Frontiers in Built Environment (Apr 2018)
Effects of Hysteresis and Negative Stiffness on Seismic Response Reduction: A Case Study Based on the 1999 Athens, Greece Earthquake
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to investigate the effects of hysteresis and negative stiffness on seismic response reduction. For this reason, the novel Hysteretic Nonlinear Energy Sink (HNES) is used as a passive vibration control device for seismic response mitigation. So far, HNES performance has been tested in shock mitigation and has proved to exhibit exceptional robustness and energy dissipation merits. Apart from a small mass and a nonlinear elastic spring of the Duffing oscillator (type-I NES), HNES is also comprised of a purely hysteretic and a linear elastic spring of potentially negative stiffness, connected in parallel. The Bouc-Wen model is used to describe the force produced by both the purely hysteretic and linear elastic springs. In this investigation, the response reduction of a primary two-degree-of-freedom model of a shear building is studied against a strong ground motion which is based on the 1999 Athens, Greece earthquake. The response reduction is achieved by using three optimized passive vibration control devices, i.e., an HNES, a type-I NES, and a traditional Tuned Mass Damper (TMD). The optimum configuration of each device is determined using Differential Evolution, a robust metaheuristic algorithm, using the maximum absolute displacement of the top floor as the objective function. Example problems are presented in order to assert that HNES behavior is vastly superior over both NES and TMD. Furthermore, the key advantage of HNES is its inherent insensitivity to drastic changes in the structural characteristics. In particular, it maintains a significant level of performance even if the column stiffness is reduced by half.
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