Abstract

Due to their slenderness, many modern footbridges may vibrate significantly under pedestrian traffic. Consequently, the vibration serviceability of these structures under human-induced dynamic loading is becoming their governing design criterion. Many current vibration serviceability design guidelines, concerned with prediction of the vibration in the vertical direction, estimate a single response level that corresponds to an "average" person crossing the bridge with the step frequency that matches a footbridge natural frequency. However, different pedestrians have different dynamic excitation potential, and therefore could generate significantly different vibration response of the bridge structure. This paper aims to quantify this potential by estimating the range of structural vibrations (in the vertical direction) that could be induced by different individuals and the probability of occurrence of any particular vibration level. This is done by introducing the inter- and intra-subject variability in the walking force modelling. The former term refers to inability of a pedestrian to induce an exactly the same force with each step while the latter refers to different forces (in terms of their magnitude, frequency and crossing speed) induced by different people. Both types of variability are modelled using the appropriate probability density functions. The probability distributions were then implemented into a framework procedure for vibration response prediction under a single person excitation. Instead of a single response value obtained using currently available design guidelines, this new framework yields a range of possible acceleration responses induced by different people and a distribution function for these responses. The acceleration ranges estimated are then compared with experimental data from two real-life footbridges. The substantial differences in the dynamic response induced by different people are obtained in both the numerical and the experimental results presented. These results therefore confirm huge variability in different people's dynamic potential to excite the structure. The proposed approach for quantifying this variability could be used as a sound basis for development of new probability-based vibration serviceability assessment procedures for pedestrian bridges.

Highlights

  • Due to their slenderness, new footbridges are nowadays more susceptible to vibration serviceability problems under human-induced load than they were in the past [1]

  • The design approach to check for vibration serviceability of footbridges in the vertical direction has remained where it was in the 1970s

  • In the case of the two footbridges investigated, a probabilistic approach was able to estimate the range of acceleration levels that could be induced by different walkers

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Summary

Introduction

New footbridges are nowadays more susceptible to vibration serviceability problems under human-induced load than they were in the past [1]. The reason for choosing this resonant force model is that it is considered as the worst-case scenario This time-domain deterministic approach is widely used worldwide. Some new and interesting approaches to modelling the walking force induced by a single pedestrian have been developed, but still did not find their way into the design guidelines mainly due to their complexity. Some examples of these are a frequency domain model that takes into account the narrow-band nature of human-induced force [3] and its improvement that relies on Monte Carlo simulations [4].

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