M.Tech in Earthquake Engineering
Semester-wise syllabus outline for an M.Tech in Earthquake Engineering
Semester 1: Core Principles
1. Seismology & Earthquake Mechanics
- Plate tectonics, seismic wave propagation, fault mechanisms, magnitude/intensity scales (Richter, Mercalli).
2. Structural Dynamics
- SDOF/MDOF systems, response spectra, time-history analysis, damping models.
3. Earthquake-Resistant Design of Structures
- IS 1893, ASCE 7, Eurocode 8, ductility concepts, base isolation, and energy dissipation devices.
4. Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering
- Soil-structure interaction, liquefaction, site response analysis, slope stability during earthquakes.
5. Lab 1: Basics of Seismic Analysis
- ETABS/SAP2000 for linear static/dynamic analysis, MATLAB for response spectrum generation.
Semester 2: Advanced Analysis & Design
1. Nonlinear Structural Analysis
- Pushover analysis, plastic hinge modeling, performance-based design (FEMA 356/440).
2. Seismic Hazard & Risk Assessment
- Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA), fragility curves, risk mitigation strategies.
3. Retrofitting & Rehabilitation of Structures
- Strengthening techniques (FRP, steel jacketing), code-compliant retrofit strategies.
4. Elective 1 (e.g., Tsunami Engineering or GIS in Disaster Management)
5. Lab 2: Advanced Simulation & Experimentation
- Nonlinear dynamic analysis in OpenSees, shake-table experiments, sensor data acquisition (accelerometers).
Semester 3: Specialization & Project Work
1. Elective 2 (e.g., Urban Resilience Planning or Seismic Design of Bridges)
2. Elective 3 (e.g., Machine Learning for Seismic Risk Prediction or Advanced Masonry Design)
3. Disaster Management & Mitigation
- Post-earthquake assessment, emergency response, community resilience frameworks.
4. Project Work Part 1
- Case studies (e.g., Bhuj/Kobe earthquake analysis), retrofitting design projects, fieldwork.
5. Professional Workshops
- Training on industry tools (STAAD.Pro, PLAXIS), seminars on recent codes (NBC, IBC).
Semester 4: Thesis/Dissertation
- Independent Research Thesis
- Focus areas: AI-driven seismic vulnerability assessment, innovative base isolators, regional hazard mapping, etc.
- Submission and defense of dissertation.
Elective Options (Semesters 2–3):
- Seismic Design of High-Rise Buildings
- Earthquake Early Warning Systems
- Computational Geotechnics (PLAXIS, GeoStudio)
- Historical & Monumental Structure Conservation
- Smart Materials for Seismic Applications
- Post-Disaster Reconstruction Policies
Key Software & Tools:
- Analysis: ETABS, SAP2000, OpenSees, SeismoStruct, PLAXIS.
- Hazard Mapping: GIS (ArcGIS, QGIS), ShakeMap, HAZUS.
- Fieldwork: Ground-penetrating radar (GPR), accelerometers, LiDAR for structural health monitoring.
Lab/Practical Focus:
1. Shake-Table Testing: Simulating seismic loads on scaled models.
2. Field Surveys: Site investigations for liquefaction potential, soil profiling.
3. Retrofit Design Projects: Using FRP wraps, dampers, or base isolators.
4. Case Study Analysis: Reviewing past earthquakes (e.g., 2001 Bhuj, 2015 Nepal).