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Bridge Engineering:

GIRISH H. AHIR
CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY

History of Bridge Development

100 B.C. Romans 2,104 years ago


Clapper Bridge

700 A.D. Asia 1,304 years ago

Tree trunk Stone


Roman Arch Bridge

Arch design evenly distributes stresses Natural concrete made from mud and straw

Great Stone Bridge in China

Low bridge Shallow arch Allows boats and water to pass through

History of Bridge Development


1900

1920
Truss Bridges Mechanics of Design Wood

2000
Suspension Bridges Use of steel in suspending cables Prestressed Concrete Steel

Basic Concepts
Span - the distance between two bridge supports, whether they are columns, towers or the wall of a canyon. Force -

Compression

Tension Compression
Tension

Concrete has good compressive strength, but extremely weak tensile strength. What about steel cables?

Basic Concepts

Beam - a rigid, usually horizontal, structural element


Beam
Pier

Pier - a vertical supporting structure, such as a pillar


Cantilever - a projecting structure supported only at one end, like a shelf bracket or a diving board

Load - weight on a structure

Types of Bridges
Basic Types: Truss Bridge Beam Bridge Arch Bridge Suspension Bridge Floating Bridge

Floating

Truss

Beam

Arch

Suspension
The type of bridge used depends on the obstacle. The main feature that controls the bridge type is the size of the obstacle.

All beams in a truss bridge are straight. Trusses are comprised of many small beams that together can support Truss Bridge a large amount of weight and span great distances.

Types of Bridges
Beam Bridge

Consists of a horizontal beam supported at each end by piers. The weight of the beam pushes straight down on the piers. The farther apart its piers, the weaker the beam becomes. This is why beam bridges rarely span more than 250 feet.

Types of Bridges
Beam Bridge
Forces When something pushes down on the beam, the beam bends. Its top edge is pushed together, and its bottom edge is pulled apart.

Types of Bridges
Arch Bridges
The arch has great natural strength. Thousands of years ago, Romans built arches out of stone. Today, most arch bridges are made of steel or concrete, and they can span up to 800 feet.

Types of Bridges
Arch Bridges
Forces

The arch is squeezed together, and this squeezing force is carried outward along the curve to the supports at each end. The supports, called abutments, push back on the arch and prevent the ends of the arch from spreading apart.

Types of Bridges
Suspension Bridges
This kind of bridges can span 2,000 to 7,000 feet -- way farther than any other type of bridge! Most suspension bridges have a truss system beneath the roadway to resist bending and twisting.

Types of Bridges
Suspension Bridges
Forces

In all suspension bridges, the roadway hangs from massive steel cables, which are draped over two towers and secured into solid concrete blocks, called anchorages, on both ends of the bridge. The cars push down on the roadway, but because the roadway is suspended, the cables transfer the load into compression in the two towers. The two towers support most of the bridge's weight.

Types of Bridges
Floating Bridge Pontoon bridges are supported by floating pontoons with sufficient buoyancy to support the bridge and dynamic loads. While pontoon bridges are usually temporary structures, some are used for long periods of time. Permanent floating bridges are useful for traversing features lacking strong bedrock for traditional piers. Such bridges can require a section that is elevated, or can be raised or removed, to allow ships to pass.

Floating Bridges

Retractable!

But high maintenance!

Bridge Engineering

How do the following affect your structure?

Ground below bridge Loads Materials Shapes

Bridge Engineering Summary


To design a bridge like you need to take into account all the forces acting on it:
The friction of the earth on every part The strength of the ground pushing up the supports The resistance of the ground to the pull of the cables The dead weight and all vehicle loads Then there is the drag and lift produced by wind and water The turbulence as fluids pass the towers Need to use appropriate materials and structural shapes in the cheapest way, yet maintaining a certain degree of safety. To account for natural disasters, engineers design bridges with a factor of safety: usually around 3 or 4.

Case Study: Tacoma Narrows Failure

The first Tacoma Narrows suspension bridge collapsed due to wind-induced vibrations on Nov. 7, 1940. The bridge over engineered it to withstand hurricane winds, but the wind that day was only 40 mph what happened!?

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