Abstract
Flood-induced failure of river bridges is intense due to frequently extreme and undesigned precipitation for global climate change. To reveal the dynamic characteristics and failure mechanism of bridges, flooding dynamic analysis is fully investigated via fluid–structure interaction simulation and Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian method. Parametric analysis of different fluids and bridge configurations and pre-ballast mitigation measure are further conducted based on a simply-supported box-girder bridge. This study reveals several significant findings: the narrow channel can accelerate downstream flood velocity of the bridge piers to over double that of the upstream flow; moreover, unsubmerged piers experience vertical downward wave force surpassing buoyancy; the box girders exhibit three flood-response states, i.e., intact, slip and collapse, dependent on the hydraulic loading and bridge resistance capacity. Maximum horizontal wave force and displacement increase exponentially with the depth of water storage. Post-slip damage, bearing stress on the wave-facing side tends towards zero, while the wave-backing side presents a twofold increase. Maximum horizontal displacement (Xmax) distinguishes the failure states, such as 0 m ≤ Xmax ≤ 0.03 m (intact), 0.03 m < Xmax ≤ 1.39 m (slip), Xmax > 1.39 m (collapse), whose relation to the maximum horizontal wave force has been proposed for design reference and the inversion analysis of the bridge force. Applying a pre-ballast equivalent to 75 % of girder weight reduces Xmax by up to 91.5 %, shifting failure from collapse to slip. These insights offer crucial guidance for enhancing bridge safety amidst escalating flood risks.
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