Dynamic Response of a Large-scale Prestressed Concrete Girder Bridge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dynamic Response of a Large-scale Prestressed Concrete Girder Bridge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Civil & Environmental Engineering Session: Bridge Survivability under Extreme Multi-Hazard Loading Dynamic Response of a Large-scale Prestressed Concrete Girder Bridge Subjected to Hurricane Wave Forces Thomas Schumacher, University of
Overview
Source: Douglass, University of South Alabama / Google Maps
Bridges damaged during hurricanes in 2004 and 2005
I-10, Lake Pontchartrain US 90, Bay St. Louis US 90, Biloxi Bay I-10, Mobile Bay I-10, Escambia Bay
FL AL MS LA
I-10 Bridge over Escambia Bay, FL
Source: Pensacola News Journal
US 90, Biloxi Bay Bridge, MS
Source: Douglass, University of South Alabama
Background
- Project task: Determine forces on bridge superstructures due to
hurricane waves, develop methods to estimate forces
- Large-scale test, 1:5
- Bridge model with realistic details and
properties
- Tunable lateral support system
(rigid, dynamic, unrestrained)
- Direct measurement of reaction forces
- Interdisciplinary research team from Coastal & Structural Engineering
Photo courtesy S. Yim, OSU
Why testing?
- Past research:
- Off-shore structures not valid for coastal bridges!
- Equations to estimate forces for piles, vertical walls, flat slabs
- Small-scale experiments, scale of 1:50 to 1:8
- Integration of local pressure measurements to get overall forces
- Realistic structural behavior neglected (no substructure flexibility)
- 2008 AASHTO guidelines need verification:
- equations based on rigid substructure configuration
- no guidance on how overall forces are distributed to girders
How to model realistic bridge behavior
SWL
Cross section of typical bridge
6 AASHTO Type III girders, 4 diaphragms
Span length = 11.3 ft (56.7 ft)
Total weight = 4034 lbs (504 kips)
Assembled test setup
Tunable lateral support system
Phase 1: quasi rigid Phase 2b: soft springs Phase 2a: medium springs
Elevation view test setup
Vertical load cells Horizontal load cells Accelerometers Displacement sensors
O.H. Hinsdale Wave Research Laboratory
- Regular and random waves (T = 2.0 to 4.5 s)
- Hurricane Katrina conditions (H = 1 to 3 ft)
- Water height (SWL)
- Structural parameters
- 3 substructure flexibilities
- With/without guard rail
- Unconstrained
- Data set of ~400 test trials
Overview of Experiment
Experimental Data
- All data for dc = 0 (water level even with bottom line of girders)
- Pressure vs. force measurements
- Maximum reaction forces
- Horizontal reaction forces: rigid vs. dynamic substructure
- Reaction forces vs. wave height (correlation plot)
- Rigid vs. dynamic response
- Comparison with 2008 AASHTO guidelines
- Show time!
Pressure vs. force measurement
Maximum reaction forces
d* Horizontal Force (kN) Vertical Force (kN)
- 1
- 0.5
0.5 1 1 5 2 10 3 15 4 20 5 25 Weight of bridge span H = 0.6 m, T= 3.0 s Horizontal Force, Fh Vertical Force, Fv
Horizontal reaction forces: rigid vs. dynamic setup
Horizontal force (rigid) Horizontal force (dynamic)
Reaction forces vs. wave height (correlation plot)
Incident wave height, Hin [m] Incident wave height, Hin [ft] Horizontal force, Fh [N] Horizontal force, Fh [lb] 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 0.0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.4 2.7 3.0
- 4000
- 2000
2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000
- 750
- 250
250 750 1250 1750 2250 Regular waves, T = 2.5 s Rigid setup Flexible setup Incident wave height, Hin [m] Incident wave height, Hin [ft] Vertical force, F v [N] Vertical force, F v [lb] 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.4 2.7 3
- 12000
- 6000
6000 12000 18000 24000 30000 36000
- 2500
- 1000
500 2000 3500 5000 6500 8000 Regular waves, T = 2.5 s Rigid setup Flexible setup
Horizontal reaction forces Vertical reaction forces
Comparison with 2008 AASHTO Guidelines
Comparison with 2008 AASHTO Guidelines
Movie 1: Phase 1 (rigid setup)
Movie 2: Phase 2b (soft springs)
Movie 3: Phase 3 (unconstrained)
Ongoing and Future Work
- 2008 AASHTO guidelines:
- Verification of predictions
- Guidance on trapped air factor TAF
- Extension of equations for flexible
substructures
- Research on Tsunami loading of bridges
Thank you for your attention!
Civil & Environmental Engineering
Publications
- Schumacher, T., Bradner, C.; Higgins, C.; Cox, D.; Wave Forces on
Bridge Superstructures: Large-Scale Laboratory Observations and Comparison with AASHTO Guidelines; in preparation.
- Bradner, C., Schumacher, T., Cox, D., Higgins, C.; Experimental Setup
for a Large-Scale Bridge Superstructure Model Subjected to Waves. ASCE Journal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering, Vol. 137(1), January/February 2011, pp. 3–11.
- Schumacher, T.; Higgins, C.; Bradner, C.; Cox, D.; Yim, S.; Large-Scale