Angeliki GERONTATI
Angeliki Gerontati was born in Athens, Greece in 1996. She holds a Degree (5-year program, integrated master) in Civil Engineering with major in Structural Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens (2019). Her thesis entitled “Strengthening of steel and angle members with reinforced polymers FRP” was prepared under the supervision of Mr. I. Vayas, Professor of the NTUA. She also has a MSc in Analysis and Design of Earthquake Resistant Structures from the same university (2020). She is a PhD candidate since 2020 on the assessment of power plants under seismic risk and supervising Mr. D. Vamvatsikos, Associate Professor of NTUA.
CONFERENCE PAPERS
Now - 2022
Karaferis N., Gerontati A., Vamvatsikos D. (2024). From PGA To Anything: Fragility Curve Conversions For Nuclear Power Plant Applications. Proceedings of the 18th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering, Milan, Italy.
Abstract | There has been a lot of discussion on intensity measure optimality for conventional structures, touting the advantages of novel metrics of ground motion intensity to improve upon the efficiency and fidelity of seismic assessment. Yet, somehow this revolution of sorts has not transitioned to nuclear power plant assessments, which cling to the time-honored tradition of the peak ground acceleration (PGA). They do so for the simple reasons of stiffness and mass. That would be stiffness in the assets themselves, typically leading to periods of the order of 0.1 to 0.2sec for both the structures and their nested components, but also in the rigidity of regulations in an understandably ultra-cautious industry. Adding the mass (and cost) of engineering effort required to reassess already established fragilities for hundreds of standardized components, it is no wonder that there is too much inertia to allow moving away from PGA. Would it not be great if someone came along and offered a minimal-error approach for converting existing fragility curves from PGA to any intensity measure of choice? Interestingly, the response characteristics of nuclear power plants may actually favor an equivalent one/two-degree-of-freedom-model based procedure that allows disaggregating existing fragilities back into ground-motion-level constituents and reconstructing them anew with the desired intensity measure parameterization. There is little doubt that safeguarding the integrity of nuclear power plants would still require massive computations rather than rely on shortcuts, yet such an approach can give novel intensity measures a fighting chance to prove that they are worth the trouble for nuclear engineering.
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Gerontati A., Karaferis N., Vamvatsikos D., Bazzurro P., Droszcz C. (2024). A Bare-Bones Nuclear Power Plant Case Study To Test Uncertainty Propagation And Correlation Effects. Proceedings of the 18th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering, Milan, Italy.
Abstract | The safety of a nuclear power plant is influenced by both aleatory randomness and epistemic uncertainty, as well as the potential inter-component and intra-component correlations. Aleatory randomness arises from inherent variability in the data, while epistemic uncertainty stems from limitations, or incomplete knowledge in models or data. Component correlation refers to the extent to which the properties of various components within a Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) are interdependent and how they may co-vary within a single component (intra-component correlation) or among similar/identical ones (inter-component). Evaluating their effects to completion is a non-trivial operation that requires a full model of the power plant and its components, as well as the overall fault tree. When the goal is the evaluation of alternative approaches to safety assessment, one need not set the bar so high. In this, we offer a pared-down model, comprising simplified models of the reactor building and of one or more non-structural components, together with a simplified fault tree that leads to loss of core cooling capacity. As an example, three alternative cases of perfect, partial, and no correlation are employed to test common causes of failure. Uncertainty is propagated using a Monte Carlo simulation with either classic or progressive Latin hypercube sampling, using the simplified model as an efficient benchmark for NPP-compatible applications.
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Gerontati A., Karaferis N., Sipcic N., Vamvatsikos D., Bazzurro P., Droszcz C. (2024). A Minimalistic Computational Testbed For Evaluating Fragility Assessment, Record Selection, And Intensity Measure Optimality For Nuclear Powerplants. Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Structural Mechanics in Reactor Technology (SMiRT27), Yokohama, Japan.
Abstract | Recent advances in Performance-Based Earthquake Engineering (PBEE) have followed their own revolutionary path over the past two decades. Focusing on the assessment of conventional buildings and infrastructure, several innovative proposals on improving fragility assessment have appeared over the years, focusing on record selection, improved intensity measures, as well as novel uncertainty propagation approaches. Whether these are also useful for nuclear powerplant assessment remains a question. Partially owing to the well-established practice and guidelines, introducing novelty in such procedures faces significant hurdles in terms of modeling, computational power, and complexity. In an effort to overcome said difficulties in the context of the METIS Euratom project, we propose a minimalistic computational testbed comprising simplified models of a building, one or more components, and a bare-bones fault tree
to tie them together and propagate uncertainties. The METIS simplified testbed is realized in open source, using Python and OpenSees to offer a fast assessment platform, whereby one can test any number of ideas in a setting that resembles a real case study. Among them are important questions, such as the influence of aftershocks, or clustered seismicity in general, new uncertainty propagation techniques, the use of hazard consistent record selection approaches in place of selection based on the uniform hazard spectrum, as well as the use of new intensity measures that can potentially reduce the aleatory uncertainty in the estimates of risk. Focusing on the latter, we present an example of application of the testbed and its results.
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Gerontati A., Vamvatsikos D. (2023). The effect of intensity measure selection and epistemic uncertainties on the estimated seismic performance for non-structural components of nuclear powerplants. Proceedings of the SECED 2023 Conference, Cambridge, UK.
Abstract | The seismic performance of a structure/component is influenced by aleatory randomness and epistemic uncertainty, but also by the intensity measure (IM) selected for the assessment. Aleatory randomness results from natural ground motion record variability, while epistemic uncertainty corresponds to modelling assumptions, parameter variability, omissions or simplifications. IM selection, though, depends on the analyst and the data available. Potential
candidate IMs are the peak ground acceleration (a nuclear industry standard), spectral acceleration at a fundamental period of the structure (the relative newcomer), and average spectral acceleration in the range of short periods (the novel option). Their performance in quantifying uncertainty for short-period nuclear powerplants is not given, nor is it necessarily obvious given the sizeable uncertainties involved. To provide a basis for discussion, a singledegree-of-freedom non-structural component in an AP1000 reactor building is used as casestudy. Three alternative uncertainty propagation approaches are employed: (a) Monte Carlo simulation with classic Latin hypercube sampling, (b) Monte Carlo simulation with progressive Latin hypercube sampling and (c) a first-order second-moment method, representing different compromises between speed and accuracy. The resulting fragility curves of the non-structural component are compared in terms of efficiency for assessing its performance, offering evidence in support of optimizing IM selection.
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Chatzidaki A., Giannelos C., Gerontati A., Vamvatsikos D., Loli M., Tsatsis A. (2022). Seismic risk and resilience assessment for the Metsovo-Panagia segment of Egnatia Odos. Proceedings of the 5th Panhellenic Conference on Earthquake Engineering and Engineering Seismology, Athens, Greece (in greek).
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Chatzidaki A., Gerontati A., Vamvatsikos D. (2022). Seismic damage and implied traffic delay assessment for a highway bridge of Egnatia Odos Greece. Proceedings of the 3rd European Conference on Earthquake Engineering and Seismology (3ECEES), Bucharest, Romania.
Abstract | The seismic damage and the implied traffic delays are assessed for two structurally independent twin bridges, one per travel direction, which form the G7 bridge of the Egnatia highway in Greece. They are reinforced concrete structures with a monolithic pier-to-deck connection that were built using the cantilever method of construction. To enhance the seismic assessment resolution, a component-based approach is followed that allows evaluating damage scenarios for individual critical bridge components and propagating them to assess the performance of the entire system. This necessitates linking the component damages to the actions that the road operator would take in order effect repairs, i.e., by reducing the speed limit in any of the lanes and/or closing any of them until repairs are finished. These interventions typically lead to traffic delays for the entire highway that are computed on an event basis via event-based probabilistic seismic hazard analysis by considering the component-to-asset and asset-to-system interdependencies. The aim is to develop a decision support tool for pre-event risk assessment and rapid post-event inspection of critical road infrastructure by combining hazard, vulnerability and sensor
information to predict the resulting consequences both on the asset and the system level at every step during an asset’s recovery back to full functionality.
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Gerontati A., Vamvatsikos D. (2022). A comparison of three scalar intensity measures for non-structural component assessment of nuclear powerplants. Proceedings of the 3rd European Conference on Earthquake Engineering and Seismology (3ECEES), Bucharest, Romania.
Abstract | Three candidate intensity measures are compared in terms of efficiency and sufficiency for assessing the non-structural performance of nuclear powerplant components. These are the peak ground acceleration, the spectral acceleration at the fundamental period of the structure, and the average spectral acceleration in the range of short periods. To do so, single-degree-of-freedom non-structural components of different periods and capacities are considered at different locations within an AP 1000 reactor model. Incremental dynamic analysis is performed for a set of 30 records. The spectral floor accelerations of each SDOF component are monitored and capacity exceedances are recorded to assess the lognormal parameters of component fragility curves. The numerical results demonstrate that average spectral acceleration would be the most useful intensity measure in both efficiency and sufficiency, regardless of location, period or capacity, with the obvious exception of the ground surface. Nevertheless, the conventional choice of the peak ground acceleration remains a very close contender, as it leads to results of low dispersion and little bias for such stiff structures and short-period components.
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Gerontati A., Bilionis D.V., Vamvatsikos D., Tibolt M. (2022). Modular modeling and risk assessment of power transmission lines under extreme weather hazards. Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Natural Hazards & Infrastructure ICONHIC 2022, Athens, Greece.
Abstract | Power transmission lines are the “highways” of electricity, consisting of conductors supported on steel towers. Transmission towers are categorized as support or angle/dead-end based on their capability to resist along-line loads transmitted by the conductors. They are vulnerable to severe weather and in particular the combination of high winds and ice accretion that could lead to catastrophic failures. It is thus of great interest in the system design to arrest the propagation of a single tower failure that may trigger a series of failures of adjacent ones, considerably lengthening the duration of power outage. A modular multi-span model of a power line is proposed for the assessment of the behavior of the tower-line system and the severity evaluation of such failures. Fault tree analysis is employed to examine the failure propagation to adjacent towers under extreme weather hazard, which allows the assessment of consequences at the level of an entire system of interleaved support and angle/dead-end transmission towers. The aggregated economic losses for an operational lifetime of 60 years are investigated using the proposed model versus a simplified approach, where all towers are exclusively characterized as support ones without considering successive failures.
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