TY - GEN
T1 - NUMERICAL SIMULATION WITH MACRO ELEMENTS OF OUT-OF-PLANE FAILURE IN ADOBE BUILDINGS UNDER SEISMIC LOADS
AU - García, Hernán
AU - Cárdenas-Haro, Xavier
AU - Tarque, Nicola
AU - Saguay, Eliana
AU - Pino, Julver
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, University of Cantabria - Building Technology R&D Group. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Ecuador is located on the eastern rim of the Pacific Ring of Fire, an area known for its seismic activity. One notable city in Ecuador is Cuenca, a historical center of UNESCO World Heritage Trust since 1999, due to its many historic buildings often featuring adobe walls. This paper aims to numerically simulate the out-of-plane failure of three adobe facades representing typical buildings in Cuenca - Ecuador using homogenized properties of adobe to estimate the seismic resistance of these walls. A micro-model approach using a damaged-based model with material properties from experimental tests on units and piers defines the homogenized properties of adobe. The methodology uses numerical analyses of Representative Volume Elements (RVEs) to characterize the complex behavior of adobe and define orthotropic homogenized properties. Further, with the homogenized approach, it is possible to numerically represent the walls and obtain their capacity curves using displacement-based pushover analyses. Finally, the damage is characterized as a function of inter-story drift. The numerical method has been proven accurate and efficient since it uses a mixed implicit-explicit integration scheme. Moreover, it can capture in-plane and out-ofplane tensile, compression, and shear failure modes. This methodology can be extended to characterize complete 3D adobe structures with relatively little complexity. Future research in this area could improve our understanding of the structural behaviour for entire adobe buildings and aid in conserving historic buildings by proposing retrofitting techniques that improve seismic strength.
AB - Ecuador is located on the eastern rim of the Pacific Ring of Fire, an area known for its seismic activity. One notable city in Ecuador is Cuenca, a historical center of UNESCO World Heritage Trust since 1999, due to its many historic buildings often featuring adobe walls. This paper aims to numerically simulate the out-of-plane failure of three adobe facades representing typical buildings in Cuenca - Ecuador using homogenized properties of adobe to estimate the seismic resistance of these walls. A micro-model approach using a damaged-based model with material properties from experimental tests on units and piers defines the homogenized properties of adobe. The methodology uses numerical analyses of Representative Volume Elements (RVEs) to characterize the complex behavior of adobe and define orthotropic homogenized properties. Further, with the homogenized approach, it is possible to numerically represent the walls and obtain their capacity curves using displacement-based pushover analyses. Finally, the damage is characterized as a function of inter-story drift. The numerical method has been proven accurate and efficient since it uses a mixed implicit-explicit integration scheme. Moreover, it can capture in-plane and out-ofplane tensile, compression, and shear failure modes. This methodology can be extended to characterize complete 3D adobe structures with relatively little complexity. Future research in this area could improve our understanding of the structural behaviour for entire adobe buildings and aid in conserving historic buildings by proposing retrofitting techniques that improve seismic strength.
KW - Adobe
KW - Homogenization
KW - Seismic resistance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85202626878
M3 - Contribución a la conferencia
AN - SCOPUS:85202626878
SN - 9788409589906
T3 - REHABEND
SP - 906
EP - 916
BT - REHABEND 2024 - Construction Pathology, Rehabilitation Technology and Heritage Management
A2 - Boffill, Yosbel
A2 - Lombillo, Ignacio
A2 - Blanco, Haydee
PB - University of Cantabria - Building Technology R&D Group
T2 - 10th Euro-American Congress on Construction Pathology, Rehabilitation Technology and Heritage Management, REHABEND 2024
Y2 - 7 May 2024 through 10 May 2024
ER -