| نویسندگان | Mohsen Khatibinia,mohammad reza shayesteh bilondi,Yazdani Hessam |
| نشریه | Structural and Multidisciplinary Optimization |
| شماره صفحات | 2517-2531 |
| شماره سریال | 6 |
| شماره مجلد | 58 |
| ضریب تاثیر (IF) | 1.488 |
| نوع مقاله | Full Paper |
| تاریخ انتشار | 2018 |
| رتبه نشریه | ISI |
| نوع نشریه | الکترونیکی |
| کشور محل چاپ | بلژیک |
| نمایه نشریه | JCR،Scopus |
چکیده مقاله
Tuned mass dampers (TMDs) are a subclass of dynamic vibration absorbers that consist of a mass-spring-damper unit that is
attached to a structure to adjust its response to seismic and wind loads. The efficacy, performance and optimum design of a TMD
strongly depend not only on its mass, stiffness and damping as well as the input energy and the structure characteristics, but also
on the structural response parameter(s) that the TMD is intended to mitigate. In that respect, this study evaluates the suitability of
four objective functions for the optimum design of the TMD of an inelastic, steel moment-resisting frame (SMRF) under an
artificial, white-noise excitation. The objective functions include 1) the maximum roof lateral displacement, 2) the maximum
drift, 3) the root mean square of drifts and 4) the cumulative hysteretic energy of the SMRF. The results indicate that the SMRF
equipped with a TMD optimized using the cumulative hysteretic energy of the SMRF as the objective function exhibits the best
seismic response under the artificial earthquake. Further examining the response of the TMD-equipped SMRF under four historic
earthquake records shows that equipping a structure with a TMD optimized using an artificial earthquake will not warrant that the
structure will exhibit a better seismic performance in all measures compared with when no TMDis used. Put other way, while the
minimization of cumulative hysteretic energy could be the best objective function for a case subjected to an artificial earthquake,
under real earthquakes, none of the objective functions consistently results in a better seismic performance. This behavior is
attributed to detuning effects arising from major structural damages and significant period shifts that occur during strong
earthquakes.
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