dison
Structural
- Nov 13, 2001
- 41
Please give me your opinions on what exactly is going on with the following situation:
- short simple span bridge
- two concrete slab girders side by side
- bearing at each end on one or more elastomeric pads
- no positive connection holding the girder down
to the substructure (gravity only)
- no transverse connection of the girders
(no tie rods & no cast-in-place concrete deck)
- eccentric live load toward center of bridge
- live loads are large compared to dead load
Under the eccentric load does torsion develop? Is sufficient restraint provided at the ends of the girder to prevent rotation and develop torsion? If so, how would you quantify it? Obviously, the reaction on the elastomeric pads would follow a distribution greatest at the center of the bridge and least at the outsides. Would this cause rotation of the whole girder toward the center of the bridge (however small), thereby preventing torsion?
If not, how would you consider the eccentric loading? Would there be transverse bending of some sort? Would you look at only the loaded portion of the girder to be effective in resisting the loads? (i.e. ignore the outer portion of the slab for normal flexure and shear calculations) or some type of shear transfer between longitudinal sections? ~dison
- short simple span bridge
- two concrete slab girders side by side
- bearing at each end on one or more elastomeric pads
- no positive connection holding the girder down
to the substructure (gravity only)
- no transverse connection of the girders
(no tie rods & no cast-in-place concrete deck)
- eccentric live load toward center of bridge
- live loads are large compared to dead load
Under the eccentric load does torsion develop? Is sufficient restraint provided at the ends of the girder to prevent rotation and develop torsion? If so, how would you quantify it? Obviously, the reaction on the elastomeric pads would follow a distribution greatest at the center of the bridge and least at the outsides. Would this cause rotation of the whole girder toward the center of the bridge (however small), thereby preventing torsion?
If not, how would you consider the eccentric loading? Would there be transverse bending of some sort? Would you look at only the loaded portion of the girder to be effective in resisting the loads? (i.e. ignore the outer portion of the slab for normal flexure and shear calculations) or some type of shear transfer between longitudinal sections? ~dison