Title: 
            Friction-Damped Concrete Shearwalls
        
        
            Author(s): 
            Avtar S. Pall and Cedric Marsh
        
        
            
                Publication: 
                Journal Proceedings
            
            
                Volume: 
                78
            
            
                Issue: 
                3
            
            
                Appears on pages(s): 
                187-193
            
            
                Keywords: 
                cyclic loads; damping; ductility; dynamic structural analysis; dynamic
tests; earthquake resistant structures; friction; high-rise buildings; hysteresis;
loads (forces); optimization; reinforced concrete;
            
            
                DOI: 
                10.14359/6916
            
        
        
            Date: 
            5/1/1981
        
        
            Abstract:
            A new concept of aseismic design for cast-in-place concrete shearwalls is proposed. By sectionalizing the solid shearwalls vertically and coupling them together with friction joints, their earthquake resistance and damage control potential can be considerably enhanced. During severe earthquake excitations the joints slip and a large portion of vibrational energy is dissipated in friction alone with little dependence on ductility of the structural components. Furthermore, the slipping of joints softens the otherwise rigid wall which, in case of tall structures, is an added advantage as it reduces the in vita tion to seismic accelerations. Nonlinear time-history dynamic analysis has been used to study and to demonstrate how a shearwall can be "tuned" to obtain optimum seismic response. The proposed joints act, in effect, both as safety valves and structural dampers.