UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY Department of Civil Engineering
Spring Semester, 2007 Instructor: AK Chopra
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Office Hours TuTh 2-3
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(CE 228 COURSE OUTLINE Woi-3
Petrie Decker GSE
Earthquake Analysis of Unsymmetric-Plan Buildings
Response history analysis
Response spectrum analysis; modal combination niles
Accidental torsion
Response Analysis for Multiple-Support Excitation
Construction of Damping Matrix; classical and non-classical damping
- Modal Analysis Procedures: Advanced Topics
‘Modal contribution factors and modal truncation
Static correction and mode acceleration superposition methods
Modal contributions in earthquake response
5. Earthquake Dynamics of Base Isolated Buildings
Reduction of Degrees of Freedom
Rayleigh-Ritz method
Foree-dependent Ritz vectors
Systems with Distributed Mass & Blasticity
Earthquake Analysis of Inelastic Buildings
Nonlinear Response History Analysis
Approximate Analysis Procedures
Modal Pushover Analysis,
FEMA-356 Procedure
Frequency Domain Method of Response Analysis
Fourier integral representation of response
Discrete Fourier transform (DFT) Methods
Possible Errors in Classical DFT Method
Improved DFT Method
Soil-Structure Interaction
Substructure analysis formulation
‘Dynamics of foundations
Frequency domain analysis procedure
Principal effects of interaction
Simplified response spectrim analysis
SDF superstructure
MDF superstructure
Building Code ProvisionsUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY Department of Civil Engineering
Spring Semester, 2007 Instructor: AK Chopra
CE 228: ADVANCED EARTHQUAKE ANALYSIS
Pre-requisite: CE 225 or consent of the instructor.
Text
Dynamics of Structures: Theory and Applications to Earthquake Engineering, by Anil K.
‘Chopra, 3rd Edition, 2007.
References on soil-structure interaction
Course Topics: Listed on a separate sheet,
Problems: Problems will generally be assigned every week and be due in a week. For
many problems it is expected that the MATLAB computer program will be used as an aid
to the problem solution, but the problem statement and results must be presented in a
complete and readily understood format (generally by hand on engineering computation
paper). Only significant, easily interpreted parts of the computer output should be
included with the problem solution,
Examinations: Homework and final examination.
Grading: Problem solutions 30%, Final examination: Closed Notes ~30%; Open
Notes ~ 40%,UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
‘Spring Semester, 2007
Page 1
Department of Civil &
Environmental Engineering
Instructor: AK. Chopra
(CE 228; ADVANCED EARTHQUAKE ANALYSIS
‘Course Schedule
Topic Reading _| Homework
116 1__| Introduction: Unsymmettic buildings 95
118 2__| RHAof Unsymmetric buildings 13.3
423 3__| RHAof unsymmetric-plan buildings & accidental torsion | 13.4
1.25 4 | RSAof unsymmetric plan buildings 137,139
430 5 __| Muitiple support excitation (MSE) 97>
24 6 __| Response Analysis for MSE. tesedaas
26 7 | Construction of Damping Matrix 10.3,10.4,10.
10.9,11.3-114
[28 8 \ | Modal Response Contributions 128-40
243 9.V | Modal Response Contributions 42.44
245 40_\ | Static Correction & mode acceleration methods 42.12-14
_ 7220 | 11 \| Earthquake Response of Elastic Buldings Chapter 18
* | 222 12. | Earthquake Dynamics of Base-Isolated Buildings 201-3
227 | 13 \ | Earthquake Dynamics of Basetsolated Buildings 20.4
+L 44 __| Reduction of DOFs: Rayleigh Ritz method A
368 18 _ | Force Dependent Ritz Vectors 14.45
38 16__| Systems with distributed mass & elasticity 16.1-5
313 | 17 __ | Modal Anaiysis of ‘distributed’ systems 165,168
Earthquake RHA and RSA of distributed’ systems 166-7
“to be reschedule
(CONTINUED ON BACK)