Dynamic Analysis and Testing of a Curved Girder Bridge

Dynamic Analysis and Testing of a Curved Girder Bridge

Author: Matthew R. Tilley

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 38

ISBN-13:

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As a result of increasing highway construction and expansion, a corresponding need to increase traffic capacity in heavily populated areas, and ever-increasing constraints on available land for transportation use, there has been an increasing demand for alignment geometries and bridge configurations that result in more efficient use of available space. As a result of this demand, there has been a steady increase in the use of curved girder bridges over the past 30 years. Despites extensive research relating to the behavior of these types of structures, a thorough understanding of curved girder bridge response, especially relating to dynamic behavior, is still incomplete. To develop an improved, rational set of design guidelines, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) initiated the Curved Steel Bridge Research Project in 1992. As part of this project, FHWA constructed a full-scale model of a curved steel girder bridge at its Turner-Fairbank Structures Laboratory. This full-scale model made it possible to conduct numerous tests and collect a significant amount of data relating to the static behavior of a curved girder bridge. However, relatively little information has been available on the dynamic response of curved girder bridges and this type of information is needed before a complete design specification can be developed. The objective of this study was to develop a finite element model using SAP2000 that could be used for predicting and evaluating the dynamic response of a curved girder bridge. Models of the FHWA curved girder bridge were developed using both beam and shell elements and response information compared with experimental data and with analytical data from other finite element codes. The experimental data were obtained during dynamic testing of the full-scale bridge in the Turner-Fairbank Structures Laboratory and analytical response information was provided from finite element models of the bridge using ANSYS and ABAQUS. The primary focus of the study was the prediction of frequencies and mode shapes of the full-scale curved girder both with and without a deck. Both experimental and analytical frequencies and mode shapes were calculated and compared. Although the more refined ANSYS and ABAQUS models provided response data that compared more favorably with the experimental data, the SAP2000 models were found to be more than adequate for predicting the lower modes and frequencies of the bridge.


Theory and Design of Bridges

Theory and Design of Bridges

Author: Petros P. Xanthakos

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 1466

ISBN-13: 9780471570974

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Indeed, this essential working reference for practicing civil engineers uniquely reflects today's gradual transition from allowable stress design to Load and Resistance Factor Design by presenting LRFD specifications - developed from research requested by AASH-TO and initiated by the NCHRP - which spell out new provisions in areas ranging from load models and load factors to bridge substructure elements and foundations.


Precast Segmental Box Girders

Precast Segmental Box Girders

Author: Fadzli Mohamed Nazri

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2019-02-09

Total Pages: 82

ISBN-13: 303011984X

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This book explores the fundamentals of the elastic behaviour of erected precast segmental box girders (SBG) when subjected to static load, as well as the construction process (casting and erection work) involved. It analyzes and compares the experimental results with those obtained using the finite element method and theoretical calculations. A short-term deflection analysis for different loads is obtained by determining the maximum deflection, stress and strain value of single span precast SBG under a variety of transversal slope. The outcome of this work provides a better understanding of the behaviour of precast SBG in terms of structural responses as well as defects, so that maintenance work can then be focused on the critical section at mid span area specifically for the bridge project longitudinally and transversely. The book is of interest to industry professionals involved in conducting static load tests on bridges, and all researchers, designers, and engineers seeking to validate experimental work with numerical and analytical approaches.


An Efficient Modelling Technique for Static and Dynamic Response of Thin-walled Box Girder Bridges

An Efficient Modelling Technique for Static and Dynamic Response of Thin-walled Box Girder Bridges

Author: Kiana Kashefi

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 290

ISBN-13:

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"Highway bridges are crucial parts of the civil infrastructure which require special attention at the time of their analysis and design. Box girder deck systems are amongst the most popular types of highway bridge structures and the understanding of their behaviour under different loads plays an important role in their structural design. Therefore, an accurate assessment of the response of these bridges under these loads is of great importance. Box girder bridges are essentially thin-walled beams having closed or a combination of closed and open cross-sections. The behaviour of these thin-walled structures under an arbitrary loading scenario is quite complex, primarily due to the cross-sectional warping (out-of-plane warping) and the distortion of the sections (in-plane warping). The accurate calculation of warping displacements has been the area of many research studies because the variation of warping displacements over a cross-section does not follow a standard pattern. With the help of a detailed Finite Element Analysis (FEA), it is possible to obtain results which may be reasonably close to the exact three dimensional (3D) elasticity solutions of these thin-walled structures. However, this approach involves significant computational resources and efforts, especially for bridges having complex geometries. The use of this modelling approach is not feasible, particularly at the preliminary design stage when the analysis is typically performed many times and the design is being modified and improved iteratively. On the other hand, a specific feature of typical box girders is that one of its dimensions (length) is very large compared to the other two dimensions. Utilising this trait, many researchers have tried to condense the 3D problem into a one-dimensional (1D) problem and treat these structures as beams. Although this approach makes the analysis highly efficient, the existing beam theories involve many approximations in order to account for out-of-plane warping and distortion of these structures. This can affect the accuracy of the solution significantly for thin-walled box girder bridges. In the present thesis, a novel method is introduced which can offer a very accurate solution to the problem and at the same time the method is computationally efficent. The proposed technique splits the 3D elasticity problem into a two-dimensional (2D) cross-sectional problem and a 1D beam problem. The 2D beam cross-sectional problem is solved using a 2D finite element discretization where the effects of in-plane warping as well as out-of-plane warping are considered. The 2D finite element analysis generates the 'exact' constitutive matrix (or stiffness matrix) for the beam cross-section which ensures proper coupling between the different modes of deformation. This cross-sectional stiffness matrix is then used in the 1D beam analysis based on a usual 1D beam finite element model. The stress resultants obtained from the 1D beam analysis and the results obtained from the 2D cross-sectional analysis are used to determine the warping displacements and finally recover the 3D stress and displacement fields of the thin-walled beams. The computational efficiency of this approach is significant in terms of prediction of the 3D response of these structures. In order to implement the method, computer programs were developed in FORTRAN specifically for the present purpose. The major research contributions of the current study are presented in the form of three journal papers and one conference paper. Firstly, the mathematical formulation of the method is presented in details and its accuracy is examined by the analysis thin-walled girders having different cross-section configurations under various loading conditions. The results are then validated against those obtained by 3D FE models of these structures. In the second paper, the method is extended to dynamic analysis of box girder superstructures. Numerical examples of thin-walled box girders are solved by the proposed approach under dynamic loading (e.g. time varying and moving loads) to show its performance. The free vibration analyses of these structures are also carried out and the results are compared with the results obtained by 3D finite element analyses of these structures. Finally, the behaviour of straight and curved thin-walled box girders is investigated through experimental studies. Detailed 3D finite-element analysis of these girders is carried out and the results are compared with the experimental results. Also, the experimental results obtained for the straight specimen are used to validate the proposed analysis approach. Additionally, the vibration frequencies of the specimens are measured using the data obtained from their impact excitations. The results obtained from the proposed method are found to have a very good correlation with the 3D FEM in all investigations. Considering the level of accuracy and efficiency required for the analysis of bridge super-structures, the proposed modelling approach seems to have a very good potential in its application for different problems. It is expected that this research will initiate further developments of this technique for its extension in the analysis of wide variety of bridge configurations (e.g. curved, composite) and for solving various problems (e.g. geometrical nonlinearity)." -- abstract, leaves i-ii.


Multi-Span Large Bridges

Multi-Span Large Bridges

Author: Pedro Pacheco

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2015-06-09

Total Pages: 460

ISBN-13: 1315687194

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Throughout the last decades, the increasing development of the urban metropolis and the need to establish fundamental infrastructure networks, promoted the development of important projects worldwide and several Multi-Span Large Bridges have been erected. Certainly, many more will be erected in the next decades. This international context undoubted