Explanation for the numerous upper floor collapses during the 1985 Mexico city earthquake |
| |
Authors: | Roberto Villa Verde |
| |
Abstract: | Presented herein are the results of a study carried out to investigate the prevalent factors that contributed to the collapse of the upper floors of a large number of buildings during the earthquake of September 19, 1985, in Mexico City. The study involves the review of the available data from such collapses, the identification of common characteristics among the buildings that suffered such type of collapse, the design of a typical 10-storey reinforced concrete frame structure according to the 1976 Mexico City building code, and the non-linear analysis of one of its frames under one of the accelerograms from the earthquake. It is found that in many cases the upper floor collapses might have occurred because the large accelerations and long duration of the earthquake induced in the failed buildings the formation of plastic hinges at their upper columns, and because these plastic hinges in turn induced the lateral instability of the affected storeys and the ones above them. It is also found that in some structures this failure mechanism can occur after plastic hinges are formed in most of their beams, and that it may result from the consequent elongation of their natural periods, their response in a second or third mode and in resonance with the ground motion that excites them, and their vibration in a mode not considered to be the predominant one in their design. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|