Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes

Singapore is not free from seismic tremors resulting from earthquakes from nearby countries such as Indonesia. The paper by Professors N.T.K. Lam, T. Balendra, J.L. Wilson and S. Venkatesan[5] noted that the history of such tremors reported no major structural damage, and that it is not clear if the...

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Main Author: Ho, Peir Meng.
Other Authors: Cheung, Joseph Sai Hung
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52820
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-528202023-03-03T17:23:52Z Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes Ho, Peir Meng. Cheung, Joseph Sai Hung School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Structures and design Singapore is not free from seismic tremors resulting from earthquakes from nearby countries such as Indonesia. The paper by Professors N.T.K. Lam, T. Balendra, J.L. Wilson and S. Venkatesan[5] noted that the history of such tremors reported no major structural damage, and that it is not clear if the rare occurrence of a high magnitude earthquake at close proximities would cause such damage. The report analyses the negative effects resulting from these ground motions propagated from far-field earthquakes. These effects can be the structural damage from displacements and psychological effects on Singaporeans through the movement of buildings in the form of velocity and acceleration. The Monte Carlo Method is first explored as it forms the basis of the report through the use of random sampling to obtain results. Thereafter, the Domain Decomposition Method (DDM) proposed by Professors Lambros Katafygiotis, Sai Hung Cheung[11] is adopted to provide a more efficient and accurate way to handle the low probability occurrences. Results show that the earthquakes do not cause damage to the structures. However, higher floors will experience tremors and possible discomfort. Bachelor of Engineering 2013-05-27T08:49:15Z 2013-05-27T08:49:15Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52820 en Nanyang Technological University 55 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Structures and design
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Structures and design
Ho, Peir Meng.
Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
description Singapore is not free from seismic tremors resulting from earthquakes from nearby countries such as Indonesia. The paper by Professors N.T.K. Lam, T. Balendra, J.L. Wilson and S. Venkatesan[5] noted that the history of such tremors reported no major structural damage, and that it is not clear if the rare occurrence of a high magnitude earthquake at close proximities would cause such damage. The report analyses the negative effects resulting from these ground motions propagated from far-field earthquakes. These effects can be the structural damage from displacements and psychological effects on Singaporeans through the movement of buildings in the form of velocity and acceleration. The Monte Carlo Method is first explored as it forms the basis of the report through the use of random sampling to obtain results. Thereafter, the Domain Decomposition Method (DDM) proposed by Professors Lambros Katafygiotis, Sai Hung Cheung[11] is adopted to provide a more efficient and accurate way to handle the low probability occurrences. Results show that the earthquakes do not cause damage to the structures. However, higher floors will experience tremors and possible discomfort.
author2 Cheung, Joseph Sai Hung
author_facet Cheung, Joseph Sai Hung
Ho, Peir Meng.
format Final Year Project
author Ho, Peir Meng.
author_sort Ho, Peir Meng.
title Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
title_short Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
title_full Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
title_fullStr Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
title_full_unstemmed Reliability assessment of a building in Singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
title_sort reliability assessment of a building in singapore subjected to future far-field earthquakes
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52820
_version_ 1759856249805996032