Earthquakes and Structures

Volume 7, Number 4, 2014, pages 463-484

DOI: 10.12989/eas.2014.7.4.463

Experimental investigations of the seismic performance of bridge piers with rounded rectangular cross-sections

Guangqiang Shao, Lizhong Jiang and Nawawi Chouw

Abstract

Solid piers with a rounded rectangular cross-section are widely used in railway bridges for high-speed trains in China. Compared to highway bridge piers, these railway bridge piers have a larger cross-section and less steel reinforcement. Existing material models cannot accurately predict the seismic behavior of this kind of railway bridge piers. This is because only a few parameters, such as axial load, longitudinal and transverse reinforcement, are taken into account. To enable a better understanding of the seismic behavior of this type of bridge pier, a simultaneous influence of the various parameters, i.e. ratio of height to thickness, axial load to concrete compressive strength ratio and longitudinal to transverse reinforcements, on the failure characteristics, hysteresis, skeleton curves, and displacement ductility were investigated. In total, nine model piers were tested under cyclic loading. The hysteretic response obtained from the experiments is compared with that obtained from numerical studies using existing material models. The experimental data shows that the hysteresis curves have significantly pinched characteristics that are associated with small longitudinal reinforcement ratios. The displacement ductility reduces with an increase in ratio of axial load to concrete compressive strength and longitudinal reinforcement ratio. The experimental results are largely in agreement with the numerical results obtained using Chang-Mander concrete model.

Key Words

RC railway bridge pier; cyclic loading; seismic performance; numerical analysis; displacement ductility

Address

Guangqiang Shao and Lizhong Jiang: School of Civil Engineering, Central South University, 22 Shaoshan South Road, Changsha, China Lizhong Jiang: National Engineering Laboratory for Construction Technology of High Speed Rail, 22 Shaoshan South Road, Changsha, China Nawawi Chouw: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, the University of Auckland, 20 Symonds Street, Auckland, New Zealand