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After two major earthquakes centred in Kahramanmara & scedil; on February 6, 2023, in T & uuml;rkiye, there was significant destruction of the building stock. More than fifty thousand people lost their lives, and many people lost their comfort of life even though they were rescued from the wreckage. Researchers have emphasized that this catastrophic consequence is generally caused by design and production errors and low material quality in almost all building types, especially reinforced concrete, steel, masonry, and prefabricated structures. Within the scope of this study, damage patterns and the design flaws of reinforced concrete structures in Malatya, which is one of the provinces affected by the Kahramanmara & scedil; earthquakes, were examined via a field study. During the fieldwork, it was determined that inadequate longitudinal reinforcement and stirrup reinforcement, in-depth reinforcement, and concrete quality, design errors in the column-beam junction area, ignoring the structure-soil interactions, short columns, torsional irregularity, and soft stories were the main factors that led reinforced concrete buildings to be heavily damaged or collapse. After the root causes of damage to reinforced concrete structures were examined, the measures and applications that should be taken to ensure that reinforced concrete structures can maintain their services in the event of earthquakes that are likely to occur in the future was discussed.

期刊论文 2025-02-01 DOI: 10.1007/s11069-024-06925-2 ISSN: 0921-030X

One effective technique for mitigating the earthquake-induced liquefaction potential is the installation of stone columns. The permeability coefficients of stone columns are high enough to cause a high seepage velocity or expedited drainage. Under such conditions, the fluid flow law in porous media is not linear. Nevertheless, this nonlinear behavior in stone columns has not been evaluated in dynamic numerical analyses. This study proposes a dynamic finite element method that integrates nonlinear fluid flow law to evaluate the response of liquefiable ground improved by stone columns during seismic events. The impact of non-Darcy flow on the excess pore pressure and stress path compared to conventional Darcy law has been investigated numerically in stone columns. Furthermore, the effects of different permeability coefficients and stone column depths have been studied under near and far field strong ground motions. The results indicate that the non-Darcy flow increases the excess pore water pressure as high as 100% in comparison to the Darcy flow.

期刊论文 2024-08-01 DOI: 10.1007/s10706-024-02785-6 ISSN: 0960-3182

Shallow sediments can respond non-linearly to large dynamic strains and undergo a subsequent healing phase as the material gradually recovers following the passing of seismic waves. This study focuses on the physical changes in the subsurface caused by the shaking from a buried chemical explosion detonated in a borehole in Nevada, USA, as a part of the Source Physics Experiment Phase II. The explosion damaged the shallow subsurface and modified the frequency content recorded by 491 geophones and 2240 Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) channels within 2.5 km from surface ground zero. We observe a gradual shift of resonance frequencies in the 10-25 Hz frequency band in the hours following the explosion and develop a method to characterize the related logarithm-type healing process of the shallow (i.e., upper similar to 25 m) subsurface. We find that stronger levels of ground motion increase the relative degree of damage and duration of the subsurface healing; with the spall region exhibiting the largest degree of damage and longest healing recovery time. We observe coherent spatial patterns of damage with the region located to the southeast of the explosion exhibiting more damage than the southwest region. This study demonstrates that both DAS and co-located geophones capture similar temporal changes associated with the physical processes occurring in the subsurface, with the high-density sampling of DAS measurements enabling a new capability to monitor the fine-scale changes of the Earth's shallow subsurface following the detonation of a buried explosion. Strong seismic waves can damage the soft sediments that compose the shallow layers of the ground. A healing phase of the sediments generally follows the passing of the seismic waves as the medium gradually recovers with time. We study the spatio-temporal response of the subsurface in the vicinity of a large buried chemical explosion that was detonated in a borehole at the Nevada National Security Site, USA. The explosion, which was part of the Source Physics Experiment Phase II, was well instrumented along a surface fiber-optic cable with Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) and hundreds of geophones. We find that the explosion, which generated a spallation of the shallow Earth, primarily damaged the upper similar to 25 m of the subsurface. We characterize the healing of the sediments and find a correlation between the duration of the healing phase and the level of maximum shaking. The high density of sensors also allows us to study spatial variations in the response of the shallow subsurface. This study demonstrates that both DAS and geophone continuous data similarly capture the spatio-temporal variations of the Earth's physical properties following strong ground motions, with DAS enabling meter-scale measurements of the subsurface changes. Shallow subsurface damage and subsequent healing caused by a buried chemical explosion are constrained with DAS and geophone data The explosion caused a relative drop of the average S-wave velocity in the Earth's shallow layers of a few percents The logarithm-type healing process of the subsurface exhibit a longer duration within the spall region

期刊论文 2024-07-01 DOI: 10.1029/2023JB028416 ISSN: 2169-9313
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