Report No.: CCEER-92-8
AN EVALUATION OF THE CURRENT CALTRANS SEISMIC RESTRAINER DESIGN METHOD
Authors: M. Saiidi, E. Maragakis, and S. Feng
Date: October 1992
A Report to the:
- California Department of Transportation
- National Science Foundation
- Nevada Department of Transportation
- Performing Organization:
- Department of Civil Engineering/258
- University of Nevada, Reno
- Reno, NV 89557
- Abstract:
- The primary objective of this study was to develop an understanding of the implications
of the current Caltrans hinge restrainer design procedure. Two aspects of the problem were
studied. One was the effects of changing (a) the cross sectional area of restrainers and
(b) the restrainer gap on the nonlinear response of a bridge with several hinges. The
other was the sensitivity of the number of required restrainers to changes in some of the
simplifying assumptions which are made in the current Caltrans restrainer design method.
- Computer program NEABS-86 was used in the nonlinear analyses [3]. The focus of this part
of the study was the relative displacements at the joints, restrainer forces, and
restrainer stresses. Three earthquake records, the El Centro 1940, Eureka 1954, and
Saratoga 1989. In addition to input earthquakes, the number of restrainers at each hinge,
the restrainer gaps, and the hinge gaps were varied. It was found that when a restrainer
gap of 0.75 in. is assumed, the number of restrainers does not affect the response
significantly. It is recommended that the design should be based on cases with and without
restrainer gaps to encompass all the critical forces, stresses, and displacements.
- To study the effects of design assumptions on the required number of cables, several
manual calculations of the example in the Caltrans restrainer design guidelines were
carried out. The deviations from the method included the treatment of mass and stiffness
of bridge segments as different hinges closed. Another variable was the simultaneous
reduction in the restrainer gap and increase in the hinge gap. The results indicated that
slight variation in some of the assumptions can change the number of restrainers
significantly. A more streamlined design method that incorporates the nonlinear response
of bridge components needs to be developed (Abstract by authors).