Optimal design of a new seismic passive protection device made in aluminium and steel

In recent years many techniques for the seismic control of structures have been developed. Among these, the metallic hysteretic devices are able to dissipate a great amount of the energy entering the building during a seismic event, thanks to a stable behavior under cyclic loads that produces a wide hysteresis loop. Steel shear panels are examples of elasto-plastic elements, which dissipate energy under a shear behavior. Generally such dampers are known to possess large energydissipation capacity relative to their size; they are cost-effective and are able to protect nonstructural elements too. Moreover, the shear panels may be easily installed and substituted in the structure. As disadvantage, this kind of energy dissipating devices can dissipate energy only after they sustain inelastic excursions. As a consequence they are ineffective for vibrations that produce interstory drifts smaller than the yielding drift of the device. To overcome this constraint, Rai and Wallace and Foti and Diaferio proposed shear panels made in aluminium alloys. In fact, these alloys are very ductile with a yielding limit lower than ordinary steel. Numerical and experimental researches have been developed on aluminium shear links. Foti and Nobile performed characterization and shaking-table tests on some aluminium shear panels showing instability phenomena and problems of the connections of the devices to the structure. The aim of the present note is to find out the optimum geometrical configuration of an aluminium-steel shear panel in order to dissipate a large amount of the seismic energy.