posted on 2010-09-01, 00:00authored byRicardo Taborda
The main objective of this thesis is to build a framework for performing earthquake simulations
capable of including nonlinear soil behavior and the presence of the built environment in highly
heterogeneous basins, and to study their influence on the final response of the ground in large urban
areas exposed to high seismic hazard. To this end, we use a finite elements approach and extend
the capabilities of Hercules, the parallel octree-based earthquake simulator developed by the Quake
Group at Carnegie Mellon.
Nonlinear soil behavior is incorporated in ground motion simulations employing a rate-dependent
plasticity approach to predict the nonlinear state of the material explicitly at every time step. The
soil is modeled as a perfectly elastoplastic material. The presence of urban structures is modeled
representing buildings as homogeneous blocks made up of the same type of hexahedral elements
used in the mesh. These elements are generated automatically through a new set of application
programming interfaces, which extend Hercules' meshing capabilities while preserving its core octree-based formulation.
Both implementations are tested under realistic earthquake conditions in heterogeneous geological
structures. In the case of nonlinear ground motion modeling, results indicate that soil nonlinearities
greatly modify the ground response, confirming previous observations for deamplification effects and
spatial variability, and evidencing three-dimensional basin effects not fully observed before. In turn,
the presence of building clusters causes multiple soil-structure interaction phenomena that change
both the near ground-motion and the individual performance of the buildings themselves. This
substantiates the argument that in soft-soil basins may it not be longer valid to ignore the presence
of neighboring structures.
These new implementations represent important advances in computational seismology and help
make a direct connection to subjects of interest in earthquake engineering. The analysis drawn from
the applications presented here confirms aspects known from previous, though limited studies, and
broadens our knowledge of the effects of nonlinear soil and the built environment on the ground
motion due to earthquakes at a regional level not explored before.