Abstract

Cable-supported structures such as bridges and stadia are critical for the surrounding community and the consequences arising from a major fire event can be substantial. Previous computational studies into the thermal response of cables often employed simplistic heat transfer models that assumed lump capacitance or cross-sectional homogeneity without proof of validity. This paper proposes a methodology for calculating the thermal response of a cable cross-section allowing for heat transfer by conduction through each strand contact surface and radiation across inter-strand cavities. The methodology has been validated against two experiments of cables subjected to radiant heating and an input sensitivity analysis has been undertaken for the heat transfer and material parameters. The approach is compared against simple heat transfer lumped methods for a parallel-strand cable where it is shown that these lumped models are not always conservative. The model is then coupled with a two-dimensional generalised plain strain model to study the likely effect of the cross-sectional temperature gradients on the mechanical response. The study considers three qualitatively different hydrocarbon jet fire scenarios, both with and without external insulation for fire protection. It is shown that the proposed methodology can reproduce realistic cross-sectional temperature distributions with up to 50% temperature difference at the cable external surface and can capture the phenomenon of load shedding in a gradually heated cable. It is also shown that assuming a lumped thermal mass neglects the possibility of moment-inducing temperature gradients which are not considered in the ambient design of cables that is driven by tensile capacities. The proposed model and its predictions contribute towards an improved understanding and a more informed structural design of cable-supported structures in fire.

Highlights

  • The design of bridges involves the assessment and evaluation of effects caused by all actions that may occur during the bridge’s life

  • The aim of this paper is to offer a rigorous two-dimensional heat transfer methodology for use in the analysis of any cable cross-section, considering heat transfer between the strands by both radiation and conduction across inner cavities and contact surfaces

  • Heat transfer between individual strands is assumed to occur by conduction and radiation across the contact surface and interstitial air cavities respectively, with the air cavities typically being too narrow to permit convection

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Summary

Introduction

The design of bridges involves the assessment and evaluation of effects caused by all actions that may occur during the bridge’s life. The probability of occurrence of an accidental fire event on or around a bridge leading to a structurally significant thermal load can be relatively low, but the consequences are potentially severe and may need to be strategically considered in design. Only very limited experimental evidence exists on the mechanical response of cables due to the practical difficulties in testing loaded large diameter long-span cables until failure. The mechanical response model described in this study will benefit from further calibration based on future experimental evidence as it becomes available. Such studies should highlight the potential influence of the applied load on the thermal performance of the cables. This study will help to inform which model input parameters should be prioritised in future research

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