4.5 Article

An Explicit Approach for Determining the Rational Length of Steel Portion in Steel-Concrete Hybrid Girder Bridges

Journal

JOURNAL OF BRIDGE ENGINEERING
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/JBENF2.BEENG-5798

Keywords

Bridge design; Box girder bridge; Hybrid girder; System equivalence

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The steel-concrete hybrid girder bridge structure combines steel and concrete members to reduce bridge self-weight and the effects of concrete creep and shrinkage. The rational length and location of the steel portion are critical in design. The system equivalence method provides a way to determine the length ratio and establish its relationship with the span ratio. The proposed analytical approach is validated by case studies and is effective for the preliminary design of hybrid girder bridges.
The steel-concrete hybrid girder bridge structure is a combination of steel and concrete members in the direction of the bridge length. In long-span segmental concrete box girder bridges, the utilization of lightweight steel girders in the middle portion of the main span would greatly reduce the bridge self-weight while decreasing concrete creep and shrinkage effects. A critical parameter in the design of hybrid girder bridges is the rational length of the steel portion as a part of the main span (in other words, the rational location of the steel-concrete connection). Based on the concept of system equivalence, the steel-concrete hybrid system is equivalent to a full-concrete system with a reasonable span arrangement. The governing condition of the equivalence is that both systems have the same magnitude of self-weight hogging bending moments over the piers. Applying the system equivalence method, the rational length ratio of the steel portion to the main span (xi) is explicitly solved, and its relationship with the length ratio of side span to main span (lambda) is established. Finally, the proposed analytical approach is validated by five case studies, indicating that it is an effective and efficient method for the preliminary design of hybrid girder bridges.

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