Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions

abstract: This report analyzed the dynamic response of a long, linear elastic concrete bridge subject to spatially varying ground displacements as well as consistent ground displacements. Specifically, the study investigated the bridge’s response to consistent ground displacements at all supports (U...

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Other Authors: Seawright, Jordan Michael (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54886
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-54886
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-548862019-11-07T03:01:02Z Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions abstract: This report analyzed the dynamic response of a long, linear elastic concrete bridge subject to spatially varying ground displacements as well as consistent ground displacements. Specifically, the study investigated the bridge’s response to consistent ground displacements at all supports (U-NW), ground displacements with wave passage effects and no soil profile variability (U-WP), and ground displacements with both wave passage effects and soil profile variability (V-WP). Time-history ground displacements were taken from recordings of the Loma Prieta, Duzce, and Chuetsu earthquakes. The two horizontal components of each earthquake time-history displacement record were applied to the bridge supports in the transverse and longitudinal directions. It was found that considering wave passage effects without soil profile variability, as compared with consistent ground displacements, significantly reduced the peak total energy of the system, as well as decreasing the maximum relative longitudinal displacements. The maximum relative transverse displacements were not significantly changed in the same case. It was also found that including both wave passage effects and soil profile variability (V-WP) generally resulted in larger maximum transverse relative displacements, across all earthquake time-histories tested. Similarly, it was found that using consistent ground displacements (U-NW) generally resulted in larger maximum longitudinal relative displacements, as well as larger peak total energy values. Dissertation/Thesis Seawright, Jordan Michael (Author) Hjelmstad, Keith (Advisor) Rajan, Subramaniam (Committee member) Kavazanjian, Edward (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Civil engineering bridge earthquake incoherence passage variability viaduct eng 88 pages Masters Thesis Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2019 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54886 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Civil engineering
bridge
earthquake
incoherence
passage
variability
viaduct
spellingShingle Civil engineering
bridge
earthquake
incoherence
passage
variability
viaduct
Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
description abstract: This report analyzed the dynamic response of a long, linear elastic concrete bridge subject to spatially varying ground displacements as well as consistent ground displacements. Specifically, the study investigated the bridge’s response to consistent ground displacements at all supports (U-NW), ground displacements with wave passage effects and no soil profile variability (U-WP), and ground displacements with both wave passage effects and soil profile variability (V-WP). Time-history ground displacements were taken from recordings of the Loma Prieta, Duzce, and Chuetsu earthquakes. The two horizontal components of each earthquake time-history displacement record were applied to the bridge supports in the transverse and longitudinal directions. It was found that considering wave passage effects without soil profile variability, as compared with consistent ground displacements, significantly reduced the peak total energy of the system, as well as decreasing the maximum relative longitudinal displacements. The maximum relative transverse displacements were not significantly changed in the same case. It was also found that including both wave passage effects and soil profile variability (V-WP) generally resulted in larger maximum transverse relative displacements, across all earthquake time-histories tested. Similarly, it was found that using consistent ground displacements (U-NW) generally resulted in larger maximum longitudinal relative displacements, as well as larger peak total energy values. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2019
author2 Seawright, Jordan Michael (Author)
author_facet Seawright, Jordan Michael (Author)
title Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
title_short Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
title_full Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
title_fullStr Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
title_full_unstemmed Case Study on the Dynamic Response of Long Bridges Subject to Spatially Varying Ground Motions
title_sort case study on the dynamic response of long bridges subject to spatially varying ground motions
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54886
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