Hybrid approach combining modelling and measurement for fatigue damage estimation of welded connections in bridges
Kwad, J; Kripakaran, P
Date: 3 March 2020
Journal
Structure and Infrastructure Engineering
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The fatigue life of structural steel bridges is governed by the time history of in-situ
stresses at its fatigue-critical structural details under service conditions. However,
these stresses are often not directly and accurately measurable due to the complex
geometry of the detail or due to access restrictions. This paper proposes ...
The fatigue life of structural steel bridges is governed by the time history of in-situ
stresses at its fatigue-critical structural details under service conditions. However,
these stresses are often not directly and accurately measurable due to the complex
geometry of the detail or due to access restrictions. This paper proposes a novel
methodology to address this challenge. The methodology infers stresses at fatigue8 critical locations by combining in-situ strain measurements taken further away
from a critical location in a full-scale bridge. Strains measured at various points
around the physical welded connection are used to compute the forces and
moments applied at the connection. These forces are then applied to a finite
element model of the connection to predict the stresses that are required to evaluate
the hot spot stresses. The developed methodology is illustrated for a welded
connection in a full-scale bridge. Results show that the predicted time history of
hot spot stress is accurate and much more realistic than those obtained from
numerical simulations. Also, the study demonstrates that the proposed
methodology is applicable for interpreting measurements from full-scale bridges
and can be integrated within a measurement interpretation platform for continuous
bridge monitoring
Engineering
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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