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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
171

Reduction of Bridge Pier Scour Through the Use of a Novel Collar Design

Valela, Christopher 03 June 2021 (has links)
Bridge piers within moving water are exposed to an additional failure mechanism known as scour. Upon the scour depth reaching the foundation of the pier, the structural integrity of the pier, and consequently the bridge, can be jeopardized. Bridge pier scour is the result of a three-dimensional flow separation consisting primarily of the horseshoe vortex, flow acceleration along the sides of the pier, and wake vortices. There are numerous factors that can affect bridge pier scour, of which many of them have been studied extensively. However, there are still some factors where the knowledge base is limited: one example is the presence of an ice cover around bridge piers. In order to reduce the risk of failure induced by scour, regardless of the cause, a preferred option is to use scour countermeasures. However, an ideal countermeasure does not exist. Therefore, the purpose of this research is to design and test an improved bridge pier scour countermeasure, while also better understanding the effects an ice cover has on scour. Achieving a new countermeasure design consisted of a hybrid approach that combined both numerical and experimental modelling. The numerical model was used in an iterative manner to expedite the design process, as well as to reduce experimental costs. Upon testing and improving the initial collar design numerically, physical models were constructed for the purpose of testing experimentally. Experimental tests were performed at a 1:30 scale in the presence of a sand bed. The same experimental setup was used to investigate bridge pier scour under an ice cover, except a rigid structure was constructed to replicate an ice cover. The artificial ice cover possessed either a smooth or a rough underside and was installed in such a way to replicate a floating or fixed (pressurized) ice cover. The purpose of the new countermeasure design was to improve on the flat plate collar by guiding the horseshoe vortex in a novel manner. By doing so, the quantity of erosive forces contacting the bed was greatly reduced. In order to reach a final design, a series of prototype designs were tested, and are outlined in this thesis, as they provide valuable insight into the scour problem. The final countermeasure design resembles a contoured collar but is made of riprap, where it was found to reduce the scour depth and volume by 81.0% and 92.3%, respectively, while using 18% less riprap than the conventional flat riprap countermeasure. Upon investigating scour in the presence of an ice cover, it was found that the quantity of scour increases as the ice cover becomes rougher and as the flow becomes more pressurized beneath. Specifically, the scour depth under the rough ice cover and the most pressurized condition increased by 412%. It was demonstrated that implementing any device which increases the width of the pier has inherent limitations for reducing scour. Instead, having a depression around the pier, especially made of riprap, such that it is flush with the bed and can help guide the horseshoe vortex, was found to greatly reduce scouring. Furthermore, it was observed that the presence of any ice cover on the surface of the water generates greater pier scour, therefore necessitating that ice cover always be taken into consideration when designing bridges in cold climates.
172

Data Analysis of Utah's I-80 Bridges - For the use in the Development of Accelerated Bridge Construction Standards

Rosvall, Erik S. 01 May 2010 (has links)
This study discusses five bridges on Utah's I-80 that were replaced in the summer of 2008 using Accelerated Bridge Construction methods. Each superstructure was built offsite and moved into place with the use of Self-Propelled Modular Transporters. The bridges were instrumented and monitored during the moving process to investigate the effects of moving an entire superstructure into place. Collected data was analyzed to find the level of stress each superstructure experienced during lifting, moving, and placement of each bridge. The change in supporting conditions from when the superstructure was built to being transferred onto Self-Propelled Modular Transporters caused significant stress reversals for all the bridges studied. A two-dimensional analysis was done using the dead load of the structure to find the initial stresses in the superstructure when supported on temporary abutments. The measured change in stress due to lifting was compared to calculations. The difference between these two stresses was defined as the lifting stress in the superstructure. Additionally, dynamic stresses incurred due to the bridge moving are determined to be within design tolerance.
173

Analysis of Effectiveness of Bridges with Partial Isolation

Hu, Wenying 01 December 2008 (has links)
The effectiveness of partial isolation is evaluated in this study. The static design procedures for linear and nonlinear partially isolated bridges are developed. Results from the static analysis of linear and nonlinear partially isolated bridges, compared with conventional and fully isolated bridges, demonstrate that the effectiveness of nonlinear partial isolation is close to full isolation for reducing the yield force and displacement of the columns in some parameter ranges. However, increased seismic demands on the abutment displacement in the bridge are observed. Nonlinear time history analysis of the different bridge models under earthquake excitations are carried out to investigate the accuracy of the design procedure for nonlinear partial isolation. In addition, an example shows the application of nonlinear partial isolation to a practical bridge.
174

Fire Hazard Assessment for Highway Bridges with Thermal Mechanical Modeling

Woodworth, Michael Allen 02 August 2013 (has links)
Bridges are critical pieces of infrastructure important to public safety and welfare. Fires have the potential to damage bridges and have been responsible for taking many bridges out of service. The hazard fire poses to bridges is a little studied risk unlike more common threats such as impact, scour and earthquake. Information on the rate of occurrence of bridge fires and the mechanisms of structural response of bridges subjected to fire are both vital to policy makers seeking to address the hazard rationally. The investigation presented developed frequency statistics of bridge fire incidents from several sources of vehicle accident and fire statistics. To further investigate the fire hazard a computational model integrating the simulation of large fires and the simulation of bridge superstructure mechanical response was created. The simulation was used to perform a parametric study of fire size and location to investigate the relationship between these parameters and damage tot bridge super-""structure. The statistics investigation resulted in an observed rate of fires due to vehicle accidents of approximately 175 per year. Approximately one of these per year was the result of a tanker truck carrying a flammable liquid leading to extensive superstructure damage. The simulation showed that a tanker fire resulted in permanent damage to the bridge by several measures where as the affects of a bus fire were minimal. The simulations also demonstrated the mechanisms of bridge response; the importance of girder temperature in that response; and the differences in the response to a tanker fire that can lead to collapse. / Ph. D.
175

A program to play contract bridge

Carley, Gay Loran January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, 2004. / MIT Instute Archives copy: reproduced from microfiche held by MIT Barker Engineering Library. / "June, 1962." / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 46). / by Gay Loran Carley. / M.S.
176

Most 203 na dálnici D1 v Považské Bystrici / Bridge No. 203 on the highway D1, Považská Bystrica

Mudrík, Marián January 2022 (has links)
The diploma thesis deals with alternative design of bridge on highway D1 near Považská Bystrica. Bridge is designed as composite steel-concrete bridge with 6 spans in length 35,7m + 42m + 42m + 42m + 42m + 35,7m. Overall length of superstructure of the bridge is 241m. Construction material used in design is steel S355, concrete C35/45 and reinforcing steel bars are grade B500B. Calculation of superstructure of two variants was performed in preliminary design. First variant is twin-girder structure system and box-girder structure system is second variant. Selected twin-girder bridge was developed in more complex structural design report. Direct erection in place with temporary piers was selected as assembly method of steel structure. Slab concreting will be done by mobile formwork. The design and calculation of the bridge structure was carried out according to valid European design codes. The diploma thesis includes engineering report, structural design report of variants, structural design report of final variant, bill of quantities of assembly parts and drawing documentation.
177

An alginate impression method to detect dental caries in patients with crown and bridge restorations

Mentz, Nicolaas Johannes 10 April 2008 (has links)
Abstract Introduction: Patients with numerous crowns and bridges are at risk of developing secondary caries on cervical margins of the crowns. This recurrent decay accounts for 60% of the reasons for the replacement of restorations. Detection and treatment of subclinical lesions is important to prevent cavitation. An alginate impression material has been used to locate cariogenic bacteria in established carious lesions. Aims: An alginate impression technique was used to assess the level of Streptococcus mutans and Lactobacilli on the crown margins of the teeth of the restored group and control subjects. Conventional caries activity tests were also used to compare these two groups. Methods: Twenty control group subjects with no crowns and a mean DMFS of 16 and 20 the restored group patients with at least 10 crowns and a mean DMFS of 129 were included in the study. Impressions were taken with a hydrocolloid material mixed with culture broth, incubated and examined for the presence of S. mutans and Lactobacilli on the cervical margins. The results were compared using the two-sample t-test, chi-squared test and a generalized logistic regression analysis. Results: More S. mutans and Lactobacilli were cultured on impressions of the restored group than the control patients (p=0.01 and 0.002). A higher proportion of patients in the restored group had high concentrations of S. mutans and Lactobacilli on their teeth than subjects in the control group (p < 0.001). In the restored group, sixty six per cent of teeth in the posterior and 48% in the anterior segment were crowns. S. mutans and Lactobacilli were found in higher concentrations on the posterior than the anterior teeth of the restored group patients than the control patients (p = 0.016 and 0.047). Furthermore, more Lactobacilli were cultured from the saliva of the restored group than control subjects while the buffering capacity of plaque and the ability of saliva to neutralize acids were lower in the restored group than control group subjects. Conclusion: The impression technique showed that S. mutans and Lactobacilli accumulated in the posterior of the mouth and were associated with crowns indicating these particular sites are at risk.
178

Inspection of Timber Bridge Longitudinal Decks with Ground Penetrating Radar

Brashaw, Brian K 13 December 2014 (has links)
Advanced nondestructive inspection techniques like stress wave timing and resistance microdrilling have been used to successfully inspection timber bridges, but it is most effective on girder style bridges. There is a noted need to develop additional inspection techniques for longitudinal deck/slab timber bridges, which comprise about 20% of the national bridge inventory. One technique that holds potential is ground penetrating radar, a recognized nondestructive testing technique that has been used effectively for many different environmental and transportation applications. It has been utilized successfully to identify buried objects, internal defects and material changes. The objective of this research was to assess the potential for using GPR to identify and assess simulated deterioration in longitudinal timber deck timber bridges. GPR scans were completed in the longitudinal and transverse directions of a screwlaminated timber bridge deck before and after a bituminous layer was added to assess embedded defects that simulated voids, decay, insect damage and horizontal shear splitting. Assessment of the GPR wave energy signal was completed using visualization software that was provided with the commercial GPR unit used for the testing. The radar signal was analyzed in both the longitudinal direction (antenna front to back) and the transverse direction (antenna side to side). Interpretation of the radar signals allowed for the identification of various internal defects present in the deck. Based on the results, GPR has the potential to identify internal defects in timber bridge decks before and after a bituminous layer was added. Large, rectangular void defects (at least 6? by 12? by 5 in. (15.2? by 30.4? by 12.7 cm)) that were hollow, filled with foam, or filled with sawdust/adhesive were most easily identified under all scanning conditions. The addition of a bituminous layer, common to slab bridge construction, damped the signal response and made it more difficult to identify defects. Several smaller defects that were found in the deck without a bituminous layer were not identified in scanning completed after the bituminous layer was added.
179

Transient Stability of the Wien Bridge Oscillator

Skillen, Richard Prescott 05 1900 (has links)
In many Resistance-Capacitance Oscillators the oscillation amplitude is controlled by the use of a temperature-dependent resistor incorporated in the negative feedback loop. The use of thermistors and tungsten lamps is discussed and an approximate analysis is presented for the behaviour of the tungsten lamp. The result is applied in an analysis of the familiar Wien Bridge Oscillator both for the presence of a linear circuit and a cubic nonlinearity. The linear analysis leads to a highly unstable transient response which is uncommon to most oscillators. The inclusion of the slight cubic nonlinearity, however, leads to a result which is in close agreement to the observed response. / Thesis / Master of Engineering (MEngr)
180

Prefabricated composite bridges : a study of dry deck joints / Prefabricerade samverkansbroar : en studie av torra farbanefogar

Hällmark, Robert January 2012 (has links)
This thesis deals with prefabricated composite bridges in general, and prefabricated concrete deck elements with dry joints in particular.As outlined in Paper I and Chapter 2 prefabrication has several advantages over in situ construction, and has hence been discussed for decades in the construction business. Further, the house building sector has taken large steps towards a more industrialized approach, in which prefabrication, lean thinking and Building Information Modelling (BIM) are all important components. Numerous studies have also examined the applicability of such an approach in the bridge sector, and several types of prefabrication techniques have been tested. Nevertheless, in many countries the bridge sector seems to lag far behind in the general shift towards more industrialized construction processes. One of the reasons for the relatively slow progress may be the fact that bridges are often unique objects with unique specifications and constraints. This hinders the standardisation that is often regarded as a key to industrialised construction.Chapter 2-3 and Paper I, presents evidence from a literature review together with information gathered from a Workshop, attended by bridge designers and researcher in Europe and the US, that prefabricated deck elements are still quite rarely used in bridge construction. Deck elements with dry transverse joints are even rarer. Few examples have been reported. In addition, the degree of prefabrication and the rate of progress towards more industrialised construction processes seem to vary substantially from one country to another.However, as described in Chapter 3 and Paper II, a prefabricated concrete deck element system with dry joints has been developed in Sweden for constructing composite bridges. The transverse joints are completely dry, and all forces are transferred by contact pressure between concrete surfaces. This implies that no tensional forces can be transferred over the transverse joints. Shear forces are transferred by overlapping concrete shear keys, designed as a series of male-female connections. The research presented in this thesis is focused on the structural behaviour of this deck element system. In order to investigate this, laboratory tests have been performed as well as field monitoring.Results of large-scale laboratory tests, presented in Chapter 4 and Paper V, show that a bridge of this type is less stiff than a similar bridge with an insitu cast deck slab. The concrete elements’ contributions to stiffness are negligible in sections with hogging moments, but make some contribution to global stiffness in sections with sagging moments. At moderate load levels, the interacting concrete area is much smaller than in a similar in-situ cast section. This is believed to be due to the combined effects of small gaps in the joints and continuous in-situ cast concrete in the injection channels.After the channels have been injected, existing gaps will be more or less permanent, since the in-situ cast concrete must be compressed up to a certain limit before the rest of the joint will be closed. Destructive testing showed that the differences in stiffness and stresses between a deck of this type and an in-situ cast bridge deck are much smaller in the ultimate limit state. In this case it could even be reasonable to design a cross-section according to Eurocodes, neglecting effects of the joints.As shown in Chapter 5 and Paper III, the overlapping shear keys are a critical detailing in this deck system. Therefore, they were tested in the laboratory to determine how they fail and evaluate their load capacity. The tests revealed two failure modes. The first is a rather ductile failure, activating the shear reinforcement. This was the expected failure mode for shear keys of this design. The second failure mode observed was a quite brittle failure in the concrete covering layer. It has only been observed in small-scale tests, and might be related to the test set-up. Nevertheless, overlapping of the rebars in the male-female shear key connection is strongly recommended to assure the robustness of shear transfer if failure occurs in the concrete covering layer.To complement the laboratory tests, a single span bridge was monitored in the field (Chapter 6 and Paper IV). The bridge was built in 2000, using the prefabricated deck system that this thesis is focusing on, and was tested in both 2001 and 2011. The tests, and subsequent Finite Element analyses, showed that under moderate loading the interacting concrete area is smaller than for a similar in-situ cast bridge. No significant long-term effects were observed, except that under eccentric loading the distribution of the deflection between the girders decreased slightly during the 10 years between tests. This indicates that the joint gaps may have narrowed and at least partly closed during this time.Chapter 7 summarises the research and presents recommendations for dealing with general issues related to the design and construction of a bridge of this type. The design methods are generally the same as for a conventional composite bridge with an in-situ cast deck slab. However, the Eurocodes require some modification for the design of prefabricated deck elements with dry joints, particularly regarding global analysis and the resistance of cross-sections. Finally, conclusions, a general discussion and suggestions for further research are presented in Chapter 8. / Denna avhandling behandlar ämnet prefabricerade samverkansbroar i allmänhet och prefabricerade betongelementfarbanor med torra fogar i synnerhetPrefabricering är ett ämne som har diskuterats i byggbranschen under de senaste decennierna. Husbyggnadsindustrin har gjort stora framsteg i riktning mot ett mer industriellt tänkande, i vilket prefabricering, Lean och BIM är viktiga pusselbitar. Även i brobranschen har mängder med forskningsprojekt utförts runt om i världen och flertalet olika prefabricering lösningar har testats genom åren. Trots detta så förefaller det så att brobranschen ligger lång efter i utvecklingen mot en mer industrialiserad byggprocess. Den långsamma utvecklingen kan till viss del förklaras av att varje bro ofta är ett unikt objekt med unika förutsättningar. Detta utgör ett hinder mot standardisering vilket ofta är beskrivet som nyckeln till industrialiserat byggande.En litteratur studie kompletterad med en Workshop, för insamling av information och erfarenheter från brokonstruktörer och forskare i Europa och USA, visar att prefabricerade farbaneelement fortfarande är ganska ovanliga på den globala byggmarknaden. Farbaneelement med torra fogar förefaller vara extremt ovanliga, enbart ett fåtal exempel har påträffats i litteraturstudien. Prefabriceringsnivån och utvecklingstakten mot ett mer industriellt byggande varierar mycket från ett land till ett annat. (Paper I och Kapitel 2-3)För samverkansbroar har ett prefabricerat farbanesystem med torra fogar mellan betongelementen utvecklats i Sverige. De tvärgående fogarna är helt torra och all kraft överförs genom kontakttryck mellan olika betongytor. Detta medför att inga dragkrafter alls kan överföras genom fogen. Tvärkrafterna överförs genom överlappande betongklackar som är utformade som en serie av hane-hona kopplingar. Forskningen som presenteras i denna avhandling är fokuserad på konstruktionens strukturella beteende. Detta beteende har undersökts via labbtester såväl som genom fältförsök. (Paper II och Kapitel 3)Storskaliga labbtester visar att en bro av denna typ är mindre styv än en liknande bro med en plastgjuten farbaneplatta. I områden med negativt böjmoment är betongelementens bidrag till styvheten försumbart. I områden med positivt böjmoment bidrar betongelementen till den globala styvheten. Vid måttlig belastning är dock den medverkande betongarean avsevärt mindre än i en motsvarande platsgjuten konstruktion. Detta orsakas förmodligen av de små glipor som finns i fogarna, i kombination med det faktum att de injekterade kanalerna är kontinuerliga över elementskarvarna. Detta medför att de initiala fogöppningarna mer eller mindre blir permanenta då kanalen injekteras, eftersom den injekterade betongen i kanalen måste tryckas samman till en viss gräns innan den resterande delen av fogen stängs. Förstörande provning visar dock att skillnaderna i spänningar och styvhet är avsevärt mindre i brottgränstillståndet. Det är därför rentav rimligt att utföra tvärsnittskontroller, i brottgränstillstånd, i enlighet med de regler som anges i Eurokoderna och därmed försumma de effekter som fogarna ger upphov till. (Paper V och Kapitel 4)De överlappande betongklackarna är en väsentlig detalj i det aktuella prefabriceringssystemet. Dessa klackar har därför testats i ett laboratorium för att för utreda hur de går i brott samt vilken last kapacitet som de har. Testerna resulterade i två olika typer av brott. Den första typen av brott aktiverade skjuvarmeringen, vilket resulterade i ett tämligen duktilt brott. Denna var även det förväntande brottscenariot och tämligen i linje med de dimensionerings metoder som föreslås för denna typ av betongklackar. Den andra typen av brott som observerades var ett tämligen sprött brott i betongens täckskikt. Denna typ av brott har enbart observerats i dessa labbtester och är möjligen relaterad till utformningen av testriggen. Det rekommenderas dock starkt att utforma armeringen i klackarna så att armeringsjärnen i hona-hane överföringen överlappar varandra. Detta för att säkerhetsställa en residualhållfasthet för skjuvöverföringen även efter ett eventuellt brott i betongens täckskikt i klackarna. (Paper III och Kapitel 5)Som ett komplement till labbtesterna har fältförsök utförs på en enspannsbro. Den aktuella bron byggdes år 2000 med den prefabriceringsteknik som denna avhandling behandlar och har instrumenterats såväl år 2001 som 2011. Även dessa tester och de efterföljande FE-analyserna visar att den medverkande betongarean, under måttlig belastning, är klart mindre än den medverkande arean för en platsgjuten betongfarbana. Inga väsentliga långtidseffekter har kunnat observeras. Enbart nedböjningsfördelningen mellan balkarna, vid excentrisk last, har minskat en del efter 10 år. Denna skillnad kan indikera att fog öppningarna var större år 2011, dessa kan åtminstone delvis ha stängts under den tid som förlöpt mellan testen. (Paper IV och Kapitel 6)Huvuddelen av denna avhandling avslutas med ett kapitel som summerar den utförda forskningen genom att presentera råd och förslag på hur det går att hantera generella konstruktions- och produktions-frågor för en bro av denna typ. Dimensioneringsmetoderna är i regel de samma som för en konventionell samverkansbro med platsgjuten farbana. För denna typ av prefabricerade farbaneelement finns det dock vissa områden där dimensioneringsreglerna i Eurokoderna bör modifieras eller rentav ändras. Systemanalys och tvärsnittskontroll är två av de dimensioneringssteg där reglerna i Eurokoderna bör modifieras en del. (Kapitel 7)

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