Vulnerability of bridges to individual and multiple hazards- floods and earthquakes

Sotirios A. Argyroudis, Stergios Mitoulis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Building resilient bridges, that are able to withstand multiple natural stressors with minimal damage and quickly restore their functionality is paramount to delivering climate-resilient transport infrastructure. Nevertheless, bridges are proven to be vulnerable to natural hazards, with floods and earthquakes being the main causes of failure. The available research and practice for assessing the vulnerability of river-crossing bridges is predominantly qualitative and therefore relies heavily on visual inspections, while ignoring important characteristics of the complex water-soil-bridge interaction. This is a knowledge gap that this paper aims to fill. This work provides novel fragility models for hydraulically induced stressors and/or combinations of hydraulic and seismic hazards. To achieve this, unique detailed two- and three- dimensional numerical models are employed, for a typical three-span prestressed box-girder river-crossing bridge. This paper is a primer on the vulnerability of flood-critical bridges as it models the entire water-soil-bridge system, taking into account critical hydraulic stressors (scour, debris accumulation, hydraulic forces), the uncertainty in scour hole formation, and all components of integral and isolated bridges: deck, bearings, piers and abutments, backfill, and the foundation soil. A detailed description of the damage modes for each component is given and sets of fragility curves for floods and combinations of hydraulic stressors and earthquakes are developed. The study concludes that integral bridges are in most cases more vulnerable to local scour than bridges with bearings, since the latter are more flexible and can therefore adapt to changes in their geometry. The opposite is true for global scour and/or seismic earthquake excitations. The generated fragility models are useful tools for quantitative risk assessment of transport systems and provide practical means in resilience-based asset management by owners and operators of transport infrastructure.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107564
Number of pages18
JournalReliability Engineering and System Safety
Volume210
Early online date20 Feb 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2021

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgements:
This research has received funding from the H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie-Actions (IF), Grant Agreement No. 746298 (Project TRANSRISK). The authors would also like to acknowledge the help provided by seven students of the University of Surrey (alphabetically): Luther Blankson, Alexandru Guja, Roman Omar, Pamela E Samson, Alec Smith, Max Woolcott and Vincent L.F. Yuan.

Keywords

  • Bridge
  • Flood
  • Scour
  • Earthquake
  • Fragility
  • Failure modes
  • Numerical modelling

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