Multi-Hazard Assessment of Seismic and Scour Effects on Rural Bridges with Unknown Foundations

Multi-Hazard Assessment of Seismic and Scour Effects on Rural Bridges with Unknown Foundations
Author: ZhiQiang Chen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN:

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This chapter proposes a probabilistic framework for assessing seismic and scour effects on existing river-crossing bridge structures. The emphasis is on bridge structures in rural areas, for which it has been recognized that a large number of rural bridges have unknown foundation types and further are subject to both flooding-induced scour and seismic damage. With a review of the US-based rural bridges, this chapter presents a probabilistic framework for bridge performance assessment. Using a representative rural bridge model, the fragility results for the bridge reveal that scour tends to be beneficial in reducing structural damage at slight to moderate seismic intensities and to be detrimental in increasing collapse potential at high-level intensities. The demand hazard curves further quantify probabilistically the occurrence of local damage and global collapse, and systematically reveal the complex effects of scour as a hydraulic hazard on bridge structures.

Risk Assessment of Highway Bridges Under Multi-hazard Effect of Flood-induced Scour and Earthquake

Risk Assessment of Highway Bridges Under Multi-hazard Effect of Flood-induced Scour and Earthquake
Author: Taner Yilmaz
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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Natural disasters may have significant impact on the functionality of highway transportation systems resulting in unacceptable socio-economic losses. Flood and earthquake hazards can be considered as two most significant natural threats to safety of bridges. The overarching need for safety and serviceability of critical transportation infrastructure system requires highway bridges to be analyzed and designed not only for discrete hazard events, but also for possible multiple-hazard (or multi-hazard) conditions. For a highway network spanning over a seismically-active flood-prone region, the occurrence of earthquakes in the presence of flood-induced scour is a possible multi-hazard scenario for bridges in the network. The varied dynamic characteristics of a bridge due to the occurrence of scour may affect the response of the bridge under earthquake loading, and eventually may increase the risk of bridge failure.Despite the rising concern of research communities on this topic, the issues related to the multi-hazard effect of flood-induced scour and earthquake on highway bridges have not been satisfactorily answered. In addition, no guideline is currently available in design codes to ensure seismic safety of bridges with potentially scoured foundations. This dissertation aims to improve a comprehensive knowledge-base on risk and reliability analyses of highway bridges subjected to this multi-hazard by developing a multi-hazard risk assessment framework for bridges and quantifying variability in multi-hazard fragility and risk of bridges through a thorough uncertainty analysis. Outcome of this research provides research communities and government agencies a better understanding of the multi-hazard effect of flood-induced scour and earthquake on the risk and reliability of highway bridges. It also serves as a foundation for future researches on developing strategic plans for repair or retrofit prioritization for highway bridges under similar multi-hazard conditions.

Seismic Vulnerability Analysis of Scoured Bridge Systems

Seismic Vulnerability Analysis of Scoured Bridge Systems
Author: Xuan Guo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2014
Genre: Bridges
ISBN:

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Bridges are a vital infrastructure component of the transportation networks in both rural and urban areas. Damaged or destroyed bridges can affect the reliability and resilience of transportation networks that are critical to human life, economical activities, and the social sustainability at large. Understanding how natural hazards affect the life-cycle performance of bridge systems will lead to improved preparedness prior to extreme disasters and benefit the society ultimately. Among many natural events, flood-induced foundation scour has been recognized as a leading cause of bridge failure in the United States. The distinct feature of flood-induced scour is that it may last during the rest of bridge's service life once it is formed around a bridge foundation. Intuitively, the threat may be potentially more severe if the permanent scour is combined with other hazards, such as earthquakes. However, the combined effects of such multiple hazards are not clearly understood to date. It is thus meaningful to investigate the effects of multi-hazard earthquake and scour on the seismic performance of river-crossing bridges. The general objective of this dissertation is to assess the seismic vulnerability of bridge structures considering flooding-induced scour in a general multi-hazard context. To meet this objective, five related research problems are defined in this dissertation. Correspondingly, scientific answers and technical solution frameworks are developed in this dissertation. The dissertation directly contributes to the multi-hazard assessment methodology with an emphasis in flood-induced scour and earthquake hazards. Specifically, the dissertation directly resolves the practical challenge of evaluating the effects of bridge scour on the seismic performance of river-crossing bridges in terms of theoretical frameworks, numerical procedures, and case study-based findings. Future research directions along the line of multi-hazard bridge performance research with an emphasis of hydro- and seismic-impacts are pointed at the end of the dissertation.

Multi-hazard Resilience Assessment of River-crossing Bridges

Multi-hazard Resilience Assessment of River-crossing Bridges
Author: Mostafa Badroddin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2020
Genre: Bridges
ISBN:

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Bridge structures are required to possess high reliability and robustness against the concurrent effect of extreme loads and environmental attacks. To achieve such interrelated goals, it is necessary to assess the system performance and resilience subjected to multi-hazard impacts and the beneficial effects of any retrofitting or hazard-countermeasure in a lifecycle context. The damaged bridge needs to be restored rapidly over its service life due to the significant economic losses and disruption to transportation networks. For river-crossing bridges, one of the essential hazard mitigation strategies is scour countermeasures. However, a quantitative understanding of the effects of SCs on bridge system resilience is not found. This dissertation presents a critical synthesis of the existing literature that provides relevant knowledge and a profound understanding of probabilistic multi-hazard assessment for bridge structures. Then, a finite element-based probabilistic framework is designed to assess the lifecycle resilience of reinforced concrete river-crossing bridges under seismic, flood-induced scour, and chloride-induced corrosion impacts, including the consideration of a typical scour countermeasure at variable service times. Based on the general performance-based approach, two probabilistic models are formulated, termed the mean-scour fragility analysis (MS-FA) model and the total-scour demand hazard analysis (TS-DHA) model, which produce straightforward functional curves and can be readily used to evaluate the seismic-scour multi-hazard effects. An integrated damage index is defined based on both local and system-level ductility demands to develop a demand hazard model and to estimate the damage-based residual functionality and recovery duration to quantify the lifecycle bridge resilience. Notably, the exceeding probability approach is designed to reveal how progressive and sudden hazards interact and result in resilience degradation and how scour countermeasures contribute to resilience enhancement. The outcomes of the numerical experiment reveal the positive and distinct effects of implementing SCs at different lifecycle intervals. More importantly, resilience time-series demonstrate arbitrary multi-modes and nonparametric patterns. Accordingly, a robust statistical distance-based approach is presented to determine the sequential evolution of time-varying multi-hazard resilience. The proposed framework would assist stakeholders and decision-makers in resilience patterns recognition, assessing the effectiveness of hazard mitigation strategies, and taking short- and long-term proactive intervention actions by specifying resilience thresholds.

Research Pays Off

Research Pays Off
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2014
Genre: Electronic book
ISBN:

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Seismic Vulnerability Analysis of Bridges in Mountainous States

Seismic Vulnerability Analysis of Bridges in Mountainous States
Author: Matt Hardman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 34
Release: 2013
Genre: Bridges
ISBN:

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Depending on the location, highway bridges can often support considerable amounts of traffic. Due to the limitations on current earthquake forecasting techniques, a normal amount of traffic will also typically remain on a bridge when an earthquake occurs. In addition to traffic, scour effects are also a potential hazard to bridge piers that may simultaneously impact the structural integrity of the bridge together with seismic loads. Although a few studies investigating the combined effect of extreme and service loads have been conducted on long-span bridges or in high-seismic zones, the studies on typical short- and medium-span bridges in low and moderate seismic zones are rare. A general dynamic simulation methodology is introduced to study the combined realistic service and extreme loads on short- and medium-span bridges. Following the introduction of the methodology, a numerical study investigating the seismic performance of a typical highway bridge in mountainous states is carried out. The bridge is subjected to different combinations of traffic, seismic, and scour and the effects on the structural performance of the bridge are investigated. The bridge, including both superstructure and substructure, is modeled in detail using SAP2000 to accommodate the goals of this study. The traffic load is considered through dynamic interaction analysis of vehicles in the simulated stochastic traffic flow. Through studying the bridge performance under various combined extreme and service loads, findings are made about controlling cases for different bridge responses and the validity of the traditional superposition approach with consideration to load combinations is also discussed. As the initial effort studied the bridge performance under multiple service and extreme loads, this study sheds some light on more comprehensive studies for the future.

Risk-targeted Performance-based Seismic Assessment and Design of Bridges

Risk-targeted Performance-based Seismic Assessment and Design of Bridges
Author: Angshuman Deb
Publisher:
Total Pages: 239
Release: 2021
Genre:
ISBN:

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Driven by the necessity to meet changing public expectations in the wake of natural disasters, such as earthquakes, the structural engineering community has been moving towards rational, risk-informed, and transparent approaches to structural design, amidst which probabilistic performance-based seismic design (PBSD) has emerged as the most scientific and promising one. The main objective of this research is to formulate a simplified yet rigorous framework for risk-targeted PBSD of Ordinary Standard Bridges (OSBs), which, despite being simple bridges, constitute an integral part of lifeline infrastructure systems, especially in earthquake-prone regions such as California. A seismic performance assessment methodology integrating site-specific seismic hazard analysis, structural demand analysis, and damage analysis in a comprehensive and consistent probabilistic framework is computationally implemented as a modular tool unifying several state-of-the-art advancements related to the field. This tool is used for a parametric probabilistic performance assessment of four different testbed OSBs over a primary design parameter space to investigate the effects of varying key structural design parameters on targeted structural performance measures. Erratic performance levels exhibited by these real-world traditionally designed bridges, compared to expert-opinion-based target performance levels, expose the inconsistency and opacity of current (prescriptive) design principles that do not explicitly state, analyze, and design for risk-targeted performance objectives but implicitly expect them to be satisfied. A comprehensive risk-targeted simplified yet rigorous PBSD method is distilled out and proposed, and its efficacy is validated using four real-world bridges as cases in point. The framework is then enhanced by the inclusion and consistent propagation of pertinent sources of uncertainty (typically ignored in practice) to obtain a more complete picture of seismic performance, thereby leading to a more comprehensive, transparent, and reliable design of OSBs, facilitating effective and risk-informed decision-making in the face of uncertainty. It is believed that the adoption of the proposed PBSD methodology, although non-traditional in its format, will be highly beneficial in the medium to long term. This initial venture will also prove crucial in supporting and fostering future research work and innovative technological developments in bridge infrastructure engineering.

Seismic Response and Performance-Based Assessment of Multi-Span Bridge-Ground Systems

Seismic Response and Performance-Based Assessment of Multi-Span Bridge-Ground Systems
Author: Abdullah S E S E Almutairi
Publisher:
Total Pages: 436
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

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The conducted study is directed towards enhancements in performance assessment of highway bridges under a wide range of earthquake input shaking scenarios. Seismic response of the superstructure is highly influenced by the global bridge-ground characteristics as an integral system. Therefore, nonlinear representation of the bridge deck, columns, abutments, and foundation response are to be integrated within a unified framework. On this basis, a performance-based earthquake engineering (PBEE) framework was extended and utilized to estimate the post-earthquake loss. To facilitate systematic execution of this analysis framework, a graphical user-interface was further developed and employed. For calibration purposes, a Finite Element (FE) model of an existing large heavily instrumented bridge system at Eureka, California (Samoa Channel Bridge) was developed. Calibration was undertaken based on the recorded earthquake response. Numerical simulations of the bridge model under seismic loading conditions were conducted. Simulation results show that the recorded data provide valuable insights to understand the seismic bridge response and to reliably estimate the damage. Using a practice-oriented pushover procedure, the response of a bridge subjected to liquefaction-induced lateral spreading was investigated. The analysis framework and representative results are presented, where the abutment lateral slope displacement is resisted by the entire bridge configuration. Permanent ground deformation induces longitudinal displacement on the abutment and consequently the entire bridge system. As such, the response of the bridge and its pile foundations were investigated and correlated with the imposed lateral spreading displacement. Overall, the novel contributions and findings are summarized as follows: (1) A bridge-ground seismic response computational analysis tool was further developed for routine practical applications; (2) In this tool, a PBEE framework was extended to handle multi-span bridge-ground systems within an integrated simulation environment; (3) Calibrated by recorded earthquake response, a framework was implemented for a representative large instrumented bridge-ground system in California to illustrate the involved response mechanisms and PBEE outcomes; (4) For response under lateral spreading considerations, a global bridge-ground systematic analysis framework was proposed and developed; (5) Patterned after an existing bridge in California, the framework was implemented with parametric studies addressing the procedure assumptions and potential retrofit bridge configurations.

Application of Multi-hazard Seismic-blast Detailing for Highway Bridges

Application of Multi-hazard Seismic-blast Detailing for Highway Bridges
Author: Dominique Morton Torres
Publisher:
Total Pages: 154
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

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The increase of worldwide terrorist attacks on public transportation has heightened our concerns of protecting the nation’s transportation infrastructure. Highway bridges are an attractive target for terrorist attacks due to ease of accessibility and their overall importance to society. The primary objective of this research is to investigate multi-hazard seismic-blast correlations of blast-induced bridge components through numerical simulations of a high-precision finite element model of a typical highway bridge in New York. Seismic-detailing for blast loading on bridges has been investigated to study the correlations between seismic design for blast load effects. High-precision 3D Finite Element models of bridges detailed for blast-resistant applications have been developed by designing the bridges for various seismic zones. In total, 9 cases of simulations for blast-induced bridges have been simulated. From the simulations, four failure mechanisms were observed and have been identified. Results from the simulation suggest that bridges detailed with higher seismic capacities were able to resist more blasted-induced failure mechanisms. The amount and location of transverse reinforcement in bridge columns played a significant role for better blast resistance. Although, there are several failure mechanisms that arise from blast loadings that do not take place in seismic conditions.