Abstract

Triple-cable design of suspension bridges with an ultrawide main girder can improve their mechanical properties, making it lucrative for numerous engineering scenarios. However, its realization requires assigning an appropriate share of the dead load of the main girder supported by three main cables to avoid the middle main cable overload by the main girder’s dead load since the latter would impair the mechanical behavior of the upper transverse beams in the towers and deteriorate the whole bridge’s torsional stiffness. Therefore, this study proposes an analytical approach for dead load allocation to the suspension bridge with three main cables, which adjusts the share of the main girder’s dead load supported by three main cables via changing the unstrained lengths of the hangers. The main advantage of the proposed approach is that it can consider both uniform and nonuniform allocations. The spatial model for the suspension bridge with three cable planes is first converted into a plane model. The relationship between unstrained lengths of the three hangers in the same cross section is determined via the deformation compatibility conditions and one of the following options: (1) equality of stiffness of the two side hangers in the case of a symmetrical plane model; or (2) energy conservation conditions in case of an asymmetrical one. The proposed method was applied to an example of a triple-cable suspension bridge with a main span of 2,100 m and a width of 75 m, and its analytical solutions were compared against finite-element method calculation results. An increase in the share of the main girder’s dead load supported by the two side main cables increased the torsional stiffness of the whole bridge and reduced the vertical load exerted by the middle main cable on the top transverse beam of each tower. Meanwhile, variation of the share of the main girder’s dead load supported by the side and middle main cables only slightly influenced the whole bridge’s vertical and lateral stiffness values. The aforementioned adjustment by the proposed method could be accomplished without increasing the steel consumption of the bridge cables. The results could provide references for the design, static, and dynamic response analysis of similar triple-cable ultrawide suspension bridges.

Full Text
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