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Fatigue Performance of Steel-Concrete Composite Continuous Box Girder Bridge Deck
Author(s) -
Yuanxun Zheng,
Zhanlin Cao,
Pan Guo,
Pu Gao,
Peng Zhang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
complexity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.447
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1099-0526
pISSN - 1076-2787
DOI - 10.1155/2021/6610830
Subject(s) - structural engineering , slab , deck , bridge (graph theory) , box girder , durability , bridge deck , beam (structure) , track (disk drive) , materials science , beam bridge , punching , girder , composite number , engineering , composite material , medicine , mechanical engineering
The fatigue performance of the bridge deck significantly affects the safety and durability of the overall steel-concrete composite beam bridge. Based on the vehicle flow information of the highway within 10 years, the fatigue performance of a two-way four-lane steel-concrete composite continuous beam bridge deck is studied in this research. The results indicate that the effect of the wheel track position is negligible for two-way four-lane bridge when the wheel track sways laterally, and the fatigue stress of bridge deck concrete is the most unfavorable while the loading position is 7.0 m away from the bridge center line. The fatigue damage decreases by 30%–40% when the centerline of the lane deviates from the most unfavorable stress position by 1 m. The punching fatigue of the concrete is more sensitive to the changes in slab thickness, and the thickness of the deck concrete slab is recommended to be ≥35 cm.

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