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Identification of modal parameters of non‐classically damped linear structures under multi‐component earthquake loading
Author(s) -
Mahmoudabadi M.,
GhaforyAshtiany M.,
Hosseini M.
Publication year - 2007
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.652
Subject(s) - modal , acceleration , parametric statistics , system identification , structural engineering , identification (biology) , peak ground acceleration , earthquake engineering , modal analysis , frequency domain , damping matrix , engineering , earthquake simulation , ground motion , mathematics , mathematical analysis , physics , finite element method , chemistry , statistics , software engineering , botany , classical mechanics , data modeling , polymer chemistry , biology , stiffness matrix
A method for parametric system identification of classically damped linear system in frequency domain is adopted and extended for non‐classically damped linear systems subjected up to six components of earthquake ground motions. This method is able to work in multi‐input/multi‐output (MIMO) case. The response of a two‐degree‐of‐freedom model with non‐classical damping, excited by one‐component earthquake ground motion, is simulated and used to verify the proposed system identification method in the single‐input/multi‐output case. Also, the records of a 10 storey real building during the Northridge earthquake is used to verify the proposed system identification method in the MIMO case. In this case, at first, a single‐input/multi‐output assumption is considered for the system and modal parameters are identified, then other components of earthquake ground motions are added, respectively, and the modal parameters are identified again. This procedure is repeated until all four components of earthquake ground motions which are measured at the base level of the building are included in the identification process. The results of identification of real building show that consideration of non‐classical damping and inclusion of the multi‐components effect of earthquake ground motions can improve the least‐squares match between the finite Fourier transforms of recorded and calculated acceleration responses. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.