Abstract

A new concept for bridge tower designs in seismic zones incorporates sacrificial link schemes that enable the tower shafts to remain elastic under large seismic excitation. In order to study the influence of inelastic tower links on the seismic response of cable-supported bridges, global seismic time history analyses were performed on models of the new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge East Span self-anchored suspension bridge (SASB) and a cable-stayed bridge (CSB) alternative. The addition of inelastic links to the signature tower improved the behavior of both structures. The tower and overall bridge demands were reduced, including the tower drift and moments as well as the suspension cable, cable stay, and superstructure drifts and axial loads. The inelastic tower links protected the SASB and CSB tower shafts from nonlinear behavior under the 1,500-year Safety Evaluation Earthquake (SEE) event as well as a 2,500-year event. When the inelastic tower links were removed, the SASB tower shafts yielded under the SEE. It was shown that the inelastic tower links could be used to tune the dynamic response of bridge towers in regions of high seismicity.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call