UNIT 5 CEHT FN
UNIT 5 CEHT FN
UNIT 5 CEHT FN
INTRODUCTION
EARTHQUAKE:
TYPES OF EARTHQUAKES:
There are many different types of earthquakes: Tectonic, Volcanic,
and Explosion. The type of earthquake depends on the region where it
occurs andthe geological make-up of that region.
Causes:
Effects of an earthquake:
Measuring an earthquake:
Masonry RC
Non-engineered Construction in Bangladesh:
In Bangladesh the majority percentage of people live in rural areas.
Most of them are very poor.
Due to financial problem most of the family built their dwelling
house using low cost localmaterials and technique.
For low quality building materials and low quality construction
technique, the housesare not strong enough to resist the natural
hazards.
Construction and distribution pattern of housing in Bangladesh
develops according to the need of the inhabitants under asset of
geographic control and changes with the evolution of the human
needs at the different stages of socio-economic and cultural
development.
The houses inrural area are generally made of indigenous
building materials like bamboo, straw, grass, jute sticks, leaves, mud
Timber House:
Relatively smaller groups of populations in Cox’s Bazar, Teknaf, and
Moheskhali are using the house forms having walls constructed with timber.
Generally, the houses are built onraised wooden platform to get safety from snakes
and other animals. The lower parts of the houses are also used forvarious purposes like
storage, keeping domestic animals, different family activities etc. Another motivation
behind this wooden construction is
the availability of wood in the forest areas. Some of these buildings
are al finished with different wood curving for aesthetics purposes.
With these distinctive features, the houses arerepresenting the special
identity of those regions.
Masonry House:
In Bangladesh, masonry houses are seen in almost every rural area,
but insmall quantity. This type of building is built with bricks. Here
suitable foundation is provided with brick flat soiling. Thecreation of
tensile and shearing stresses in walls is primary cause of different
types of damages tosuch buildings.
DAMAGES:
LANDSLIDES: Rocks and earth from mountains and hills beginrolling downhill.
The greatest landslide concentration occurs in weak, poorly cemented, geologically young rock and
soil. As a result of their weakness, the vibrations of earthquakes rapidly erode these materials.
Landslides include shallow rock falls and rockslides, as well as disrupted, chaotic jumbles of soil,
rock, and vegetal debris that topple downhill. The greatest danger emanating from landslides includes
their ability to damage and destroy homes, block roads and streams, disrupt pipes, water mains,
sewers and power lines, damage oil and gas production facilities, andgenerate massive dust clouds
Tsunamis are the result of a sudden vertical offset in the ocean floor, which can indeed be triggered by
intense earthquakes.
Essentially, tsunamis are creatures of the open ocean, or trains of great waves
that can travel long distances across the sea. As a tsunami approaches the shore, the water depth
decreases, the front of the wave slows down, and thewave grows dramatically in height and surges
unexpectedly onto the land. Truthfully, tsunamis can carry a considerable amount of energy because
theypossess strong currents that cause massive erosion of the coastline, as well asbulldoze towns and
drown unsuspecting, curious people. When earthquakes occur, these dark "walls" of water suddenly
flood coastal areas like Californiaand Japan without warning. For example, in 1896, an earthquake
off of the coast of Japan generated an enormous tsunami with waves up to 100 feet high. This "wall of
water" killed 22,000 people and destroyed entire villages.
MUDSLIDES: slip down mountain slopes, sweep main valley floors, and bury habitations
below.
Mudslides often occur a few hours after the extraordinarily widespread slope mass movements
(landslides) take place. Moreover, they are induced by the collapse of several temporary natural
dams built by the large and high-density landslides.
Several people lose their lives during these catastrophic events. For example, in the 1994, Northridge
California earthquake, there were a significant amount of landslides that induced mudslide activity,
and many people died as a result.
During an earthquake with intense seismic activity, loose, moist soil is shaken, and the individual
grains separate, turning the earth into a soft, fluid slurry that is capable of swallowing entire buildings.
As a result of the seismic vibrations, the soil loses strength and behaves as a viscous or thick fluid,
rather than as a solid mass. Essentially, in the case of liquefaction, the ground behaves much like
quick sand, and can prove to be very dangerous and sometimes deadly. For example, liquefaction
occurred in the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco, California, and also in the 1995 earthquake in
Kobe, Japan.
Kobe, Japan (January 17th, 1995): The number of buildings destroyed by the earthquake exceeded
100,000, or approximately one in five buildings in the strongly shaken area. An additional 80,000
buildings were badly damaged. The large numbers of damaged traditional- style Japanese residences
and small, traditional commercial buildings of three stories or less account for a great deal of the
damage. In sections where these buildings
Ultimately, in the event of an earthquake, structural damage depends on FIVE very
important components.
The strength of the earthquake waves that reach thesurface
Geologic foundation
EMOTIONAL DAMAGE:
DEATHS people become trapped under the rubble and debristhat is generated from
the earthquake. Falling structures and flying glass and other objects strike
unsuspecting people.
Steel may be required in many forms, like bolts, rods, angles, channels,expanded
metal and welded wire fabric. Wood and bamboo are the most Common materials
for damage repair work are cement and steel. In some situations non-shrink cement or
an admixture like aluminium powder in ordinary portland cement is admissible rounds,
sleepers, planks, etc.
Besides the above, special materials and techniques are available for best
results in the repair and strengthening operations. A quality assurance is needed
toguarantee sound results.
Shotcrete :
Shotcrete is a method of applying a combination of sand and portland cement
(concrete) which is mixed pneumatically and conveyed in dry state to the nozzle
of a pressure gun. Here water is mixed and hydration takes place justprior to
expulsion. The material bonds well to properly prepared surface of masonry and
steel. In application to curved or irregular surfaces, its high strength after
application and good physical characteristics, make for an ideal means to achieve
added structuralcapability in walls and other elements. There are some
restrictions of clearance, thickness,direction of application, etc
Polymerised mortar:
For larger void spaces, it is possible to combine polymers of
either lowviscosity or higher viscosity with sand aggregate to form
polymer mortar.
Polymer mortar mixture has higher compressive strength, higher tensile strength and a
lower modulus of elasticity than Portland cement concrete. Thus the mortar is not stiff
enoughto replacing reinforced concrete.
Quick-setting cement mortar:
This material was originally developed for the use as a repair
material for reinforced concrete floors adjacent to steel blast
furnaces. It is a non- hydrous magnesium phosphate cement with
UNIT 5 CEHT BY S MONICA SOWJANYA
two components, a liquid and a dry, which can be mixed in a
manner similar to portland cement concrete.
Mechanical anchors :
Mechanical anchors employ wedging action to provide anchorage.
Some anchors provide both shear and tension resistance. Such anchors
are manufactured to give required strengths. Alternatively, chemical
anchors bonded in drilled holes with polymer adhesives can be used.
Techniques to Restore Original Strength:
While considering restoration work, it is important to realize that even fine
cracks in load bearing members which are unreinforced, like
masonry and plainconcrete reduce their resistance significantly.
Therefore all cracks must be located and marked carefully and the
critical ones fully repaired either by injecting strong cement or
chemical grout or by providing external bandages. The techniques
are described below alongwith other restoration measures
Requirement’s of structural safety of thin pre-cost roofing units against
Earthquake forces: Protection Against Earthquakes
□ Earthquakes are a natural phenomenon and an act of
god butare not predictable (so far).
□ Approximately 75% of fatalities due to earthquakes during the
last century occurred due to the collapse of
NonEngineered(NE) weak masonry construction made from
different types of bricks, clay, rammedearth or adobe.
FLOODS:
Sometimes a river receives a lot of extra water, either from lots of
rain or other natural disasters. ... Floods occur because of heavy
rains, a river overflowing, a dam or levy breaking, a tsunami, or
melting snow.
CYCLONES:
A hurricane is an intense tropical storm with powerful winds and
heavy rain. Other names for a hurricane include cyclone, typhoon
and tropical storm. Whilethey are essentially the same thing, the
UNIT 5 CEHT BY S MONICA SOWJANYA
different names usually indicate wherethe storm took place.
Tropical cyclones are like giant engines that use warm, moist air as
fuel. That is why they form only over warm ocean waters near the
equator. The warm, moist air over the ocean rises upward from
near the surface. Because this air movesup and away from the
surface, there is less air left near the surface.
Those that form in the Indian Ocean can affect India, Bangladesh,
north-west Australia, some parts of east Africa and Indian Ocean
islands such as Mauritius and Madagascar. In the northern
hemisphere most tropical cyclones occur between June and
November with apeak in September.
Tropical cyclones typically form over large bodies of relatively
warm water. They derive their energy through the evaporation
of water from the ocean surface, which ultimately recondenses
into clouds and rain when moist air rises and cools to saturation.
DAMAGES:
To qualify as hurricane-force, winds must maintain speeds of 74 miles
per hour orhigher. Such speeds can topple trees and send small
objects hurling through the air, where they can cause more
damage. Some particularly strong hurricaneshave produced wind
speeds in excess of 200 miles per hour. Cyclones of suchstrength
can blow houses off of their foundations and strip siding and shingles.
Primary Hazards
Secondary Hazards
Tertiary Hazards
Primary Hazards:
Primary hazards include strong winds, heavy rains, and storms. The sea level rises abnormally near
the coasts as a result of which the low-lying areas near the coastal regions get submerged, drowning
humans, their live stocks, and their inhabitations, destroying vegetation and soil fertility. Very strong
winds damage the houses, trees, communication systems etc, resulting in huge loss of life and
property.
Secondary Hazards:
Secondary hazards include floods, fire, and freshwater flooding. Heavy and prolonged rains cause
floods in rivers which cause submergence of the nearby inhabited regions, erosion of valuable
farming lands and destruction of buildings. Strong winds in forest regions result in forest fires which
spread with the intensity of cyclonic winds.
Sometimes all the above hazards occur simultaneously because of which the relief operations
become difficult. As the water level rises in the streets, transportation and communication in rescue
operations and clean-up efforts become extremely difficult.
The death tolls due to cyclones are very high. Nearly two million people have died globally due to
cyclones and their effects. Despite their devastating effects, cyclones of low intensity are beneficial
as they bring rain to dry areas and move heat from the tropical regions. They are sometimes useful in
the field of navigation.
Benefits of Tropical Cyclones: Although Tropical cyclones are known for destruction they
cause, when they strike they also bestow certain benefits to the climatic conditions of that area
such as Relieve drought conditions.
Carry heat and energy away from the tropics and transport it towards temperate latitudes, thus
helps to maintain equilibrium in the Earths troposphere and
Management of Cyclones: There are many structural and non-structural measures for
effective disaster management of cyclones. The structural measures include construction of
cyclone shelters, construction of cyclone resistant buildings, road links, culverts, bridges,
canals, drains, saline embankments, surface water tanks, communication and power
transmission networks etc. Non-structural measures like early warning dissemination systems,
management of coastal zones, awareness generation and disaster risk management and
capacity building of all the stakeholders involved. These measures are being adopted and
tackled on State to State basis under National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (NCRMP) being
implemented through World Bank Assistance.