Steel and Composite Structures
Volume 43, Number 2, 2022, pages 165-183
DOI: 10.12989/scs.2022.43.2.165
A case study of protecting bridges against overheight vehicles
Aly Mousaad Aly and Marc A. Hoffmann
Abstract
Most transportation departments have recognized and developed procedures to address the ever-increasing weights
of trucks traveling on bridges in a service today. Transportation agencies also recognize the issues with overheight vehicles'
collisions with bridges, but few stakeholders have definitive countermeasures. Bridges are becoming more vulnerable to
collisions from overheight vehicles. The exact response under lateral impact force is difficult to predict. In this paper, nonlinear
impact analysis shows that the degree of deformation recorded through the modeling of the unprotected vehicle-girder model
provides realistic results compared to the observation from the US-61 bridge overheight vehicle impact. The predicted
displacements are 0.229 m, 0.161 m, and 0.271 m in the girder bottom flange (lateral), bottom flange (vertical), and web (lateral)
deformations, respectively, due to a truck traveling at 112.65 km/h. With such large deformations, the integrity of an impacted
bridge becomes jeopardized, which in most cases requires closing the bridge for safety reasons and a need for rehabilitation. We
proposed different sacrificial cushion systems to dissipate the energy of an overheight vehicle impact. The goal was to design
and tune a suitable energy absorbing system that can protect the bridge and possibly reduce stresses in the overheight vehicle,
minimizing the consequences of an impact. A material representing a Sorbothane high impact rubber was chosen and modeled in
ANSYS. Out of three sacrificial schemes, a sandwich system is the best in protecting both the bridge and the overheight vehicle.
The mitigation system reduced the lateral deflection in the bottom flange by 89%. The system decreased the stresses in the
bridge girder and the top portion of the vehicle by 82% and 25%, respectively. The results reveal the capability of the proposed
sacrificial system as an effective mitigation system.
Key Words
bridge impact; crash beam; damage mechanics; energy dissipation; early warning detection; overheight vehicle
Address
Aly Mousaad Aly and Marc A. Hoffmann:Windstorm Impact, Science and Engineering (WISE) Research Lab, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering,
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA-70803, USA