Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures

Design frameworks worldwide consider natural or man-induced hazards to be statistically uncorrelated. This view has dominated engineering practice for decades; however, evidence suggests that such events could, in fact, coincide, thereby increasing the demand for infrastructure resilience. The conti...

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Main Author: P. Martinez-Vazquez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Cogent Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311916.2024.2423849
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author P. Martinez-Vazquez
author_facet P. Martinez-Vazquez
author_sort P. Martinez-Vazquez
collection DOAJ
description Design frameworks worldwide consider natural or man-induced hazards to be statistically uncorrelated. This view has dominated engineering practice for decades; however, evidence suggests that such events could, in fact, coincide, thereby increasing the demand for infrastructure resilience. The continuous flow of wind raises the question of whether the forces it generates should be accounted for during earthquake-resistant design. Historically, forces of different natures have been seen to interact, causing damage that current design frameworks cannot prevent. Therefore, we must reflect on current engineering practices and make the necessary changes to minimise risk. This investigation addresses this knowledge gap by exploring the potential effects of earthquakes, wind, and fire acting on buildings. It estimates strength reduction factors that could potentially integrate more robust performance-based design initiatives. This study considers a range of historical earthquake records, wind speeds, and temperature gradients affecting steel and concrete structures to provide insight into the degree of deterioration that combined hazards could impose on infrastructure, which could eventually translate into a change in their initial ductility or, in extreme situations, total collapse.
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spelling doaj-art-eddb3300bce041e1a7fd5111e6b936dc2024-11-12T09:08:47ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Engineering2331-19162024-12-0111110.1080/23311916.2024.2423849Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structuresP. Martinez-Vazquez0Department of Civil Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UKDesign frameworks worldwide consider natural or man-induced hazards to be statistically uncorrelated. This view has dominated engineering practice for decades; however, evidence suggests that such events could, in fact, coincide, thereby increasing the demand for infrastructure resilience. The continuous flow of wind raises the question of whether the forces it generates should be accounted for during earthquake-resistant design. Historically, forces of different natures have been seen to interact, causing damage that current design frameworks cannot prevent. Therefore, we must reflect on current engineering practices and make the necessary changes to minimise risk. This investigation addresses this knowledge gap by exploring the potential effects of earthquakes, wind, and fire acting on buildings. It estimates strength reduction factors that could potentially integrate more robust performance-based design initiatives. This study considers a range of historical earthquake records, wind speeds, and temperature gradients affecting steel and concrete structures to provide insight into the degree of deterioration that combined hazards could impose on infrastructure, which could eventually translate into a change in their initial ductility or, in extreme situations, total collapse.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311916.2024.2423849Multi-hazard resilient designearthquakewindfireinelastic performancestrength reduction factors
spellingShingle P. Martinez-Vazquez
Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
Cogent Engineering
Multi-hazard resilient design
earthquake
wind
fire
inelastic performance
strength reduction factors
title Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
title_full Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
title_fullStr Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
title_full_unstemmed Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
title_short Earthquake, wind, and fire: joint effects on structures
title_sort earthquake wind and fire joint effects on structures
topic Multi-hazard resilient design
earthquake
wind
fire
inelastic performance
strength reduction factors
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311916.2024.2423849
work_keys_str_mv AT pmartinezvazquez earthquakewindandfirejointeffectsonstructures