Theoretically optimal forms for very long-span bridges under gravity loading

Author:

Fairclough Helen E.1,Gilbert Matthew1ORCID,Pichugin Aleksey V.2ORCID,Tyas Andy1,Firth Ian3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, University of Sheffield, Mappin Street, Sheffield S1 3JD, UK

2. Department of Mathematics, CEDPS, Brunel University London, Uxbridge UB8 3PH, UK

3. COWI UK Ltd, Bevis Marks House, Bevis Marks, London EC3A 7JB, UK

Abstract

Long-span bridges have traditionally employed suspension or cable-stayed forms, comprising vertical pylons and networks of cables supporting a bridge deck. However, the optimality of such forms over very long spans appears never to have been rigorously assessed, and the theoretically optimal form for a given span carrying gravity loading has remained unknown. To address this we here describe a new numerical layout optimization procedure capable of intrinsically modelling the self-weight of the constituent structural elements, and use this to identify the form requiring the minimum volume of material for a given span. The bridge forms identified are complex and differ markedly to traditional suspension and cable-stayed bridge forms. Simplified variants incorporating split pylons are also presented. Although these would still be challenging to construct in practice, a benefit is that they are capable of spanning much greater distances for a given volume of material than traditional suspension and cable-stayed forms employing vertical pylons, particularly when very long spans (e.g. over 2 km) are involved.

Funder

University of Sheffield, the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Expedition Engineering Ltd

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference37 articles.

1. Technology of the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge

2. Hansford M. 2012 Cable stay revolution hangs in the balance. New Civil Engineer 5 July 2012 pp. 4–5.

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