CEE Seminar: Elastic Seismic Demand of Soil-Foundation Structure Systems

Thursday, February 11, 2016 - 2:00 p.m. to Friday, February 12, 2016 - 2:55 p.m.
McDonnell Douglas Engineering Auditorium (MDEA)
Dimitris Pitilakis, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor, Department of Civil Engineering,
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

Abstract:

Soil-foundation-structure interaction modifies the foundation response of a system, and therefore its elastic seismic demand. Typically, in design codes, seismic demand is calculated by the intersection of the free-field demand spectrum with the fixed-base structure’s period. More elaborate approximations use the intersection of the free-field with the effective period of the coupled system. FEMA440 and NIST2012 go one step further and propose use of the "foundation input motion" instead of  the free-field motion, accounting for kinematic  interaction, whereas  inertial interaction is considered in a subsequent step. An alternative approximation will be presented based on appropriate modification factors of the free-field demand, to evaluate the actual demand of typical bridge piers considering SFSI.

Speaker Bio:

Pitilakis, assistant professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, received his master's degree from UC Berkeley, and a doctorate in earthquake engineering from Ecole Centrale in Paris, France. He is an expert in geotechnical earthquake engineering, with emphasis on soil-foundation-structure interaction, dynamics of foundations and performance-based geotechnical design. He is member of national and international scientific societies on earthquake engineering and reviewer of international scientific journals. He has developed scientific software for the simulation of the soil-foundation-structure interaction, with emphasis on nonlinear soil behavior, as well as software for estimating surface foundation bearing capacity and settlements. Pitilakis has significant experience in experimental soil-foundation-structure interaction in small-scale (shaking table and centrifuge) and full-scale (EuroProteas in Euroseistest http://euroseisdb.civil.auth.gr/sfsis).