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  <title><![CDATA[Phd Defense by Pablo Vega-Bahar]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><strong>School of Civil and Environmental Engineering</strong></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Ph.D. Thesis Defense Announcement</strong></p>

<p>Seismic Assessment and Dynamic Testing of Reinforced Concrete Frames Retrofitted with a Shape-Memory Alloy Brace System</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>By</strong></p>

<p>Pablo Vega-Behar</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Advisor:</strong></p>

<p>Dr. Reginald DesRoches (CEE) &amp; Dr. Roberto T. Leon (Virginia Tech)</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Committee Members:</strong></p>

<p>Dr. C.S. Walter Yang (CEE), Dr. David W. Scott (CEE), Dr. Richard W. Neu (ME)</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Date &amp; Time:</strong>Tuesday, July 9, 8:00am</p>

<p><strong>Location:</strong> Mason 2119</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Region-level seismic risk assessments have estimated the economic and life-safety impact of a large<br />
magnitude earthquake in the US New Madrid Seismic Zone at over $300 billion dollars and close to<br />
100,000 casualties, respectively. Seismic rehabilitation of structures has been a research priority for the<br />
last 2 decades to address safety of older structures. Non-ductile reinforced concrete (RC) frame structures<br />
have been a focus of much of this research due to their prevalence in the Central and Eastern US.<br />
However, prior research and existing solutions have several limitations. Regarding experimental research,<br />
most prior tests fail to capture the interaction of multiple components in a full structural system, or the<br />
studies involve reduced scales that do not appropriately replicate critical resistance mechanisms. For<br />
existing retrofit solutions, these have been effective in increasing life-safety for occupants but they typically<br />
sustain levels of damage that render them irreparable, which fails to address economic impacts. In<br />
addition, their construction is typically invasive, which may disrupt building occupants and operations.<br />
Thus, this research attempts to address these limitations by proposing a retrofit solution that is reusable,<br />
self-centering, and has a minimally invasive construction and installation procedure. The retrofit was tested<br />
dynamically in a full-scale system to overcome the limitations of prior, reduced-scale experimental testing<br />
research. Experimental and analytical results showed that the SMA bracing device effectively reduced<br />
inter-story drifts compared to a non-retrofitted frame. The retrofitted test structure showed minimal damage<br />
at demand levels that would have collapsed the original structure. Numerical results indicate that the SMA<br />
brace retrofit significantly reduces the probability of exceeding all damage states at given spectral<br />
accelerations. Most notably, the probability of exceeding the complete damage state was reduced from<br />
50% (as-built) to less than 2% (SMA brace retrofit) at a 0.78g spectral acceleration. The design and<br />
assembly steps for experimental testing suggest that this retrofit can be beneficial in practical applications<br />
where disruptions to building occupants are a concern. The retrofit design procedure, its behavior and response to all test loads, a qualitative evaluation of the design method, seismic risk performance<br />
assessment, and implications on future research are discussed</p>
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