Pushover Analysis
Pushover Analysis
3 PERFORMANCE POINT
It is the point where the capacity spectrum intersects the appropriate demand spectrum. To
have the desired performance in the structure it should be designed by considering these
points of forces.
5 PLASTIC HINGE
Location of inelastic action of the structural member is called as plastic hinge.
Plasticity may be associated with force-displacement behaviors (axial and shear) or moment-
rotation (torsion and bending). Hinges may be assigned (uncoupled) to any of the six DOF.
Post-yield behavior is described by the general backbone relationship shown to the right. The
modeling of strength loss is discouraged, to mitigate load redistribution (which may lead to
progressive collapse) and to ensure numerical convergence.
CSI Software automatically limits negative slope to 10% of elastic stiffness, though overwrite
options are available. For informational purposes, additional limit states (IO, LS, CP) may be
specified which are reported in analysis, but do not affect results. Unloading from the point of
plastic deformation follows the slope of initial stiffness.
Both P-M2-M3 hinges and fiber hinges are available to capture coupled axial and biaxial-
bending behavior. The P-M2-M3 hinge is best suited for nonlinear static pushover, whereas
the fiber hinge is best for hysteretic dynamics.
Note: It is important that frame and wall objects be designed, e.g. reinforcement should be
defined for concrete frames and walls, prior to running a nonlinear analysis utilizing hinges.
Three kinds of hinge properties are available in ETABS:
6.2 Auto Hinge Properties.
Auto hinge properties are defined by the program. The program cannot fully define the auto
properties until the section to which they apply has been identified. Thus, the auto property is
assigned to a frame or wall object, and the resulting hinge property can then be reviewed.
The main reason for the differentiation between defined properties (in this context, defined
means both auto and user-defined) and generated properties is that typically the hinge
properties are section dependent. Thus, it is necessary to define a different set of hinge
properties for each frame or wall section type in the model. This could potentially mean that
you would need to define a very large number of hinge properties. To simplify this process,
the concept of generated properties is used in ETABS. When generated properties are used,
the program combines its built-in criteria with the defined section properties for each object
to generate the final hinge properties. The net effect of this is that you do significantly less
work defining the hinge properties because you do not need to define every hinge.
The user assigns auto hinge properties and user-defined hinge properties to a frame or wall
object. The program then automatically creates a new generated hinge property for every
assigned hinge.
1. Click the Define menu > Section Properties > Frame/Wall Nonlinear
Hinge command to access the Define Frame/Wall Hinge Properties form.
2. Choose or input parameters for the following areas.
Add New Property button. Click this button and the Default for Added
Hinges form will display. Use that form to specify the type of default hinge
definitions to be used as the basis of adding a new hinge definition. After
selecting Steel, Concrete or User Defined, the Hinge Property Data form will
display. Use that form to complete the definition of a new hinge property.
1. Highlight a hinge property name in the Defined Hinge Props list box.
Note that generated properties cannot be copied.
2. Click the Add Copy of Property button to display the Hinge Property
Data form pre-loaded with the definition options of the selected hinge
property.
3. Use that form to add a new definition based on the selected definition.
Property button will be grayed out and inactive. A hinge property cannot be deleted until it
has been removed from all objects. Remove a hinge by selecting the object(s) and deleting
the assignment.
3.
Show Hinge Details check box. When this check box is checked, the Defined
Hinge Props area expands to a spreadsheet type area that has the following
columns:
o Type. The type of hinge (e.g., Axial P, Shear V, Moment M and so on)
is displayed in this column.
Note: Make changes to any of these items by first highlighting the row of data to be
changed. Then click the Modify/Show Property button to display the Hinge Property
Data form and make the necessary adjustments. Note that generated properties cannot be
modified.
4.
Show Generated Props check box. By default, hinge properties that the
program automatically generates at each hinge location are not listed in
the Defined Hinge Prop area of the Define Frame/Wall Hinge
Properties form. Check the Show Generated Props check box, and ETABS
will display those properties in the {Defined, all} Hinge Props area along with
any Auto hinge properties that have been assigned to the model.
Convert Auto to User Prop button. This button appears on the form when an
Auto hinge property has been assigned to a frame or wall object(s) in the
model and the Show Generated Props check box is checked. When this button
is clicked, the program converts the Auto property hinge to a user-defined
hinge property. After an Auto hinge property, has been converted to a user-
defined property, the resulting hinge property definition can be modified by
clicking on it and then clicking the Modify/Show Property button to display
the Hinge Property Data form.
7 CAPACITY
It is defined as the expected ultimate strength (in flexure, shear and axilla loading) of the
structural components excluding the reduction factors commonly used in the design of
concrete members. The capacity generally refers to the strength at the yield point of the
element or structure’s capacity curve. For deformation controlled component’s, capacity
beyond the elastic limit generally includes the effect of strain hardening.
8 DEMAND
Demand is represented by an estimation of the displacement or deformation that the structure
is expected to undergo. This is in contrast to conventional, linear elastic analysis procedures
in which demand is represented by prescribed lateral forces applied to the structure.
2. Static analysis
3. Design
4. Pushover analysis
2. Defining properties and acceptance criteria for the pushover hinges the program includes
several built-in default hinge properties that are based on average values from ATC 40 for
concrete members and average values from FEMA 273 for steel members these built-in
properties can be useful for preliminary analysis but user defined properties are
recommended for final analysis.
3. Locate the pushover Hinges on the model by selecting one or more frame members and
assigning them one or more hinge properties and its locations.
4. Defining the pushover analysis load cases inner tabs more than one pushover load can be
run in the same analysis also a pushover load case can start from the file and conditions of
another pushover Loads that was previously run in the same analysis typically a gravity load
pushover is force control and lateral pushover displacement controlled.
5. Run the basic static analysis and if desired dynamic analysis then run the static nonlinear
pushover analysis.
10 PUSHOVER ANALYSIS:
An overview of the procedure for pushover analysis is given as follows:
References: