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Seismic response of a cross interchange metro station in soft soil: Physical and numerical modeling
Author(s) -
Wu Weifeng,
Ge Shiping,
Yuan Yong,
Ding Wenqi,
Anastasopoulos Ioannis
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
earthquake engineering and structural dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.218
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1096-9845
pISSN - 0098-8847
DOI - 10.1002/eqe.3446
Subject(s) - stiffness , earthquake shaking table , structural engineering , discontinuity (linguistics) , geotechnical engineering , finite element method , deformation (meteorology) , cross section (physics) , engineering , geology , mathematical analysis , oceanography , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics
The expansion of the Shanghai metro grid leads to a growing demand for underground stations. This paper studies the seismic performance of a typical cross interchange station in soft soil, combining shaking table testing and numerical modeling. The cross interchange station is composed of a three‐storey section, rigidly connected to a perpendicular two‐storey section, leading to an abrupt change of stiffness in the conjunction area. A series of 1 g shaking table tests are conducted, using synthetic model soil (a mixture of sand and sawdust) and granular concrete with galvanized steel wires to model the soil‐structure system. The experimental results are then used as a benchmark, allowing for validation of a 3D finite element (FE) model. The validated FE model is shown to compare adequately well with the shaking table tests and is subsequently used to indirectly extrapolate the results to prototype scale. The combined experimental and numerical study allows deriving insights on the dynamic response of cross interchange stations. A key conclusion is that the abrupt change of stiffness at the conjunction area leads to concentration of racking deformation at the bottom storey. This leads to significant stress concentrations on the station sidewall in the same area, revealing the increased seismic vulnerability due to the induced stiffness discontinuity. Seismic damage can be avoided by increasing the reinforcement ratio in such critical locations or by introducing deformable joints.