Analysis of Aircraft Impacts into the World Trade Center Towers Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8. Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster.
 
 
 Analysis of Aircraft Impacts into the World Trade Center  Towers Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.  Federal  Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World  Trade Center Disaster. (36044 K) Kirkpatrick, S. W.; Bocchieri, R. T.; Sadek, F.;  MacNeill, R. A.; Holmes, S.; Peterson, B. D.; Cilke, R.  W.; Navarro, C.  NIST NCSTAR 1-2B;    290 p. September 2005.
Keywords:
 World Trade Center; high rise buildings; building  collapse; disasters; fire safety; fire investigations;  terrorists; terrorism; aircraft impact; impact; failure;  aircraft fuels; dispersons; structural dynamics;  uncertainty; damage; structural damage  Abstract:
 The objective of this report was to analyze the aircraft  impacts into each of the World Trade Center (WTC) towers  to provide the following: (1) estimates of probable  damage to structural systems due to aircraft impact,  including exterior walls, floor systems, and interior  core columns; (2) estimates of the aircraft fuel  dispersal during the impact; (3) estimates of debris  damage to the interior tower contents, including  partitions and workstations. Thus, this analysis  established the initial conditions for the fire dynamics  modeling and the thermal-structural response and  collapse initiation analysis. The impact analyses were  conducted at various levels of complexity including: (1)  the component level, (2) the subassembly level, and (3)  the global level to estimate the probable damage to the  towers due to aircraft impact. Simplified analyses were  also used to support the development of the global  finite element models. Analysis of uncertainties using  the component and subassembly analyses were conducted to  assess the effects of variability associated with  various input parameters and identify the most  influential parameters that affect the damage estimates  using orthogonal factorial design. Based on the results  of the sensitivity analyses, the most influential  parameters identified were varied in the global models  to provide a range of damage estimates for WTC 1 and WTC  2.  As part of the tower and aircraft models,  constitutive relationships describing the actual  behavior of the structures under the dynamic impact  conditions of the aircraft were developed based on test  results of the tower steels and from the open literature  for other materials. Various grades of steels used in  the exterior walls and core columns of the towers,  weldment metal, bolts, reinforced concrete, aircraft  materials, and nonstructural contents were considered.  The constitutive relationships included high strain-rate  effects and failure criteria for the various materials.  The tower models used in the global impact analyses were  developed based on the original WTC drawings and the  structural databases of the towers developed within the  framework of the baseline structural performance  analysis. The tower models included the primary  structural components of the towers in the impact zone,  including exterior walls, floor systems, core columns,  and connections. A refined finite element mesh was used  for the areas in the path of the aircraft and a coarser  mesh was used elsewhere. The models also included the  nonstructural building contents, such as partitions and  workstations, in the path of the aircraft debris. The  Boeing 767 aircraft model was developed based on  information gathered from documentary aircraft  structural information, and data from measurements on a  Boeing 767 aircraft. The model included the aircraft  engines, wings, fuselage, empennage, and landing gear,  as well as nonstructural components of the aircraft. A  detailed analysis was carried out to estimate the fuel  distribution in the aircraft wings at the time of  impact.