Abstract

Millions of in-service concrete bridges around the world are exceeding their design life. Corrosion may lead to a sudden fracture of prestressing steels, and understanding the fatigue behavior of corroded prestressed concrete (PC) bridges is essential. Accordingly, an effective fatigue analytical model for corroded PC beams is needed. In this study, an experimental investigation of the fatigue behavior of corroded PC beams, was carried out. Thirteen PC beams had experienced acceleration corrosion before high-cycle fatigue testing. All beams failed due to fatigue fracture of the corroded tensile steel bars, and three-dimensional laser scanning results indicated that the fracture occurred at the minimum cross sections with a severe corrosion pit. A segmented linear analytical model to evaluate fatigue response and predict fatigue life was developed which considers fatigue irrecoverable plastic strain of concrete, stress concentration, and longitudinal variation in the cross-sectional areas of corroded steel bars. There is an acceptable agreement between the numerical and experimental results of corroded PC beams. The proposed model can reasonably predict the evolution of strains in concrete, corroded prestressing steel, and rebars in PC beams under high-cycle fatigue loading, thereby allowing fatigue life prediction. Further analysis studied the influence of degree of corrosion in prestressing wires/rebars, stress concentration and longitudinal variation in cross-sectional areas of corroded steel bars, load ranges, and partial prestressing ratios (PPRs). It was found that, to reasonably estimate the fatigue life of corroded PC beams, the influence of stress concentration must be considered with the proposed impact factor. A higher corrosion degree, load range, or PPR shortens the fatigue life of corroded PC beams.

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