Earthquake Response Analysis of Yielding Structures Coupled with Rocking Walls
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 00:44 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Derivation and validation of equations for yielding structures with rocking walls shows vertical tendons have marginal effect on inelastic earthquake response for medium- to high-rise buildings.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
even for medium-rise buildings the effect of vertical tendons on the inelastic structural response is marginal, with the exception of increasing the vertical reactions at the pivoting points of the rocking wall. Accordingly, the paper concludes that for medium- to high-rise buildings vertical tendons in rocking walls are not beneficial.
Load-bearing premise
The one-degree of freedom idealization is dependable for capturing the essential inelastic response, as validated against the nonlinear time-history response analysis of a 9-story moment-resisting steel frame coupled with a stepping rocking wall.
read the original abstract
This paper investigates the inelastic response of a yielding structure coupled with a rocking wall which can be vertically restrained. The paper first derives the nonlinear equations of motion of a yielding oscillator coupled with a vertically restrained rocking wall and the dependability of the one-degree of freedom idealization is validated against the nonlinear time-history response analysis of a well-known 9-story moment-resisting steel frame that is coupled with a stepping rocking wall. While, the coupling of weak building frames with rocking walls is an efficient strategy that controls inelastic deformations by enforcing a uniform interstory-drift distribution, therefore, avoiding mid-story failures, the paper shows that even for medium-rise buildings the effect of vertical tendons on the inelastic structural response is marginal, with the exception of increasing the vertical reactions at the pivoting points of the rocking wall. Accordingly, the paper, concludes that for medium- to high-rise buildings vertical tendons in rocking walls are not beneficial.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper derives the nonlinear equations of motion for a yielding oscillator coupled with a vertically restrained rocking wall. It validates the one-degree-of-freedom (1DOF) idealization against nonlinear time-history analysis of a 9-story moment-resisting steel frame coupled with a stepping (unrestrained) rocking wall. The central result is that vertical tendons produce only marginal changes to the inelastic structural response (except for increasing vertical reactions at the pivots), leading to the conclusion that such tendons are not beneficial for medium- to high-rise buildings.
Significance. If the 1DOF model remains faithful under tendon restraint, the result would indicate that the added design complexity of vertical tendons does not meaningfully improve drift control or prevent mid-story failures in medium-rise frames, potentially simplifying rocking-wall retrofit strategies. The first-principles derivation of the equations of motion and the use of an independent multi-story validation model are positive features.
major comments (1)
- [Validation of the one-degree of freedom idealization] The validation of the 1DOF idealization (described in the abstract and the validation section) is performed exclusively against the 9-story frame with a stepping rocking wall. The headline claim—that vertical tendons have only marginal effect on inelastic response—depends on the same 1DOF model now extended to include tendon restraint, which alters uplift kinematics and reaction paths. No equivalent validation or error metric is provided for the tendon-restrained configuration, directly undermining confidence in the conclusion that tendons are not beneficial for medium- to high-rise buildings.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the validation result but does not report quantitative error measures, specific parameter values, or the number of ground motions used.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed review and constructive feedback on our manuscript. We address the major comment point-by-point below, providing clarifications on the modeling approach and validation strategy while acknowledging areas where the presentation can be strengthened.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Validation of the one-degree of freedom idealization] The validation of the 1DOF idealization (described in the abstract and the validation section) is performed exclusively against the 9-story frame with a stepping rocking wall. The headline claim—that vertical tendons have only marginal effect on inelastic response—depends on the same 1DOF model now extended to include tendon restraint, which alters uplift kinematics and reaction paths. No equivalent validation or error metric is provided for the tendon-restrained configuration, directly undermining confidence in the conclusion that tendons are not beneficial for medium- to high-rise buildings.
Authors: We agree that the validation in Section 4 is performed against the 9-story frame coupled with a stepping (unrestrained) rocking wall, confirming that the 1DOF idealization captures the essential nonlinear dynamics and interstory drift control for that configuration. The equations of motion for the vertically restrained case are derived in Section 3 from first principles by incorporating the additional constraint forces from the tendons into the kinematic relations and equilibrium equations; this extension modifies the uplift condition and reaction paths in a manner that is fully accounted for analytically. The central comparison (with vs. without tendons) is performed entirely within the validated 1DOF framework, where the only change is the explicit inclusion of tendon restraint. While we recognize that an independent multi-story validation for the tendon-restrained case would provide additional reassurance, the derivation ensures consistency in the modeling assumptions, and the marginal effect arises directly from the altered kinematics rather than from any unvalidated aspect of the 1DOF reduction itself. We will revise the manuscript to explicitly state the scope of the validation, add a discussion of the modeling assumptions that remain unchanged under tendon restraint, and include a brief error analysis comparing the 1DOF predictions with and without tendons against the available stepping-wall benchmark data. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation from first principles with independent validation
full rationale
The paper derives the nonlinear equations of motion from first principles of dynamics for a yielding oscillator coupled with a vertically restrained rocking wall. Dependability of the 1DOF idealization is validated against nonlinear time-history response of an independent 9-story moment-resisting steel frame coupled with a stepping rocking wall. The conclusion that vertical tendons produce only marginal changes (except at pivots) follows from applying this derived model to the restrained case. No self-definitional relations, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, load-bearing self-citations, or ansatzes smuggled via citation are present that would reduce any result to its inputs by construction. The derivation chain remains self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The 1DOF model adequately represents the inelastic dynamics of the 9-story frame under the coupled rocking-wall condition
discussion (0)
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