Parametric Study and Length Limitations for Prestressed Concrete Girder Integral Abutment Bridges

2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keisha T. Baptiste ◽  
WooSeok Kim ◽  
Jeffrey A. Laman
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 5031
Author(s):  
Wooseok Kim ◽  
Jeffrey A. Laman ◽  
Farzin Zareian ◽  
Geunhyung Min ◽  
Do Hyung Lee

Although integral abutment bridges (IABs) have become a preferred construction choice for short- to medium-length bridges, they still have unclear bridge design guidelines. As IABs are supported by nonlinear boundaries, bridge geometric parameters strongly affect IAB behavior and complicate predicting the bridge response for design and assessment purposes. This study demonstrates the effect of four dominant parameters: (1) girder material, (2) bridge length, (3) backfill height, and (4) construction joint below girder seats on the response of IABs to the rise and fall of AASHTO extreme temperature with time-dependent effects in concrete materials. The effect of factors influencing bridge response, such as (1) bridge construction timeline, (2) concrete thermal expansion coefficient, (3) backfill stiffness, and (4) pile-soil stiffness, are assumed to be constant. To compare girder material and bridge geometry influence, the study evaluates four critical superstructure and substructure response parameters: (1) girder axial force, (2) girder bending moment, (3) pile moment, and (4) pile head displacement. All IAB bridge response values were strongly related to the four considered parameters, while they were not always linearly proportional. Prestressed concrete (PSC) bridge response did not differ significantly from the steel bridge response. Forces and moments in the superstructure and the substructure induced by thermal movements and time-dependent loads were not negligible and should be considered in the design process.


Author(s):  
Suhail Albhaisi ◽  
Hani Nassif

This paper presents a simple approach to calculate the displacements and the rotations induced by thermal loading in integral abutment bridges (IABs). The approach was derived from the results of a parametric study that investigated the effect of substructure stiffness on the performance of short- and medium-length steel IABs built on clay and sand under thermal load effects. Various parameters, such as pile size and orientation, pile material, and foundation soil stiffness, were considered in the study. Detailed three-dimensional (3-D) finite element (FE) models using the software LUSAS were developed to capture the overall behavior of IABs. The developed 3-D FE model was calibrated with field measurements obtained from a previous study. A parametric study was carried out with the calibrated models to study the effects of the above parameters on the performance of IABs under thermal loading using the AASHTO load and resistance factor design temperature ranges. The study showed that most parameters have significant effects on the displacement and rotation of the abutment and the supporting piles. Also, for relatively wide IABs, there were significant variations in the displacement and rotations in the substructure elements between interior and exterior locations. This approach, which used simple equations and charts and included parameters such as the length of the bridge, the stiffness of the foundation soil, and the pile location, provided results that were comparable with those of a detailed FE analysis.


2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 511-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jimin Huang ◽  
Carol K. Shield ◽  
Catherine E. W. French

2016 ◽  
Vol 846 ◽  
pp. 421-427
Author(s):  
Ahmed S. Alqarawi ◽  
Chin J. Leo ◽  
D.S. Liyanapathirana ◽  
Sanka Ekanayake

Integral Abutment Bridges are widely utilized around the world because they offer a design alternative minimizing the potential construction and maintenance difficulties associated with expansion joints in other types of bridges. However, integral bridge systems also have certain issues that result from the absence of expansion joints. This is because temperature changes induce cycles of elongations and shortenings in the bridge deck which lead to rotational movements in bridge abutments against and away from the retained soil. This phenomenon may develop long term problems in terms of settlement of the backfill at the bridge approach and escalation in the lateral earth pressure acting on the bridge abutments. This paper aims to investigate the approach settlement and lateral earth pressure development in integral bridges abutments using finite element modelling of a concrete bridge abutment and the adjoining soil using the ABAQUS software. The paper presents a parametric study of the effects imposed by abutment movements on the retained soil. This study also investigates the effectiveness of using expanded polystyrene (EPS) geofoam inclusions as a remedial measure to minimize the approach settlement and lateral stress ratcheting effects in Integral Abutment Bridges.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (Special Issue on First SACEE'19) ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Bruno Briseghella ◽  
Fuyun Huang ◽  
Gabriele Fiorentino

Integral abutment bridges (IABs) are becoming rather common due to the durability problems of bearings and expansion joints. Monolithic connections between the deck and sub-structure allow, on one side, to increase the structure redundancy and reduce the maintenance costs. However, from the other side, soil-structure effects are also introduced due to the interactions between the abutment and the backfill and between the pile and soil induced by thermal variations, long-term effects (creep and shrinkage) and dynamic loads, such as earthquakes. Several authors have investigated the soil-structure interaction for IABs both theoretically and experimentally, but there is still a lack of common line guidelines and codes. After a literature review of the main studies regarding the seismic response of IABs, this paper introduces some recent contributions given by investigators in this field. In particular, the following topics are discussed: (a) an experimental study on an innovative deck to pier/abutment joint; (b) the possibility of using prestressed concrete or ultra-high performance piles in IABs; (c) a pile isolation technique based on a pre-hole filled with damping materials; and (d) a research project supported by European Union inside the Horizon 2020 SERA project on the seismic behaviour of novel integral abutment bridges. The paper clearly demonstrates the potential applications of the proposed technologies for IABs built in seismic zones.


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