The selection of specific elastic response spectra according to soil categories is the standard to account for site effects in engineering design and general-purpose hazard maps. Most of the international seismic codes are based on the average shear wave velocity of the upper 30 m (Vs(30)) to discriminate between soil categories. The works of Borcherdt and Glassmoyer (1992) and Borcherdt (1994) were the first to propose the adoption of the Vs(30) as a tool to discriminate soils with similar seismic response. Nevertheless, after Borcherdt (1994), some doubts arose about the capability of Vs(30) in site effects estimation (among others, Steidl 2000; Park and Hashash 2004; Stewart et al. 2003; Castellaro et al. 2008; Lee and Trifunac 2010). The objectives of this study are: (i) to find soil classes with a similar response to an earthquake; (ii) to develop empirical amplification factors for 5 % damped response spectral acceleration in the period range T 0.04-4 s; (iii) to identify proxies for site classification (Vs(30), stratigraphy, fundamental frequency, etc.). We propose a soil classification, which is not based on a priori subdivision, but it relies on the natural aggregation of empirical amplification function of the sites, obtained by normalizing the spectra of recorded motions by a reference (rock) spectrum from a ground motion prediction equation (GMPE, developed by Bindi et al. 2011, based on the ITACA 1.0 database). The empirical amplification functions of sites are aggregated by means of cluster analysis.

On the Performances of Site Parameters for Soil Classification

Gallipoli Maria Rosaria;Peronace Edoardo
2015

Abstract

The selection of specific elastic response spectra according to soil categories is the standard to account for site effects in engineering design and general-purpose hazard maps. Most of the international seismic codes are based on the average shear wave velocity of the upper 30 m (Vs(30)) to discriminate between soil categories. The works of Borcherdt and Glassmoyer (1992) and Borcherdt (1994) were the first to propose the adoption of the Vs(30) as a tool to discriminate soils with similar seismic response. Nevertheless, after Borcherdt (1994), some doubts arose about the capability of Vs(30) in site effects estimation (among others, Steidl 2000; Park and Hashash 2004; Stewart et al. 2003; Castellaro et al. 2008; Lee and Trifunac 2010). The objectives of this study are: (i) to find soil classes with a similar response to an earthquake; (ii) to develop empirical amplification factors for 5 % damped response spectral acceleration in the period range T 0.04-4 s; (iii) to identify proxies for site classification (Vs(30), stratigraphy, fundamental frequency, etc.). We propose a soil classification, which is not based on a priori subdivision, but it relies on the natural aggregation of empirical amplification function of the sites, obtained by normalizing the spectra of recorded motions by a reference (rock) spectrum from a ground motion prediction equation (GMPE, developed by Bindi et al. 2011, based on the ITACA 1.0 database). The empirical amplification functions of sites are aggregated by means of cluster analysis.
2015
Istituto di Metodologie per l'Analisi Ambientale - IMAA
978-3-319-09047-4
Soil classification
Cluster analysis
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/297729
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 2
social impact