied to reduce human and economic losses.
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HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF EARTHQUAKE-RESISTANT DESIGN
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Development of construction practices to mitigate the effects of shaking.
Notable Earthquake events that led to the development of Design Codes and Laws related to Earthquake.
33
Step forward to Response Spectrum Theory
• In 1948, a joint committee of the Structural
Engineers Association of Northern California
and the San Francisco Section of ASCE
proposed model lateral-force provisions for
California building codes.
• A major advance was the introduction of
the earthquake-response spectrum
concept, which was first developed by Biot
in 1943 and later proposed as a design tool
by Housner.
• This theory combines ground motion and
the dynamic properties of the structure
(namely the period). This led to the building
period becoming an explicit factor in the
determination of seismic design forces.
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• Structural dynamic concepts
Structural Dynamics were further developed in the
1960s and incorporated in
seismic codes after the 1971
San Fernando earthquake.
• In particular, structural dynamic
specifications explicitly
incorporating the response
spectrum theory were required
for the design of hospitals and
other critical facilities.
• Significant advances have been
made in the development of
analytical procedures; much of
this has been in parallel with
the development of computers
Structural Dynamic Analysis from a modern day Software. because solutions based on
structural dynamics are
computationally intensive.
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Structural Dynamics
• Dynamic forces are only equivalent to code-specified lateral forces in that a
structure designed to resist these forces has the capability of deforming
without overstressing from load reversals, and provide adequate member
ductility, as well as provide connections with sufficient strength and resiliency
to accomplish the following performance goals:
36
Performance Based Design
• The performance goals have generally remained unchanged since the 1970s,
but have taken on a broader approach of design, that allows the client or
Structural designer to decide the Desired Level of Performance. This new
philosophy is known as performance-based design.
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END
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REFERENCES
• https://www.cdc.gov/disasters/earthquakes/images/header_images/earthquakes_homepage.jpg
• https://i0.wp.com/theconstructor.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/How-Ground-Shakes-During-Earthquakes.jpg?fit=822%2C504&ssl=1
• https://seismo.ethz.ch/en/knowledge/things-to-know/causes-of-earthquakes/general/
• https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/35/Fluids_and_faults.jpg
• https://media-cldnry.s-nbcnews.com/image/upload/t_fit-1500w,f_auto,q_auto:best/msnbc/Components/Photos/070817/070817_utah_hmed_1p.jpg
• https://www.manilatimes.net/2022/07/28/news/national/agony-in-abra/1852522
• https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/files/2022/07/329399.jpeg
• https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/human-induced-earthquakes-fracking-mining-video-spd
• https://temblor.net/earthquake-insights/philippine-volcano-taal-erupts-with-a-fury-of-earthquakes-and-ash-10371/
• https://coloradogeologicalsurvey.org/wp-content/uploads/RT-0061890-20030218-09.jpg
• https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/proxy/v6d43YvyK2JpRZoThW0UuW5sbyiSeo9PPVVVZYZAqNNEwTOP9eN3SFawMYH0M-zKp0PZ_-
pfeEDRD0XEAeWvUvIldV2xr7m_lN67UC1Qw_c-x9efvuYEZkFeWIMZO3nQdg
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• https://cdn.britannica.com/41/166941-050-594F0534/Yingxiu-school-China-Sichuan-earthquake-May-2008.jpg
• https://i0.wp.com/theconstructor.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/How-Ground-Shakes-During-Earthquakes.jpg?fit=822%2C504&ssl=1
• http://www.seismicresilience.org.nz/topics/seismic-science-and-site-influences/earthquake-hazards/ground-shaking-2/
• https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-FFb29p3kYKQ/WqWgxwAx_2I/AAAAAAAAHXc/6NZshsAo-Ds2PndvFK7xzC9xcAaXKhHKwCLcBGAs/s1600/0313-ps-1.gif
• https://i0.wp.com/theconstructor.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/image3-629x420.png
• https://civilarc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Seismic-Design-Philosophy-for-Building.gif
• https://cdnassets.hw.net/dims4/GG/523ef4a/2147483647/resize/480x%3E/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcdnassets.hw.net%2F55%2Fe4%2F6f7bee2f46749b52accae826047
5%2Ftheecuadorexchange-00-hero.jpg
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