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Simplified approach for design of raft foundations against
fault rupture. Part I: free-field
I. Anastasopoulos1,2, N. Gerolymos1,
G. Gazetas1 and M. F. Bransby2
1. School of Civil Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
2. Civil Engineering, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK
ˇˇ
Abstract: Over the past few decades, earthquake
engineering research mainly focused on the effects of strong seismic shaking.
After the 1999 earthquakes in Turkey and Taiwan, and thanks to numerous cases
where fault rupture caused substantial damage to structures, the importance of
faulting-induced deformation has re-emerged. This paper, along with its
companion (Part II), exploits parametric results of finite element analyses and
centrifuge model testing in developing a four¨Cstep semi¨Canalytical approach for
analysis of dip-slip (normal and thrust) fault rupture propagation through sand,
its emergence on the ground surface, and its interaction with raft foundations.
The present paper (Part I) focuses on the effects of faulting in the absence of
a structure (i.e., in the free-field). The semi-analytical approach comprises
two-steps: the first deals with the rupture path and the estimation of the
location of fault outcropping, and the second with the tectonically-induced
displacement profile at the ground surface. In both cases, simple mechanical
analogues are used to derive simplified semi-analytical expressions. Centrifuge
model test data, in combination with parametric results from nonlinear finite
element analyses, are utilized for model calibration. The derived
semi-analytical expressions are shown to compare reasonably well with more
rigorous experimental and theoretical data, thus providing a useful tool for a
first estimation of near-fault seismic hazard.
Keywords: fault rupture; semi-analytical
expression; soil-structure interaction; earthquake
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