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Hysteretic and Dilatant Behavior of Cohesionless Soils and Their Effects on Nonlinear Site Response: Field Data Observations and Modeling

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors present evidence that nonlinearity can be directly observed in acceleration time histories such as those recorded at the Wildlife Refuge and Kushiro Port downhole arrays from the 1987 Superstition Hills, California, and the 1993 Kushiro-Oki, Japan, earthquakes, respectively.
Abstract
In this study we present evidence that nonlinearity can be directly observed in acceleration time histories such as those recorded at the Wildlife Refuge and Kushiro Port downhole arrays from the 1987 Superstition Hills, California, and the 1993 Kushiro-Oki, Japan, earthquakes, respectively. These accelerograms and others compiled in this study present a characteristic waveform composed of intermittent high-frequency peaks riding on a low-frequency carrier. In addition, soil amplification of the surface records is strongly observed compared to their downhole counterpart; this is contrary to the expected amplification reduction produced by the nonlinear soil behavior. Laboratory studies show that the physical mechanism that produces such phenomena is the dilatant nature of cohesionless soils, which introduces the partial recovery of the shear strength under cyclic loads. This recovery translates into the ability to produce large deformations followed by large and spiky shear stresses. The spikes observed in the acceleration records are directly related to these periods of dilatancy and generation of pore pressure. These results are significant in strong-motion seismology because these spikes produce large if not the largest acceleration. They are site related, not source related. Using the in situ observations from the Kushiro Port downhole array, we have modeled the 1993 Kushiro-Oki earthquake. The synthetic accelerograms show the development of intermittent behavior—high frequency peaks—as observed in the recorded acceleration time histories. Shear modulus degradation due to pore pressure produces large strains in the soil with large amplification in the low-frequency band of the ground motion. We also modeled data from the 1987 Superstition Hills earthquake recorded at the Wildlife Refuge station. The results show the importance of better soil characterization when pore pressure may develop and the effects of dilatancy in the understanding of nonlinear site response.

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ModelHVSR-A Matlab ® tool to model horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio of ambient noise

TL;DR: The ModelHVSR program may be used during microzonation or similar studies, when one needs to either verify the existing geotechnical models by comparing theoretical HVSR to the observed one, or invert the observed ambient noise measurements to obtain the most-likely geotehnical models of the soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinematic Ground‐Motion Simulations on Rough Faults Including Effects of 3D Stochastic Velocity Perturbations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a methodology for generating kinematic earthquake ruptures for use in 3D ground-motion simulations over the 0-5-Hz frequency band, and demonstrate the approach using a suite of simulations for a hypothetical M w  6.45 strike-slip earthquake embedded in a generalized hard-rock velocity structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trampoline effect in extreme ground motion.

TL;DR: A simple model of a mass bouncing on a trampoline is presented to account for this asymmetry and the large vertical amplitude of the Iwate-Miyagi earthquake, which may prompt major progress in near-source shaking assessments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing Nonlinear Behavior of Soils in Seismic Site Response: Statistical Analysis on KiK‐net Strong‐Motion Data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of the nonlinear behavior of soils on site response, through various earthquake recordings from the KiKnet database in Japan, and proposed the percentage of modification (either amplification or deamplification) of the site response curve compared to the linear evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI

International Benchmark on Numerical Simulations for 1D, Nonlinear Site Response (PRENOLIN): Verification Phase Based on Canonical Cases

Julie Régnier, +53 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the epistemic uncertainties related only to wave propagation modeling using different nonlinear constitutive models are shown to increase with the strain level and to reach values around 0.2 (log(10) scale) for a peak ground acceleration of 5''m/s^2 at the base of the soil column, which may be reduced by almost 50% when the various constitutive model used the same shear strength and damping implementation.
References
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Book

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Keiiti Aki, +1 more
TL;DR: This work has here attempted to give a unified treatment of those methods of seismology that are currently used in interpreting actual data and develops the theory of seismic-wave propagation in realistic Earth models.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Shear modulus and damping in soils: design equations and curves

TL;DR: In this paper, an equation and graph for the determination of shear modulus and damping of soils for use in design problems involving repeated loading or vibration of soils, are presented.
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