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Research article
First published January 1998

Fatigue Impacts on Bridge Cost Allocation

Abstract

The objectives of this project were to develop an analytical tool and to use it to evaluate the relative user responsibilities for fatigue damage to highway bridges. This tool was designed to be a general analytical tool to evaluate the current fleet mix database established by FHWA. It is a FORTRAN program designed to read standard format FHWA files for vehicle data and vehicle kilometers traveled. The output is a relative fatigue damage matrix for each vehicle class and weight group over 12 FHWA-established functional highway classes. The relative damage factors are then used as input into the highway cost allocation study to assign costs of fatigue damage. This study advances the analytical technique for evaluation of relative fatigue damage to highway bridges by incorporating the semicontinuum analysis method, the Palmgren-Miner hypothesis, and the rain-flow cycle counting algorithm. The analysis evaluates a database of 39 bridges selected as representative of those in the United States and contains several hundred fatigue-prone details for analysis. The vehicle database was developed by FHWA specifically for the highway cost allocation study. Reviewed in this paper are the basis of the fatigue analysis used for this study and all assumptions made in the development of the fatigue program. The vehicle database and bridge selection and database incorporated into this study are also described. Results of the analysis are summarized and presented.

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References

1. Laman J. A., Boothby T. E., and Ashbaugh J. R. Fatigue Impacts on Bridge Cost Allocation and Truck Size and Weight Limits. Final Report PTI 9707. Pennsylvania Transportation Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, 1997.
2. Ayyub B. M., Schelling D. R., Fu C. C., and Hassan M. H. Bridge Sampling for Evaluating Structural Impact of Trucks. Journal of Advanced Transportation, Vol. 26, 1992.
3. Bannantine J. A., Comer J. J., and Handrock J. L. Fundamentals of Metal Fatigue Analysis. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1990.
4. Miner M. A. Cumulative Damage in Fatigue. Journal of Applied Mechanics, Vol. 12, and Transactions of the ASME, Vol. 67, 1945, pp. A159–A164.
5. LRFD Bridge Design Specifications, 1st ed. American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, Washington, D.C., 1994.
6. Saklas J. G., Albrecht P., Sidani M., and Schelling D. R. Bridge Fatigue Damage Cost Allocation. Production Software, Inc.; FHWA, U.S. Department of Transportation, Sept. 1988.
7. Jaeger L. G., and Bakht B. Bridge Analysis by Microcomputer. McGraw Hill Book Company, New York, 1989.

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Article first published: January 1998
Issue published: January 1998

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© 1998 National Academy of Sciences.
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Authors

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Jeffrey A. Laman
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, 212 Sackett Building, University Park, PA 16802
John R. Ashbaugh
Steven Schaefer Associates, Inc., 3900 Colerain Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45223

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This article was published in Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board.

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