Development of the Historical Analysis of the Seismic Parameters for Retroffiting Measures in Chilean Bridges
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
- Seismic demand and structural analysis behavior, including the phenomena of extreme events on bridges and vulnerability;
- Bridge management and inspection programs, including pathologies and performance indicators related to extreme events;
- Performance design and seismic design provision, including the structural elements and mechanical outfitting.
2.1. Evolution of Bridges and Seismic Events Studies
2.2. Bridge Management System and Inspections
2.3. Theoretical Analysis of the Seismic Provision of the Manual de Carreterras (2019)
- Bridges facing moderate earthquakes have to provide an elastic behavior;
- Bridges facing medium earthquakes have to mitigate damage to the non-structural elements;
- Bridges facing large earthquakes have to avoid the collapse of the structure.
- The use of external and intermediate diaphragms, regardless of the seismic area or the type of girders to be installed;
- The use of external and intermediate seismic stoppers, located both on the abutments and piers. The stoppers must act as fusible elements when they impact the diaphragms due to the transversal displacement of the superstructure;
- The external and intermediate seismic stoppers must be designed for an Ao vertical acceleration. The gap between the internal stoppers and diaphragm must be equal to the maximum height of the bearing supports, plus 5 cm. The intermediate seismic stoppers have to be 7 cm;
- Increase the minimum length of the bearing support based on the following formulae:
- The elastomeric support for the girders must be fully anchored to the infrastructure and the corresponding girder;
- Vertical bars must be used to restrict the vertical displacement and reduce efforts on the bearing supports;
- Devices must be used to prevent the loss of longitudinal support on the girders.
3. Methods Section
- Classification of information about each bridge was made, setting general parameters, such as the name, location in the region, province, and route where the bridge was built. Additionally, specific parameters were considered, such as typology, length of the bridge, the main span, number of existing spans, width of the carriage way, total deck width, and materials of the deck;
- The elements considered in the infrastructure were the length of the bearing support, the presence of seismic stoppers, the configuration of the wing-wall abutment, and the typology of piers and foundations. For the superstructure, we considered the number, separation, material, and dimension of the girders, the arrangement of the seismic bars, the location and material of the diaphragms, the typology of bearing, and the expansion joints;
- After determining the parameters of each bridge, we clustered the bridges of similar typology to set a sort of seismic provision per decade.
4. Results
- AASHTO: 1935–1953;
- Norm for the project calculations of reinforced concrete road bridges (Alberto Claro Velazco): 1954–1980;
- Manual de Carreteras: Vol. 3—1980;
- Nuevos Critérios Sismicos—2010–2011;
- Manual de Carreteras Vol. 3—2017–2019.
4.1. General Typology
4.2. Main Girders
4.3. Foundation
4.4. Piers
4.5. Bearing Support
4.6. Seismic Bars
4.7. Seismic Stoppers
4.8. Bearing Length
4.9. Expansion Joints
5. Discussion
5.1. Seismic Provision Analysis
- The main pathologies observed in several earthquake events in Chile include: horizontal displacement of the superstructure, settlement and damage on structural elements (main girders), and seismic provision (buckling of seismic bar, impact and damage of bearing support and expansion joint) [28];
- The three main parameters are the lack of seismic stoppers, undersized bearing lengths, and the use of expansion joints. This seismic provision has to be considered a comprehensive mechanical outfitting system. The system applied to the traditional Chilean bridges of simple supported bridges, as well as straight and skewed, and their subsequent performances, must consider the superstructure’s constraints due to excessive horizontal displacement:
- (a)
- In that case, not using seismic stoppers produces an uncontrolled horizontal displacement of the superstructure. If we use a stopper with a reduced dimension, the constraint could be ineffective and possibly collapse due to the aftershock. On the other hand, using a seismic stopper can impact the main girder and not the crossbeam, making it possible to reduce the transverse displacement. However, this provokes damage in the main girder. This condition is against the performance target: to protect the main elements;
- (b)
- An undersized bearing length is considered for longitudinal and transverse displacement. This condition is most relevant in curved or skewed bridges because their displacement is combined, with undersize parameters even further reduced due to the superstructure’s torsional effects. The use of a stopper and the length size have to be studied and correlated. The longitudinal and transverse stoppers have to be considered in curved bridges and sloped ones;
- (c)
- The typology of the expansion joint is fitted due to the original structural analysis of the typology. The pathology observed on several bridges under seismic events is a collapse of this device. Change to the expansion joint modifies the superstructure’s general displacement and provides a better seismic performance. Despite this, a careful study must be performed to reduce the intervention on old concrete slabs and ensure the adequate compatibility of base materials. Similarly, a dimension study of each element must be considered.
5.2. Practical Implications
- Replacement of bearing support;
- Replacement of expansion joint;
- Retrofitting of girder (steel and precast).
- Increasing the length bearing support in abutment and piers;
- Including intermediate and external stoppers;
- Replacement of hold-downs;
- Including crossbeam or bracing.
5.3. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Type of Girders | Quantity | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Post-stressed | 236 | 42.68% |
Pre-stressed | 70 | 12.66% |
Steel | 184 | 33.27% |
Slab | 20 | 3.62% |
Box Girder | 5 | 0.90% |
Arch | 3 | 0.54% |
Reinforced concrete | 14 | 2.53% |
Reinforced concrete Gerber | 7 | 1.27% |
N/I | 14 | 2.53% |
Total= | 553 | 100% |
Type of Piers | ||
---|---|---|
Wall | 133 | 24.05% |
Pile-pier | 142 | 25.68% |
Portal frame | 3 | 0.54% |
Steel portal frame | 2 | 0.36% |
N/I | 273 | 49.37% |
Total= | 553 | 100% |
Seismic Bars | ||
---|---|---|
Vertical | 471 | 85.17% |
Diagonal | 30 | 5.43% |
Vertical/diagonal | 2 | 0.36% |
Horizontal | 2 | 0.36% |
N/I | 48 | 8.68% |
Total= | 553 | 100% |
Bearing Table | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Min. | Max. | Mode |
1920–1940 | 0.30 m | 0.65 m | Not applicable |
1940–1950 | 0.40 m | 0.50 m | Not applicable |
1950–1960 | 0.35 m | 0.50 m | 0.40 m |
1960–1970 | 0.35 m | 1.10 m | 0.50 m |
1970–1980 | 0.30 m | 0.75 m | 0.50 m |
1980–1990 | 0.30 m | 1.17 m | 0.50 m |
1990–2000 | 0.35 m | 1.25 m | 0.70 m |
2000–2010 | 0.50 m | 2.05 m | 0.70 m |
Expansion Joint Type | ||
---|---|---|
Edge reinforcing-type | 295 | 53.35% |
Elastomeric | 179 | 32.37% |
Transflex | 5 | 0.90% |
ProFlex | 1 | 0.18% |
VSL | 1 | 0.18% |
JNA | 2 | 0.36% |
PVC (polyvinyl chloride) | 1 | 0.18% |
Neoprene | 1 | 0.18% |
No Information | 68 | 12.30% |
Total= | 553 | 100% |
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Calderón, E.; Valenzuela, M.; Minatogawa, V.; Pinto, H. Development of the Historical Analysis of the Seismic Parameters for Retroffiting Measures in Chilean Bridges. Buildings 2023, 13, 274. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020274
Calderón E, Valenzuela M, Minatogawa V, Pinto H. Development of the Historical Analysis of the Seismic Parameters for Retroffiting Measures in Chilean Bridges. Buildings. 2023; 13(2):274. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020274
Chicago/Turabian StyleCalderón, Enrique, Matías Valenzuela, Vinicius Minatogawa, and Hernán Pinto. 2023. "Development of the Historical Analysis of the Seismic Parameters for Retroffiting Measures in Chilean Bridges" Buildings 13, no. 2: 274. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020274
APA StyleCalderón, E., Valenzuela, M., Minatogawa, V., & Pinto, H. (2023). Development of the Historical Analysis of the Seismic Parameters for Retroffiting Measures in Chilean Bridges. Buildings, 13(2), 274. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020274