The abutment is the part of a bridge that has a more significant dynamic interaction with the soil; the behaviour of the abutment is also influenced by the interaction with the superstructure, producing a reciprocal time-dependent exchange of inertial forces between them. This note illustrates a finite element description of the coupled dynamic interaction of an abutment with the bridge structure and with the soil, occuring in the occasion of a severe event. The computational procedure was entirely implemented in Opensees with the aim to investigate the dynamic response of the specific abutment of the Pantano viaduct which would be used as an accessing facility to the still unbuilt Messina Strait suspension bridge, in Italy. The potentiality and versatility of OpenSees were used to reach an accurate numerical modelling of both the soil and the structure. The mechanical behaviour of the soil was reproduced through the Manzari and Dafalias hardening plasticity constitutive model, that was calibrated in order to reproduce the experimental laboratory data. The adutment was regarded as an elastic structure, while the dynamic interaction of the abutment with the superstructure was studies by means of the two approached of increasing complexity and accuracy. Parallel computing, obtained with the OpenSeesSP interpreter, was needed to optimise the computational time for the non-linear time domain analyses. The strategy solution presented herein is useful in that it enhances the current capability to evaluate the dynamic behaviour of bridge structures implementing a coupled soil structure interaction analysis that considers explicitly the propagation of seismic waves in the foundation soil and their interaction with the structure.
Study of the Dynamic Soil-Abutment-Superstructure Interaction for a Bridge Abutment / Gorini, Davide Noè; Callisto, Luigi. - (2017), pp. 57-60.
Study of the Dynamic Soil-Abutment-Superstructure Interaction for a Bridge Abutment
Gorini, Davide Noè
Primo
;
2017-01-01
Abstract
The abutment is the part of a bridge that has a more significant dynamic interaction with the soil; the behaviour of the abutment is also influenced by the interaction with the superstructure, producing a reciprocal time-dependent exchange of inertial forces between them. This note illustrates a finite element description of the coupled dynamic interaction of an abutment with the bridge structure and with the soil, occuring in the occasion of a severe event. The computational procedure was entirely implemented in Opensees with the aim to investigate the dynamic response of the specific abutment of the Pantano viaduct which would be used as an accessing facility to the still unbuilt Messina Strait suspension bridge, in Italy. The potentiality and versatility of OpenSees were used to reach an accurate numerical modelling of both the soil and the structure. The mechanical behaviour of the soil was reproduced through the Manzari and Dafalias hardening plasticity constitutive model, that was calibrated in order to reproduce the experimental laboratory data. The adutment was regarded as an elastic structure, while the dynamic interaction of the abutment with the superstructure was studies by means of the two approached of increasing complexity and accuracy. Parallel computing, obtained with the OpenSeesSP interpreter, was needed to optimise the computational time for the non-linear time domain analyses. The strategy solution presented herein is useful in that it enhances the current capability to evaluate the dynamic behaviour of bridge structures implementing a coupled soil structure interaction analysis that considers explicitly the propagation of seismic waves in the foundation soil and their interaction with the structure.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Gorini_Callisto_OpenSees_2017.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: articolo
Tipologia:
Versione editoriale (Publisher’s layout)
Licenza:
Tutti i diritti riservati (All rights reserved)
Dimensione
2.08 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.08 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione



