Technical Papers
Jan 8, 2020

Reliability Assessment of Steel Lattice Tower Subjected to Random Wind Load by the Stochastic Finite-Element Method

Publication: ASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems, Part A: Civil Engineering
Volume 6, Issue 1

Abstract

This work concerns the stochastic finite-element method (SFEM) reliability analysis of a skeletal, very slender steel telecommunication tower calibrated with a full-scale pushover experiment carried out for the same tower. The basic SFEM implementation is completed with common application of the generalized stochastic perturbation technique (SPT) and of the response function method with polynomial basis of the statistically optimized order. Verification of the proposed stochastic technique is carried out for the first four probabilistic moments by a comparison with traditional crude Monte Carlo simulation and, alternatively, with semianalytical methodology using the same polynomial structural responses as SPT and the well-known probabilistic integral definitions. Characteristic mean wind speed is introduced here as the input random Gaussian variable, while the computational model is subjected to the wind profile linearly dependent upon this mean speed consistent with applicable European design codes. The SFEM analysis is carried out here including large deformations of the tower elements and dynamic excitations in each node induced by the given trial wind spectrum. Finally, second-order reliability method (SORM) analysis is provided on the basis of the resulting extreme normal forces in the tower legs and their counterparts taken directly from the full-scale pushover experiments. The obtained results show that reliability indices for these towers according to the engineering codes have larger magnitudes than these corresponding to the experimental statistics and SFEM.

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Acknowledgments

The first author would like to express his deepest gratitude to T-Mobile Poland S.A., whose financial support made full-scale experimental testing of the steel lattice towers project possible. He would also like to express his personal gratefulness to Mr. Michał Wójcicki.

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Go to ASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems, Part A: Civil Engineering
ASCE-ASME Journal of Risk and Uncertainty in Engineering Systems, Part A: Civil Engineering
Volume 6Issue 1March 2020

History

Received: Jul 13, 2018
Accepted: Jul 9, 2019
Published online: Jan 8, 2020
Published in print: Mar 1, 2020
Discussion open until: Jun 8, 2020

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Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Structural Mechanics, Chair of Structural Reliability, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Architecture and Environmental Engineering, Łódź Univ. of Technology, Al. Politechniki 6, Łódź 90-924, Poland. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6984-0193. Email: [email protected]
Klaudia Juszczyk [email protected]
Ph.D. Candidate, Dept. of Structural Mechanics, Chair of Structural Reliability, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Architecture and Environmental Engineering, Łódź Univ. of Technology, Al. Politechniki 6, Łódź 90-924, Poland. Email: [email protected]
Marcin Kamiński [email protected]
Professor, Dept. of Structural Mechanics, Head of Chair of Structural Reliability, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Architecture and Environmental Engineering, Łódź Univ. of Technology, Al. Politechniki 6, Łódź 90-924, Poland (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]

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