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Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering Leaflet 2025

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Tahar Nouioua
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
95 views

Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering Leaflet 2025

Uploaded by

Tahar Nouioua
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GEOTECHNICAL EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING

A BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SERIES


https://www.geoengfdn.org/geotechnical-earthquake-engineering

Module 1: Earthquake Ground Motions & Seismic Site Response | January 27 - 30, 2025
Module 2: Liquefaction Engineering | February 24 - 27, 2025
Module 3: Seismic Performance of Slopes and Earth Structures | March 17 - 20, 2025
All days live (synchronous) from 12:30 to 16:00 Pacific Standard Time

Adda Athanasopoulos-Zekkos, PhD


University of California at Berkeley (Lead Instructor)
Jonathan D. Bray, PhD, PE, NAE
University of California at Berkeley (Lead Instructor)
Dimitrios Zekkos, PhD, PE
University of California at Berkeley (Lead Instructor)
Norman Abrahamson, PhD, NAE
University of California at Berkeley (Instructor)
Robert Kayen, PhD, PE
USGS [retired] and University of California at Berkeley
(Instructor)
Nicholas Sitar, PhD, P.ENG
University of California at Berkeley (Instructor)
Thaleia Travasarou, PhD, PE, GE
Fugro

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e s e r i e s
GEOTECHNICAL EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING
A BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SERIES

WHY THIS COURSE SERIES

Berkeley pioneered many of the advances in geotechnical earthquake engineering over the last six decades in large part under
the leadership of the late Professor H. Bolton Seed. The Berkeley Faculty continue to be leaders in developing concepts and
procedures instrumental to advancing the field of geotechnical earthquake engineering. Key elements of Berkeley's highly
rated Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering graduate course are being made available through this short course series. Similar
short courses have been offered previously around the world, and they have been well received by practicing engineers,
government regulators, and researchers.

This series of three short courses focuses on key concepts and recent advances in geotechnical earthquake engineering. In
the first short course module, engineering seismicity is reviewed with a focus on characterizing and selecting design ground
motions. Seismic site response procedures, including evaluating dynamic soil properties, are discussed. In the second short
course module, soil liquefaction is explored. Field and laboratory observations of the cyclic response of soils are discussed.
Simplified liquefaction triggering procedures are presented. Focus is placed on the effects of liquefaction through evaluation
of the residual shear strength of liquefied material and liquefaction-induced ground displacements and their effects on
structures. Mitigation techniques are presented. In the third short course module, seismic considerations related to seismic
slope stability, dams, levees, embankments and retaining systems are presented. Some example problems are solved to
illustrate the primary issues involved in evaluating geotechnical earthquake hazards. Question and answer sessions provide
opportunities to discuss selected concepts in greater detail. Each attendee will be given course notes that support the
lectures.

COURSE SERIES OBJECTIVES

Module 1 Course Objectives:


The objective of Module 1 is to present the State of the Art and Practice on seismic site response. Specific course objectives:
1. Considerations in conducting a DSHA and a PSHA
2. Considerations in ground motion selection and modification
3. Selection of dynamic soil properties and seismic site response analyses

Module 2 Course Objectives:


The objective of Module 2 is to present the State of the Art and Practice on soil liquefaction engineering. Specific course
objectives:
1. Understand the state concept of soil response in drained and undrained shear under monotonic and cyclic loading
2. Perform liquefaction triggering assessments using state-of-the-practice tools and procedures and interpret the results
3. Evaluate the effects of soil liquefaction on the ground and structures

Module 3 Course Objectives:


The objective of Module 3 is to present the State of the Art and Practice on the seismic performance of Slopes and Earth
Structures. Specific course objectives:
1. The seismic stability considerations for natural hillslopes and engineered earth slopes
2. The seismic stability considerations for the seismic analyses of dams, tailings dams, levees and landfills
3. The seismic performance of retaining structures, the calculation of seismic earth pressures calculation and seismic
displacement of walls
Module 1: Earthquake Ground Motions & Seismic Site Response
BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SCHEDULE
All Dates & Times are Pacific Time Zone (California Time)
DAY 1 (27 JAN 2025):
12:30 – 13:30 1. Engineering Seismicity (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- intro; plate tectonics, elastic rebound, earthquake magnitude; MMI; recurrence interval
- geology, source, path and site effects; wave propagation; source characterization
13:45 – 14:45 2. Earthquake Engineering (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- fundamentals of vibration; response spectra; Fourier spectra
- ground motion intensity measures (IMs; amplitude, frequency content, duration)
- ground motion models (GMMs); median and standard error of estimations
15:00 – 16:00 3. Deterministic Earthquake Ground Motions (J. Bray)
- deterministic seismic hazard assessment - DSHA
- fault rupture, near-fault forward-directivity pulse motions; long duration ground motion
- deterministic estimation of design rock motions – amplitude scaling of motions
DAY 2 (28 JAN 2025):
12:30 – 13:30 4. Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Assessment (N. Abrahamson)
- probabilistic seismic hazard assessment - PSHA; epistemic and aleatory uncertainty
- hazard curves and de-aggregation; uniform hazard and conditional mean spectra
13:45 – 14:45 5. Design Ground Motions (N. Abrahamson)
- ‘seed’ ground motion selection
- ground motion modification –spectrum compatible scaling of motions
- review of design suite of ground motions
15:00 – 16:00 6. Panel Discussion of Earthquake Ground Motions (J. Bray with N. Abrahamson &
A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
DAY 3 (29 JAN 2025):
12:30 – 13:30 7. Dynamic Soil Properties (D. Zekkos)
- field and laboratory tests; factors affecting material behavior
- cyclic loading and strain-dependent shear modulus and material damping curves
13:45 – 14:45 8. Soil Response under Shear (J. Bray)
- volume change (contractive or dilative response to shear)
- pore water pressure change during undrained loading
- dynamic shear strength
15:00 – 16:00 9. Seismic Site Effects (J. Bray)
- historical evidence, sources of ground motion amplification: site, basin, topographic effects
- simplified methods and analytical approaches (transfer function)
- layered systems; application of input motions (outcropping and within profile)
- seismic response of soft clay sites
DAY 4 (30JAN 2025):
12:30 – 13:30 10. Seismic Site Response Analysis (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- equivalent-linear analysis
- nonlinear analysis: total and effective stress
- equivalent-linear & nonlinear analyses comparison
13:45 – 15:00 11. Earthquake Ground Motions & Seismic Site Response Projects (T. Travasarou)
15:15 – 16:00 12. Panel Discussion of Site Response & Site Effects (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos with J. Bray,
T. Travasarou & D. Zekkos)

Live (synchronous) from 12:30 to 16:00 Pacific Standard


Time on January 27 - 30, 2025

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e f i r s t m o d u l e
Module 2: Liquefaction Engineering
BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SCHEDULE
All Dates & Times are Pacific Time Zone (California Time)
DAY 1 (24 FEB 2025):
12:30 – 13:30 1. State Concept (J. Bray)
- intro; state concept interpretation of sand response under monotonic shearing
13:45 – 14:45 2. Cyclic Response of Sand (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- cyclic response of sand, pore water generation, and soil liquefaction
15:00 – 16:00 3. Key Factors Affecting Liquefaction Triggering (J. Bray)
- susceptibility, key factors of liquefaction, laboratory tests, fines content, plasticity triggering

DAY 2 (25 FEB 2025):


12:30 – 13:30 4. Liquefaction Investigation Tools (D. Zekkos)
- in situ site investigation tools
- soil sampling and sampling disturbance
13:45 – 14:45 5. CPT-Based Liquefaction Procedures (J. Bray)
- simplified liquefaction triggering procedure: CSR, CRR, MSF, Kσ, Kα, & FSL
- CPT-based liquefaction triggering procedures
15:00 – 16:00 6. Panel Discussion of Soil Liquefaction & Triggering (D. Zekkos with A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos & J. Bray)

DAY3 (26 FEB 2025):


12:30 – 13:30 7. Other Liquefaction Triggering Procedures (R. Kayen)
- effects of geologic deposition
- other approaches to evaluating liquefaction triggering, SPT and Vs procedures
13:45 – 14:45 8. Liquefaction Evaluation of Silt and Gravel (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- silty sand, silts, clayey soil
- gravelly soil liquefaction
15:00 – 16:00 9. Liquefaction Ground Settlement, Lateral Spreading & Ejecta (J. Bray)
- liquefaction-induced ground deformation: settlement, lateral spreading, ground failure
indices (Ishihara 1985, LPI, LSN, LD-CR), and ejecta

DAY 4 (27 FEB 2025):


12:30 – 13:15 10. Residual Shear Strength of Liquefied Soil (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- flow slides & post-liquefaction stability check
- contractive, brittle soil response
- residual strength of liquefied soils
13:30 – 14:45 11. Liquefaction Effects on Structures (J. Bray)
- dynamic analyses
- simplified methods
- countermeasures against liquefaction and evaluation of mitigation
15:00 – 16:00 12. Panel Discussion of Evaluating Liquefaction Effects (R. Kayen with A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos & J. Bray)

Live (synchronous) from 12:30 to 16:00 Pacific Standard


Time on February 24 - 27, 2025

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e s e c o n d m o d u l e
Module 3: Seismic Performance of Slopes and Earth Structures
BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SCHEDULE
All Dates & Times are Pacific Time Zone (California Time)
DAY 1 (17 MAR 2025): SEISMIC SLOPE STABILITY & FAULT RUPTURE
12:30 - 13:15 1. Surface Fault Rupture Hazard (J. Bray)
13:30 - 14:30 2. Observations of Seismic Slope Stability of Slopes and Cliffs (N. Sitar)
- observations of the performance of rock slopes; cliffs; soil slopes
14:45 - 16:00 3.Seismic Slope Stability (J. Bray)
- pseudostatic stability analyses, seismic coefficient
- calculated seismic slope displacement
- simplified seismic slope stability analyses
DAY 2 (18 MAR 2025): SEISMIC PERFORMANCE OF DAMS
12:30 - 13:30 4. Observations and Dynamic Analyses of dams (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- observations of performance; preliminary assessment
- dynamic analyses of earth dams
13:45 - 14:45 5. Seismic Performance of Tailings Dams (J. Bray)
- observations of tailings storage facilities in earthquakes
- tailings material characterization
- evaluation of tailings dams
15:00 - 16:00 6. Panel Discussion on Seismic Performance of Slopes and Dams (A. Athanasopoulos-
Zekkos with J. Bray & N. Sitar)
DAY 3 (19 MAR 2025): SYSTEM RESPONSE, LEVEES, & WASTE LANDFILLS
12:30 - 13:30 7. System-Level Frameworks for Seismic Stability Assessments (D. Zekkos)
- importance of system-level analysis of hillslopes & methodology
- model integration & back-analyses of failed slopes
- landslide runout and impact on infrastructure
13:45 - 14:45 8. Observations and Dynamic Analyses of Levees (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- observations of performance; preliminary assessment
- dynamic analyses and seismic performance of levee systems
15:00 - 16:00 9. Seismic Performance of Waste Landfills (D. Zekkos)
- observations of seismic performance of landfills
- waste characterization; seismic evaluation of landfills
DAY 4 (20 MAR 2025): RETAINING SYSTEMS
12:30 - 13:30 10. Seismic Performance of Retaining Structures & Basement Walls (N. Sitar)
- observations of seismic performance
- retaining & basement walls, & mechanically stabilized walls
- experimental studies
- limit equilibrium design methods and their limitations
- dynamic analysis methods
13:45 – 15:00 11. Seismic Performance of Port Structures (A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos)
- observations of seismic performance of port piers and waterfronts
- deformation-based seismic design of retaining structures
- case study: Performance, characterization and modeling of port piers and waterfronts in the
2014 MW 6.1 Cephalonia earthquake
- seismic isolation strategies
15:15 – 16:00 12. Panel Discussion on Retaining Systems (D. Zekkos with A. Athanasopoulos-Zekkos & N. Sitar)

Live (synchronous) from 12:30 to 16:00 Pacific Standard


Time on March 17 - 20, 2025

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e t h i r d m o d u l e
GEOTECHNICAL EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING
A BERKELEY VIRTUAL SHORT COURSE SERIES

COURSE CONTENT DELIVERY METHOD


By registering to any of the courses you can get the course content in two ways:
1. Live (synchronous) from 12:30 to 16:00 Pacific Standard Time on January 27 - 30, 2025 (Module 1), February 24 - 27,
2025 (Module 2), and March 17 - 20, 2025 (Module 3).
2. Recorded lectures that will remain available for one month after the Live version of each course. This has been shown to
facilitate particularly participants in different time zones.
In addition, the courses include significant time for discussion and consultations in joint rooms and break-out rooms with the
instructors

DELIVERABLES
14 hrs of online lectures for each module – Available for real-time during the course delivery as well as non-real-time (i.e.,
asynchronous). Registered participants will be able to view the presentations for an entire month following the
completion of the course through a password-protected website.
All course slides
Recommended Technical literature for each specific technology/theme
Certificate of attendance by the Short Course Organizer
Certificate for 8 PDH hours (separate for each module)

COURSE COST
The cost of each four half-day course is $985. A limited number of spots are available for students (with a 35% price
reduction) after coordination with the short course leader.
A 10% reduction in cost is provided for 3-4 registrations and a 20% off for 5+ registrations (if paid at the same time during
course registration).
A 50% reduction in cost for the third module is provided to users that will register in all three modules (if paid at the same
time during course registration).
Refund Policy: Course registration can be fully refunded based on requests made until two weeks before each short course.
Specifically, until January 13, 2025 for the first module and the whole series, until February 10, 2025 for the second module,
and until March 3 2025 for the third module.

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e
s e r i e s

R e g i s t e r f o r t h e R e g i s t e r f o r t h e R e g i s t e r f o r t h e
f i r s t m o d u l e s e c o n d m o d u l e t h i r d m o d u l e

COURSE REGISTRATION
Registration deadline is January 20, 2025 for the first module and the whole series, February 17, 2025 for the second
module, and March 10, 2025 for the third module, unless the course becomes fully-booked earlier.

CONTACT
For questions related to this short course, please contact the short course leader Prof. Dimitrios Zekkos
([email protected])

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