Archive/Concrete Damaged Plasticity-Based Analysis of Damage and Stiffness Degradation in Cooling Tower Shells Under Spatially Variable Seismic Loading
Concrete Damaged Plasticity-Based Analysis of Damage and Stiffness Degradation in Cooling Tower Shells Under Spatially Variable Seismic Loading
Paweł Boroń, Joanna Maria Dulińska
20 de mayo de 2026
en

Abstract

This study investigates the seismic response of a natural draft reinforced concrete cooling tower subjected to spatially varying earthquake ground motion, with particular emphasis on nonlinear material behavior, damage evolution, and stiffness degradation. The analysis is based on a constitutive description of concrete using the Concrete Damaged Plasticity (CDP) model, enabling the representation of tensile cracking, compressive crushing, and irreversible plastic deformation under cyclic dynamic loading. Two structural configurations of the lower shell region–a locally thickened shell and a bottom ring-stiffened solution–are examined from the perspective of material performance and damage control. Spatially varying seismic excitation is defined using a real earthquake record from the Carpathian Flysch region, with wave passage and incoherence effects calibrated from in-situ measurements. Nonlinear time-history analyses, performed to capture the coupling between material degradation mechanisms and global structural response, demonstrate that the seismic performance of the cooling tower is controlled primarily by local material behavior rather than global dynamic characteristics. Spatial variability of ground motion activates complex deformation modes, leading to pronounced tensile damage, plastic strain accumulation, and stiffness degradation in the lower shell region. The structural variant with thickened lower zone of the shell exhibits extensive material deterioration, including the formation of a continuous plastic zone and irreversible deformation associated with damage localization. In contrast, the ring-stiffened configuration effectively limits damage propagation, reduces plastic strain by up to 80%, and maintains predominantly elastic material response with significantly lower stiffness degradation. The bottom ring stiffener is shown to provide superior performance by mitigating damage evolution of the concrete structure under spatially non-uniform seismic loading. The study highlights the critical role of advanced constitutive material modeling in capturing the realistic seismic behavior of reinforced concrete shell structures and demonstrates that structural strengthening strategies should be evaluated based on their ability to control material degradation mechanisms.

IPC Classification

C07

Keywords

concretedamagedplasticity-basedanalysisdamagestiffnessdegradationcoolingtowershellsspatiallyvariableseismicloadingmaterialsinvestigatesresponsenaturaldraftreinforcedsubjectedvaryingearthquakeground
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