Temporary Structural Health Monitoring of Historical Széchenyi Chain Bridge
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Evaluating the measurement results of a proof load test, which was carried out in 2018, to conclude whether fixed or partly fixed pins would start rotating due to a live load on the bridge;
- Assessing the temporary measurement results during reconstruction to conclude whether pins would start rotating due to reducing self-weight (dead load), which is mostly dominant for chain bridges.
2. Literature Review
3. Proof Load Test
3.1. Configuration and Measurement Locations
3.2. Load Cases
- Unloaded bridge;
- Three trucks in one lane in the middle span of the inflow side;
- Six trucks in one lane in the middle span of the inflow side;
- Nine trucks in one lane in the middle span of the inflow side;
- Twelve trucks in one lane in the middle span of the inflow side;
- Unloaded bridge (evaluating the effect of ΔT);
- Six trucks in the middle span of the outflow side;
- Twelve trucks in the middle span of the outflow side.
- Unloaded bridge (evaluating the effect of ΔT);
- Ten trucks, five in each side span, on the inflow side;
- Unloaded bridge (evaluating the effect of ΔT);
- Ten trucks, five on each side span, on the outflow side;
- Unloaded bridge (evaluating the effect of ΔT).
3.3. Measurement Results
4. Temporary Monitoring System
4.1. Configuration and Measurement Locations
4.2. Reconstruction Stages
- The crane runway is built on the superstructure (15 July 2021);
- Suspended scaffolding is installed, while the reinforced concrete slab is demolished in the main span (1 August 2021);
- Old steel stingers are dismantled in the main span, a new orthotropic deck is installed on half of the main span, and suspended scaffolding is installed in the side spans (3 November 2021);
- The old concrete slab and steel stringers are dismantled from the entire bridge, the new orthotropic deck is installed between the pylons, the sidewalks in the main span are dismantled, and the suspended scaffolding is dismantled (3 January 2022).
4.3. Measurement Results
5. Summary and Conclusions
- All the measured pins are stuck, so no rotations were expected due to the live load (proof test load), temperature change, or the removal of the concrete deck during the bridge reconstruction.
- The internal forces resulting from daily and/or seasonal temperature changes can equal or exceed the magnitude of the internal forces resulting from the design traffic load; the largest normal force and bending moment changes compared to the characteristic resistances from the proof load test are 3% and 10%, respectively, whereas they are 5% and 15%, respectively, for temperature changes.
- The effect of reconstruction was dominant, with the largest normal force and bending moment changes reaching 13% of the tensile resistance and 33% of the bending resistance, respectively, but these significant internal force changes could not cause the pins to rotate.
- Normal stresses due to bending within the chain elements are significant, and therefore, the bending component should always be considered in the static verification of the chain elements.
- Half-a-year-long monitoring of data could significantly contribute to the understanding of the structural behaviour of the Széchenyi Chain Bridge and its specialties, including (i) the error in the pin rotation capacity and (ii) significant internal forces due to temperature change, which were not previously considered significant issues during the design process.
- The change in normal force has a significant effect on the geometric stiffness of the chain system, as shown by the analysis of the monitoring system data. This effect can also be caused by temperature change, which warrants attention from the designers.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Fibre | Chain | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Top | Upper | 110–125 | 85–110 | 105–120 | 80–105 |
Lower | 100–125 | 110–135 | 100–140 | 95–140 | |
Neutral | Upper | 60–80 | 35–80 | 60–80 | 40–80 |
Lower | 55–70 40–50 | 35–80 | 65–85 | 25–80 | |
Bottom | Upper | 85–120 | 45–50 | 115–125 | |
Lower | 40–110 | 115–115 | 45–110 | 95–140 |
Chain | Quantity | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PLT | REC | ΔT | PLT | REC | ΔT | PLT | REC | ΔT | PLT | REC | ΔT | ||
Upper | ΔN [kN] | 1206 | 1517 | 1904 | 1036 | 1682 | 1439 | 1482 | 4568 | 1768 | 1042 | 2379 | 1426 |
ΔM [kNm] | 147 | 702 | 151 | 146 | 359 | 268 | 228 | 457 | 142 | 141 | 366 | 285 | |
Lower | ΔN [kN] | 998 | 2996 | 1215 | 801 | 2943 | 1134 | 1305 | - | 1316 | 959 | 2565 | 1132 |
ΔM [kNm] | 17 | 560 | 197 | 23 | 263 | 270 | 27 | - | 220 | 21 | 347 | 326 |
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Kövesdi, B.; Kollár, D.; Dunai, L. Temporary Structural Health Monitoring of Historical Széchenyi Chain Bridge. Buildings 2024, 14, 535. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14020535
Kövesdi B, Kollár D, Dunai L. Temporary Structural Health Monitoring of Historical Széchenyi Chain Bridge. Buildings. 2024; 14(2):535. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14020535
Chicago/Turabian StyleKövesdi, Balázs, Dénes Kollár, and László Dunai. 2024. "Temporary Structural Health Monitoring of Historical Széchenyi Chain Bridge" Buildings 14, no. 2: 535. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14020535
APA StyleKövesdi, B., Kollár, D., & Dunai, L. (2024). Temporary Structural Health Monitoring of Historical Széchenyi Chain Bridge. Buildings, 14(2), 535. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14020535