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Ch9 Horizontally Curved Steel Girders

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The passage discusses how curved steel girders have become a more viable and cost-effective option for bridge design as understanding of their behavior has increased and fabrication/erection technologies have advanced. Challenges included accounting for combined flexural and torsional stresses as well as deformation effects.

The passage provides a brief historical overview of research on curved beam theory dating back over 150 years. Major developments include the introduction of curved sections to replace straight chord systems and advances in digital computing enabling more complex analyses to be conducted.

Factors encouraging increased use of curved steel girders include the need for smooth traffic flow, right-of-way limitations, economic/environmental considerations, and emphasis on aesthetic design. Curved systems can reduce substructure costs and allow for shallower sections with less overhang.

CHAPTER 9

HORIZONTALLY CURVED
STEEL GIRDERS

9.1 INTRODUCTION

There has been a dramatic increase in the use of horizontally curved steel girders
in highway bridges and interchanges throughout the world over the past several
decades. The need for the smooth dissemination of congested traffic, right-of-way
limitations, economic and environmental considerations, and increased emphasis on
aesthetic considerations has encouraged this trend. When curved bridge superstruc-
tures were first introduced, they were generally composed of a series of straight
girder chords. Over time these systems have steadily been replaced by structures
containing curved sections. Although the cost of curved superstructures may be
higher than that for their straight counterpart, the total cost of a curved girder
bridge system has been found to be less than that of a similar straight system
because a substantial portion of the substructure can be eliminated. Also, using
continuous curved girders allows for shallower sections as well as a reduction in
outside girder slab overhangs.
In the early years of modern bridge design, engineers were reluctant to use
curved girders due to mathematical complexities associated with their design.
Curved girders are subjected to not only major axis flexural stresses but also to sig-
nificant torsional stresses, even under gravity loading. The overall effects of torsion
on slender-web curved steel plate girders of dimensions commonly used in bridges
can be approximated through torsional theory of beams; deflection, cross-sectional
distortion, and deflection amplification (large-displacement) effects, however, may
be much more pronounced in curved girder systems and may require more advanced
methods to accurately predict behavior. The inherent rotation characteristics of hor-
izontally curved girders require that diaphragms and bracing used in straight girder
systems simply to prevent premature lateral buckling become very important (pri-
mary) load-carrying components. Despite these obstacles, the availability of digital
computers over the past several decades to carry out complex analyses, along
Guide to Stability Design Criteria for Metal Structures, Sixth Edition Edited by Ronald D. Ziemian 413
Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
414 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

with advancements in fabrication and erection technology, have made horizontally


curved girder superstructures a viable and cost-effective option for designers.
This chapter presents an overview of the behavioral issues associated with the
stability and design of curved beams and girders. A brief historical review is initially
provided. Because the primary thrust of recent research has been on developing
resistance formulations for the design and construction of bridges comprised of
curved steel superstructures, this chapter emphasizes the latest efforts conducted
by U.S. researchers towards improving bridge design and construction methodol-
ogy. Other important behavioral phenomena such as dynamics and fatigue are not
addressed in this chapter.

9.2 HISTORICAL REVIEW

Research prior to the mid-1960s on the behavior of curved beams was generally
limited to theoretical work on the linear elastic static behavior of isolated curved
members, with the earliest work on curved beam theory attributed to St. Venant
(1843) over 150 years ago. Since then, thousands of pages of technical papers,
reports, and books have been published on the behavior and design of curved
beams. These researchers include Gottfield (1932), Umanskii (1948), Dabrowski
(1964, 1965, 1968), Vlasov (1961), Timoshenko (1905), Shimada and Kuranashi
(1966), Watanabe (1967), and others. Comprehensive presentations of the theory of
thin-walled beams including flexure torsion, distortion, and stress distribution are
provided in several texts (Vlasov, 1961; Dabrowski, 1968; Kollbrunner and Basler,
1969; Heins, 1975; Nakai and Yoo, 1988).
Since the mid-1960s an emphasis on curved girder research in the United States
and Japan has been placed on the practical use of curved beam theory in the
design and construction of horizontally curved bridges. The first survey of pub-
lished works pertaining to horizontally curved bridges was presented by McManus
et al. (1969) and contained 202 references. Additional references were subsequently
added by Ketcheck (1969), Tan et al. (1969), and Pandit et al. (1970). Several years
later, the ASCE and AASHTO Task Committee on Curved Girders (AASHTO,
1978a) presented a state-of-the-art report that provides 106 references on horizon-
tally curved box girders. The committee also presented results of a survey pertaining
to the geometry, design, detail, construction, and performance of box-girder bridges
constructed in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan (AASHTO, 1978b).
Comprehensive reviews and syntheses of curved bridge girder research have been
updated by others (Kulicki et al., 2006; Linzell et al., 2004b; White et al., 2001;
Linzell, 1999; Zureick et al., 1994).
In 1963, U.S. Steel published a report that presented an approximate analysis
technique for “open-framed” curved I-girder bridges (Richardson, Gordon, and
Associates, 1963). The method presented in the 1963 report was viewed as too
complicated and cumbersome for design, and hence in 1965 U.S. Steel published
an approximate procedure that became known as “V-load analysis” for determining
moments and shears in horizontally curved open-framed highway bridges (Highway
HISTORICAL REVIEW 415

Structures Design Handbook , 1965). It is theoretically pure with regard to torsion


due only to curvature and load distribution for static equilibrium. The method
does not account for lateral bracing between girders in the plane of the flanges.
Accuracy of the method with regard to live load depends upon the ability of the
user to assign appropriate loads to the girders prior to the V-load analysis. It has
been noted that the live-load distribution factors used in straight bridge design do
not appropriately represent the distribution in curved bridges and researchers have
subsequently proposed equations for curved bridge design (U.S. Steel Corporation,
1984; Heins and Jin, 1984; Brockenbrough, 1986).
In 1969, a comprehensive pooled funds research project, referred to as the
Consortium of University Research Teams (CURT), sponsored by 25 participat-
ing U.S. state highway departments was initiated under the direction of the FHWA
to study the behavior of curved bridges and to develop design requirements. The
team consisted of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, the University
of Pennsylvania, the University of Rhode Island, and Syracuse University, whose
efforts, along with those at the University of Maryland, resulted in the work-
ing stress design criteria and tentative design specifications. The ASCE-AASHTO
Task Committee on Curved Girders (AASHTO, 1977c) compiled the results of
CURT and others into a single set of recommendations for the design of curved
I-girder bridges. The CURT project was followed by the development of the load
factor design criteria (Stegmann and Galambos, 1976; Galambos, 1978), which,
along with the working stress criteria, were adopted by AASHTO (1980) as the
first Guide Specifications for Horizontally Curved Highway Bridges, subsequently
referred to as the Guide Specifications (AASHTO, 1980, 1987). The Guide Speci-
fications address both “I” and “box” shape girder bridge superstructures. Strength
formulations for the web, flanges, and stiffeners are emphasized. Experience indi-
cates that the strength formulations have been at least adequate in that there have
been no reported failures of curved steel superstructure bridges in the United States
due to overload. The original form of the Guide Specifications, however, is dis-
jointed and difficult to use, and due to a lack of continuity with straight bridge
standards, it was never adopted as an integral part of any of the AASHTO Stan-
dard Specifications for Highway Bridges. The only other bridge design document
that specifically addresses curved bridge design is the Japanese Guidelines for the
Design of Horizontally Curved Girder Bridges, published in draft form by the Han-
shin Expressway Public Corporation (1988). Several researchers have demonstrated
disparity in the strength formulations between the Japanese and American curved
bridge design guides, which further emphasized the need for additional research.
Changes to the original 1980 Guide Specifications were included in the AASHTO
Interim Specifications for the years 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, and 1990. A new
edition was published in 1993 that included the interim and additional changes but
did not reflect the extensive research on curved girder bridges that was conducted
since 1980 or the many important changes in related provisions of the straight girder
specifications.
A comprehensive research project administered in 1992 by the FHWA, Curved
Steel Bridge Research Project (CSBRP), was initiated to conduct fundamental
416 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

research into the behavior of curved steel flexural members and bridges that would
lead to the development of LRFD Specifications for curved bridge design. The
CSBRP included tests on a full-scale I-girder bridge (Figs. 9.1 and 9.2) and the
research resulted in an expanded knowledge of the moment and shear capacities of
horizontally curved I-girder bridges. The work of the CSBRP was extended in 1999
through a project, which was jointly sponsored by FHWA and the AISI, that used
refined nonlinear finite element analyses to augment the knowledge gained through
the experimental tests conducted under the CURT and CSBRP projects. This analyt-
ical work resulted in the unification of the design equations for straight and curved
steel girders into the 2004 LRFD specifications (AASHTO, 2004; White and Grubb,
2005). Comprehensive summaries of the CSBRP are provided by Linzell (1999),
White et al. (2001), Yoo and Davidson (2002), and Hartmann (2005). Other journal
publications and conference presentations have resulted since the CSBRP began,
many of which are highlighted below.
In 1993, NCHRP Project 12-38, “Improved Design Specifications for Horizon-
tally Curved Steel Girder Highway Bridges,” was initiated to reorganize the Guide
Specifications using the current state-of-the-art information while retaining the
Working Stress and Load Factor Design formats. Project 12-38 resulted in NCHRP
Report 424, “Improved Design Specifications for Horizontally Curved Steel Girder
Highway Bridges,” and a 2003 edition update to the Guide Specifications (Hall
et al., 1999). The 2003 Guide Specifications demonstrate the applicability of the
guidelines through design examples for I- and box girders. In 1999, NCHRP
Project 12-52, “LRFD Specifications for Horizontally Curved Steel Girder High-
way Bridges,” was initiated to prepare specifications for the design and construction
of horizontally curved steel girder bridges (for both I- and box girders) in a cal-
ibrated LRFD format. Merging of the curved girder provisions into the straight
girder design provisions was accomplished by statistically calibrating the curved
bridge design provisions. NCHRP Project 12-52 culminated in NCHRP Report
563, “Development of LRFD Specifications for Horizontally Curved Steel Girder
Bridges” (Kulicki et al., 2006), which documents the effort leading to the speci-
fications, contains a compilation of abstracts of horizontally curved girder bridge
research reports, and was used as the basis for updating the 2004 LRFD Bridge
Design Specifications to include curvature effects.

9.3 FABRICATION AND CONSTRUCTION

Curvature induces many challenges from the very beginning of the bridge fabrica-
tion and construction process. Residual stresses formed during curved plate-girder
fabrication can be much greater than those in straight plate girders and significantly
affect the strength of the girder. Ensuring proper camber is difficult. Transporting
and shipping girders with significant curvature becomes problematic because the
girders must be properly restrained to prevent instability during shipping and over-
hangs must be carefully checked. Once at the job site, placing the girders becomes
cumbersome.
FIGURE 9.1 Plan view of the FHWA-CSBRP test frame (Hartmann, 2005).

417
418 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

FIGURE 9.2 FHWA-CSBRP test frame at the FWHA Laboratory (Hartmann, 2005).

9.3.1 Fabrication
Generally there are three methods of fabricating curved steel I-girders: (1) cut
curving, (2) heat curving, and (3) cold curving. Cut curving involves flame cutting
the flanges to the desired curvature from a standard steel plate. The advantage of
this method is that there is no limit on the radius of curvature that can be obtained.
This method of fabrication involves careful planning for economical cutting of the
flange plates to minimize the amount of scrap generated. In addition, adhering to
consistency in plate thickness and steel grades allows the fabricator to economize by
combining and nesting plates (Grubb et al., 1996). Practically, all curved box girders
are fabricated by cut curving. Extreme care must be exercised in the fabrication of
box girders. The flexibility that engineers take advantage of during the field erection
of I-girders is not available with box girders due to their very high torsional rigidity.
Heat curving is accomplished by simultaneously heating one side of the top and
bottom flanges of a fabricated straight I-girder to introduce residual curvature after
cooling. The application of heat can be continuous, strip, or V-type. In continuous
heating, the flange edges are heated along their length. In strip heating, the flanges
are heated in rectangular strips at regular intervals until the required curvature is
attained. In V-type heating, the top and bottom flanges are heated in truncated
triangular or wedge-shaped areas having their bases along the flange edge and
spaced at regular intervals along each flange.
In the cold-curving process, a straight I-girder is bent plastically to obtain an
over-deformed curvature and released. The relaxed configuration results in the
required curvature. Cold curving is fast, efficient, and precise and could be one of
FABRICATION AND CONSTRUCTION 419

the most economical methods of fabricating a curved I-girder. The possibility of


fracture due to localized load effects, however, has raised concerns.
Regardless of the curving method used, plate-girder fabrication introduces resid-
ual stresses and camber loss. This is particularly true for heat-curved girders.
Residual stresses are created whenever a member is permanently deformed or
distorted in a nonuniform manner and persist in a material or a component under
uniform temperature in the absence of externally applied loads. Very little infor-
mation is available on the residual stresses developed in flame-cut and welded
I-section curved girders (Bradford et al., 2001). Based on research by Kishima et
al. (1969), Culver and Nasir (1969) suggested a residual stress pattern for welded
I-sections. Brockenbrough (1970a,b,c) reported that the magnitude and distribution
of residual stress in heat-curved girders is a function of dimensions and material
properties of the straight girder and the curving procedure.

9.3.2 Transporting
Instability challenges that are exacerbated by curvature can occur while transporting
girders from the fabrication plant to the construction site. Steel bridge girders can
be transported by highways, railways, waterways, or a combination of the three,
depending on where the bridge is to be constructed. The weight, height, length, and
width of the girder sections may be limited by the transporting method chosen. The
transporting mode must ensure that the girders can be delivered to the site without
deforming the cross section and inducing additional stresses. The location of splices
and the overall geometry of the section can be designed so that the girder will be
easier to maneuver. Proper restraint against vertical, longitudinal, and transverse
movement must be considered. For straight girders during transportation, lateral
restraint is typically provided only at vertical supports, while curved girders may
need to overhang and require additional support to prevent instability.

9.3.3 Erecting
Overall stability of single long slender girders during lifting is a major concern
during the construction of highway bridges. Lifting of girders in straight bridge
construction presents little difficulty as the center of gravity coincides with the
centroidal axis of the beam cross section. A horizontally curved girder, however,
introduces rotation during lifting as the center of gravity does not coincide with the
centroidal axis of the beam cross section. Depending on the length of the beam,
lateral–torsional buckling or significant nonlinear deflection behavior may occur,
thus shifting the center of gravity and causing rigid-body instability.
The calculation of optimum pick locations for two lifting points can be approx-
imated by treating the curved girder as a circular arc in plan and assuming that
the section is prismatic (Grubb et al., 1996). Bridge girders, however, are often
nonprismatic, which creates additional problems for locating the balance points. In
practice, erectors often “weigh” a piece; the girder may be lifted a few inches and
put down repeatedly until the balance points are located. Unfortunately for curved
420 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

girders, this may take several trials. Wire rope slings or girder clamps are usually
used for attaching the free edges of the top flange at the lifting points. Due to
the inherent tendency of a curved girder to twist, high stresses may occur at the
attachment locations. These intense stresses may occur on the inside (concave) or
outside (convex) edge of the girder flange, depending on the direction in which the
girder tends to rotate.
The lifting and support mechanism used depends on the length of the beam.
While longer girders necessitate the use of spreader beams, shorter girders can be
lifted with single- or double-cable slings. In addition, a component of the cable
force in the horizontal plane that causes minor axis bending must be taken into
account when inclined cables are used. Two parallel girders can be bolted together
by the diaphragms or cross frames and lifted as one piece. Lifting of girders in
pairs helps resist wind loads and may save time. Horizontal stiffening trusses can
be added to the compression flanges before lifting. Of course, the ability to lift two
girders at once ultimately depends on the crane capacity available at the jobsite.

9.3.4 Sequencing
Proper erecting and sequencing of curved girders is essential during construction.
The placement sequence of the girders and diaphragms or cross frames should
be carefully planned so that fit-up problems are minimized. Diaphragms or cross
frames are bolted between each girder to provide stability and to control deflection
of the girders. The fabricator normally assembles the bridge components prior to
delivery to the jobsite to ensure that fit-up problems will not occur. Once the girders
have been loaded for transporting and unloaded for placement, resulting changes
in camber may cause further fit-up problems. In addition, the configuration of the
partially completed structure must be stable. Unlike straight girders, curved girders
depend on adjacent girders for stability.
Several approaches can be adopted for erecting and stabilizing curved girders.
Grubb et al. (1996) describe three methods for proper erection and stabilization.
In the first method, which assumes adequate crane capacity is available, paired
erection is desirable. After erecting the first pair of girders, individual girders can
be erected successively and connected to adjacent girders by cross frames. This
increases the torsional stiffness, thereby adding stability to the system. A second
method of erecting each girder is to use one crane to pick up the girder and place
it while another crane supports the girder to which it is connected. While both
cranes hold their girders, the diaphragms or cross frames are bolted into place. The
addition of the second girder and cross bracing between them changes the governing
instability mode from flexural–torsional buckling of a single girder to flexural
buckling of two girders acting together as a unit. This method requires adequate area
for mobilization of two cranes. A third method uses temporary false-work towers
or bents to shore the girders, which requires a site space that is often not available.
The 2003 update to the Guide Specifications included sections that address
curvature-specific constructability and construction loads. The design examples
presented in the 2003 Guide also include construction sequence calculations. The
ANALYSIS METHODS 421

“Steel Bridge Erection Guide Specification,” developed by Task Group 10 (Erec-


tion) of the AASHTO/NSBA Steel Bridge Collaboration and later adopted and
published by AASHTO (2007), briefly addresses the fabrication and erection of
curved girders. Given the frequency of problems encountered during construc-
tion, several researchers have studied the large-scale erection behavior of curved
I-girders. Important recent studies include Linzell (1999, 2004a), Galambos et al.
(1996, 2000), Simpson (2000), Chavel and Earls (2001, 2006a,b), Bell and Linzell
(2007), and Chang and White (2008a).

9.4 ANALYSIS METHODS

Analysis methods for horizontally curved steel members can be classified into
two major categories: approximate and refined methods. The approximate meth-
ods require minimal modeling effort and are adequate for preliminary analysis
and design purposes. These include the plane grid, space frame, V-load, and M/R
methods. The refined methods are more computationally intensive and time con-
suming in terms of modeling. Therefore, the methods that fall in this class are often
used only for final analyses. Examples of such methods include the finite element
method, finite strip method, finite difference method, slope deflection method, and
analytical solutions to the governing differential equations. Software developed
specifically for curved bridge design includes BSDI (2000), DESCUS (2002), and
MDX (2000). A brief description of each of these analytical methods is presented
below. The 2003 Guide Specifications also include a section and commentary on
“approximate” and “refined” analysis methods. Additional details and demonstra-
tion of accuracy are provided by Modjeski and Masters (1989), Zureick et al.
(1994), Zureick and Naquib (1999), McElwain and Laman (2000), Nevling et al.
(2006), Bell and Linzell (2007), and Chang and White (2008a,b).

9.4.1 Approximate Methods


The following approximate methods of analysis have been found to be reasonably
accurate for noncomposite dead loads and are capable of accounting for limited
skew. There are many bridge geometries, however, where approximate methods do
not provide adequate results.

Plane Grid Method The plane grid method idealizes the structure as an assem-
blage of two-dimensional grid members with one translational and two rotational
degrees of freedom. It is frequently used for straight bridge design and analysis
but does not account for nonuniform torsion (warping) and therefore can be used
only for initial member sizing.

Space Frame Method This method was introduced in 1973 by Brennan and
Mandel for the analysis of open and closed curved members. The curved members
are idealized as three-dimensional straight members, while the diaphragms and
422 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

lateral bracing are assumed as trusslike members that can carry only axial loads.
The effects of warping are typically not included in this analysis, which again
makes this method only applicable to initial design.

V-Load Method The V-load method idealizes the system as straight girders
with span lengths equal to the arc lengths of the curved girders by accounting
for curvature through self-equilibrating vertical shear forces (acting on diaphragm
locations). It underestimates inner girder stresses and does not consider the bracing
effect in the plane of the bottom flange. The magnitude of these loads depends
on the radius of curvature, bridge width, and diaphragm spacing [U.S. Steel Cor-
poration, 1984; Poellot 1987; Fiechtl et al., 1987; National Steel Bridge Alliance
(NSBA), 1996].

M/R Method This method was presented in 1970 by Tung and Fountain for
the approximate analysis of curved box-girder bridges. Torsion due to curvature is
calculated for each girder. It is assumed that the girder is free to rotate without
restraint of the deck or cross frames attached between boxes, that the box retains
its shape, and that no other torsion is applied. These are rather strict limitations
that may not always be applicable.

9.4.2 Refined Methods


Finite Element Method Described in more detail in Chapter 20, this approach
discretizes the structure into small divisions (elements) where each element is
defined by a specified number of nodes. The displacement field, stresses, and strains
within the domain of each element are derived using an approximate function of
its nodal displacements, which serve as the primary unknowns. This is one of
the most general and accurate methods because it does not limit geometry, loads,
or boundary conditions and therefore can be applied to open and closed girders.
Static and dynamic analyses can be conducted. Geometric and material nonlinear
effects, including residual stresses, may be included. The modeling and analysis
efforts required for this method, however, often make it impractical for preliminary
analyses.

Finite Strip Method The curved bridge is divided into narrow strips in the
circumferential direction that are restrained in the radial direction. The analysis
includes bending and membrane actions as well as warping and distortional effects
(Hsu, 1989). Although this method provides simplicity over the finite element
method because of the smaller number of unknowns that need to be solved for, it
does not offer the flexibility and versatility of the finite element method.

Finite Difference Method A grid is superimposed on the structure and the gov-
erning differential equations (GDEs) are replaced by algebraic difference equations
that are solved for each grid point.
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 423

Slope Deflection Method The partial differential equations are established in


terms of slope-deflection equations and the solution is assumed to be a Fourier
series. The analysis includes the effects of curvature, nonuniform torsion, and
diaphragms.

Solution to the Governing Differential Equations An analytical solution


to the GDE is obtained. The solution is usually a closed-form or a series solution,
such as Fourier series.

Although these refined analysis methods are capable of predicting the behavior
of each line girder, the finite element method is the only approach that can accu-
rately describe the interaction between the adjacent girders, an effect that is rather
dominant in horizontally curved girder bridges. Hence, the other refined methods
may not provide adequate results.

9.5 STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS

9.5.1 Curvature Effects on Flange Plate Stability and Flange


Slenderness Requirements
The combination of major axis (vertical) bending with warping torsion of curved
I-shaped girders results in a nonuniform distribution of stress across the flange
width. To establish the effect of curvature on flexural resistance contributed by the
flanges, the normal stress is approximated as the linear addition of the bending
normal stress, which is assumed to be uniform across the width of the flange, and
the normal stress resulting from “lateral bending” of the flange, which can result
from nonuniform torsion and/or lateral forces on the girder (Fig. 9.3). This results
in a linear variation of normal stress that has a maximum value at one edge of the
flange, an average value at the widthwise center (web juncture), and a minimum
at the other edge. Therefore, the two sides of a slender flange will not buckle
independently, nor is it realistic to assume that the full width of a compact flange
can become plastic under combined bending and torsion.
Frampton (1968) and Culver and Frampton (1970) examined the elastic buckling
case, in which each half of the flange is treated separately as an isotropic sector
plate free on one edge and rotationally restrained along the other edge by the web
and the other half of the flange. This investigation was later extended by Culver
and Nasir (1969, 1971) to also cover the inelastic flange local buckling behavior.
Culver (1971) presented a summary of his research related to proportioning the
compression flange in a horizontally curved I-girder and pointed out that the total
stress (warping plus bending) at the flange tip must be limited to 0.55Fy if the
AASHTO b/t limit is used for curved girders. This approach was adopted by
AASHTO in the Guide Specifications, where the flange local buckling criteria are
based only on the b/t ratio.
Kang and Yoo (1990) conducted an analytical study that examined the allow-
able flexural stresses permitted by the Guide Specifications using three-dimensional
424 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

FIGURE 9.3 Components of longitudinal stress (Hartmann, 2005).

finite element models of the entire cross section. The results indicated that curva-
ture may have a significant effect on local buckling. Using finite element analyses,
Davidson and Yoo (1996) concluded that, contrary to the conclusions of Culver
during the CURT program, the actual curvature of the flange plate was incon-
sequential for curvatures typical of bridge girders and the stress gradient and
rotational restraint provided by the web are the dominating parameters affecting the
local flange buckling of curved girder flanges. Finite element analyses were used
to establish a slenderness equation that reflects the effect of curvature on local
buckling.
Japanese researchers have also conducted analytical research on the local buck-
ling behavior of curved compression flanges and have concluded that the influence
of the stress gradient due to warping behavior cannot be omitted in evaluating
the buckling strength of I-girders with substantial curvature (Nakai et al., 1981;
Nakai and Yoo, 1988; Fujii and Ohmura, 1987). Initial deflections and resid-
ual compressive stresses were also considered (Komatsu et al., 1975; Komatsu
and Kitada, 1981). This research suggests that the required curved compression
flange thicknesses should be increased by approximately 30% in order to elimi-
nate potential local buckling when warping effects are “predominant” (Komatsu
and Kitada, 1981; Hanshin, 1988; Nakai and Yoo, 1988; Japan Road Association,
1990).
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 425

Madhavan and Davidson (2005, 2007) used a Galerkin series approach to define
the effect of stress gradient on elastic buckling coefficients of centerline-stiffened
flat plates subject to a compression stress gradient. Equations were developed for
warping-to-bending stress ratios up to 10. The solution was related to slenderness
requirements for the design of I-sections subjected to combined major axis bending
and minor axis bending and/or torsion. Their results indicated that there is no
practical need for b/t limits with curved compression flanges that are different from
straight girder compression flanges and the reduction in elastic buckling strength
for slender flanges is negligible. This work, however, did not consider residual
stress effects.
The full-scale testing completed as part of the CSBRP included seven “bend-
ing specimens” of compression-flange slenderness varying from b/t of 13.6 to
33.6 (Hartmann, 2005). This testing was complimented by extensive finite ele-
ment modeling that demonstrated excellent agreement with test results (White et
al., 2001; Yoo and Davidson, 2002). The CSBRP bending tests and finite ele-
ment work revealed that the compression-flange slenderness did affect the vertical
bending capacity, with normalized performance decreasing with an increase in
compression-flange slenderness. It also pointed out that the component of resis-
tance provided by very slender flanges is sensitive to geometric imperfections.
Overall, the CSBRP bending tests and finite element analyses supported the use
of a “unified” design method. Based upon the analytical works described above
and verified by the CSBRP testing, the consensus is that there is no need for more
stringent flange slenderness requirements for curved bridge girders than those of
straight girders. Therefore, the AASHTO (2004) LRFD specifications do not include
curvature-specific flange slenderness requirements. A summary of b/t requirements
for the various codes and guides is presented in Table 9.1.

9.5.2 Effect of Curvature on Web Plate Strength and Stability


The primary role of plate-girder webs in the region of high bending moment is
to maintain the relative distance between flange plates. In regions near supports,
webs resist most of the shear. Efficient design of plate girders therefore requires
that the flange plates carry most of the primary bending moment and that the web
be designed as “slender” as possible. Because of this, existing web depth thick-
ness limitations, transverse stiffener spacing and rigidity, and longitudinal stiffener
location and rigidity are largely based on buckling considerations.

TABLE 9.1 Compression Flange Slenderness Definitions


bf /tf , Yield Strength 50 ksi (Kulicki et al., 2006)

Specifications Compact Slender

1993 Guide 14.3 19.7


2003 Guide 18.0 23.0
2004 LRFD 18.3 24.0
426 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

For straight girders, the bifurcation buckling behavior of the web plate is eas-
ily and accurately idealized using simplified boundary and loading conditions. For
curved plate girders, however, curvature induces both warping of the cross section
and, more importantly for web considerations, distortion of the web. Such dis-
tortion can cause the distribution of longitudinal membrane stresses in the web
due to vertical bending to become nonlinear. Furthermore, the nonlinearity of this
membrane stress distribution increases with an increase in curvature, which in turn
results in an increase in flange normal stresses.

Pure Bending The curved I-girder web slenderness requirements presented in


the Guide Specifications up to the 1993 edition were based largely on the analyti-
cal studies conducted by Culver et al. (1972a,b,c; Brogan, 1972). In these studies,
the web panel was modeled as a series of isolated elastically supported cylindri-
cal strips subject to fictitious radial loading, and a “spring foundation” boundary
condition was employed that simulates the continuous curved plate under bending
moment (Wachowiak, 1967). Numerical results were generated for the reduction in
effective moment required to produce initial yield in the flanges based on curvature
and web slenderness for an aspect ratio of 1.0 and a web-to-flange area ratio of
2.0. From the results, a maximum reduction of approximately 13% was noted for
a/R = 0.167 and approximately 8% for a/R = 0.10 (h/tw = 150), both of which
correspond to extreme curvature (where a is the distance between transverse stiff-
eners, tw web thickness, and R radius of curvature). To apply the parametric results
to develop design criteria for practical curved girders, the deflections and web bend-
ing stresses that would occur for the girder with a curvature that corresponds to
an initial imperfection out-of-flatness limit of D/120 were used, where D is the
web depth. It is noted that this corresponds to a curvature of a/R = 0.067 for
a panel with an aspect ratio of 1.0. The values of moment reduction using this
approach were compared with those presented by Basler and Thurlimann (1961;
Vincent, 1969).
An extension of this work was published a year later when Culver et al. (1973)
checked the accuracy of the isolated elastically supported cylindrical strips by treat-
ing the panel as a two-way shell rather than as individual strips. The flange/web
intersection was modeled as fixed and the boundaries at the transverse stiffen-
ers were modeled as fixed and simple. Longitudinal stiffeners were modeled with
moments of inertias as multiples of the AASHTO (1969) values for straight girders
at the time. Using analytical results obtained for the slenderness required to limit
the plate bending stresses in the curved panel to those of a flat panel with the maxi-
mum allowed out-of-flatness (a/R = 0.067) and with D/tw = 330, an equation was
developed for curved plate-girder web slenderness with one longitudinal stiffener.
It was concluded that if longitudinal stiffeners are located in both the tension and
compression regions, the reduction in D/tw is not required. This work was con-
tinued in Mariani et al. (1973) in which the optimum transverse stiffener rigidity
is determined analytically. During the same time, Abdel-Sayed (1973) studied the
prebuckling and the elastic buckling behavior of curved web panels and proposed
equations for estimating the critical load under pure normal loading (stress), pure
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 427

shear, and combined normal and shear loading. It was demonstrated that the criti-
cal load was higher for curved panels over the comparable flat panel and increases
with an increase in curvature.
Daniels et al. (1979a,b, 1980; Daniels and Batcheler, 1979; Daniels and Herbein,
1980; Zettlemoyer et al., 1980) summarized a Lehigh University five-year experi-
mental research program on the fatigue behavior of horizontally curved bridges and
concluded that the slenderness limits suggested by Culver are too severe. Equations
for load factor design and allowable stress design were developed and implemented
in early versions of the Guide Specifications.
Numerous analytical and experimental works on the subject have been published
by Japanese researchers since the end of the CURT project. Mikami et al. presented
work in Japanese journals (Mikami et al., 1980; Mikami and Furunishi, 1981) and
later in the ASCE Journal of Engineering Mechanics (Mikami and Furunishi, 1984)
on the nonlinear behavior of cylindrical web panels under bending and combined
bending and shear. Significant conclusions included: (1) The compressive mem-
brane stress in the circumferential direction decreases with increase in curvature;
(2) a panel under combined bending and shear exhibits a lower level of the circum-
ferential membrane stress when compared with a panel under pure bending and, as
a result, the bending moment carried by the web panel is reduced; and (3) the plate
bending stress under combined bending and shear is larger than that under pure
bending. No formulations or recommendations for design use were made. Kuran-
ishi and Hiwatashi (1981, 1983; Hiwatashi and Kuranishi, 1984) used the finite
element method to demonstrate the elastic finite-displacement behavior of curved
I-girder webs under bending using models with and without flange rigidities. The
reduction in bending moment resistance was demonstrated; however, for slender-
ness in the design range, only a small reduction was noted. No formulations or
recommendations for direct design use were made. Fujii and Ohmura (1985) pre-
sented research on the nonlinear behavior of curved webs using the finite element
method. It was emphasized that the web panel model with no flange rigidity is inad-
equate in estimating the behavior of the curved panel under significant loading. No
specific recommendations or formulations regarding the design of curved I-girder
webs were made. Suetake et al. (1986) examined the influence of flanges on the
strength of curved I-girders under bending using the mixed finite element approach.
Conclusions indicated that the aspect ratio of the panel is of minor importance and
the influence of the flange rigidity cannot be ignored. Also, observations were made
on the torsional buckling behavior of the flanges. No quantitative formulations for
design use were recommended.
Nakai et al. (1986) conducted analytical research on the elastic large-
displacement behavior of curved web plates subjected to bending using the finite
element method. The web plate panels were modeled with and without flange rigid-
ity. Flanges were modeled with fixed and simple supports. The boundary conditions
at the panel ends (transverse stiffener locations) were modeled as simple support.
One and two levels of longitudinal stiffeners were also modeled. It was determined
that including the flange stiffness is essential to extract reliable results for the behav-
ior of the curved web panels and therefore all parametric results used flange rigidity
428 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

models. It was further shown that increasing curvature has little effect on the resist-
ing moment (less than 10% within the range of actual bridge parameters). This was
attributed to the fact that the web contributes only a small portion to the flexural
resistance compared to the flanges. It was also demonstrated that the maximum web
deflection occurs in the vicinity of 0.25h from the compression flange, but that this
transverse deflection is effectively eliminated when one or two longitudinal stiffen-
ers are present. Web slenderness requirements based on the effects of curvature on
displacement and stress were formulated by Nakai and proposed for adoption by the
Hanshin (1988) Guidelines for the Design of Horizontally Curved Girder Bridges
(Kitada et al., 1986). It was suggested that limiting values should be established so
that the curved web plate transverse deflection and plate bending stress be limited
to the maximum transverse deflection and bending stress that would occur in the
straight girder with the same dimensions but, instead of curvature, with a maximum
initial deflection of D/250, which was the maximum allowable initial deflection
stipulated in the Japanese design code (Japan Road Association, 1990). Nakai et al.
conducted other research pertaining to the behavior of curved I-girder webs, includ-
ing a series of experimental studies on the behavior of curved I-girder webs under
bending, shear, and combined bending and shear (Nakai et al., 1983, 1984a,b,c,
1985a,b,c).
Davidson et al. (1999a,b, 2000a,b) investigated the buckling, finite-displacement,
and ultimate-strength behavior of curved I-girder web panels under pure shear, pure
bending, and combined bending and shear using the finite element method. The
finite element models confirmed that the elastic buckling stress for the curved panel
is higher than that of the comparable flat panel under pure shear. Under pure bend-
ing, Davidson et al. (1999a,b) showed that the nonlinear transverse displacement
effectively reduces the moment-carrying capacity of the curved section over that of
a similar straight section. Based on a “lateral pressure analogy,” curvature reduc-
tion equations on the design slenderness were developed. This work was extended
to study the effects of longitudinal stiffeners on the strength and stability of curved
web panels (Davidson et al., 2000b).
As a result of NCHRP Project 12-38, the web slenderness requirements of the
2003 guide specifications were adjusted to be more in line with the straight girder
specifications. The curvature-dependent web slenderness equations resulting from
the work of Culver and Daniels used in editions prior to the 2003 Guide Specifica-
tions was eliminated. The slenderness of unstiffened webs increases linearly from
a D/tw of 100 at 700 ft radius to 150 for radii of 2000 ft and greater. For trans-
versely stiffened webs, D/tw cannot exceed 150 and the spacing between stiffeners
increases linearly from a spacing of D at 700 ft radius to 3D for radii of 2000 ft
and beyond. For transversely and longitudinally stiffened webs, slenderness cannot
exceed 300. The critical bending stresses for all cases are not dependent upon the
curvature of the girder.
The bending tests conducted during the CSBRP include three different web
slendernesses and one specimen that was not transversely stiffened. It was con-
cluded from these tests that, although the most slender web section (2Dc /tw = 189,
singly symmetric) exhibited significant buckling, web slenderness does not affect
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 429

bending capacity at first yield or ultimate moment. Therefore, the AASHTO (2004)
LRFD Specifications do not include requirements reflecting curvature effects on
web behavior in bending-dominant regions of the girder.

Pure Shear The web of a plate girder that is stiffened by flanges and trans-
verse stiffeners has considerable postbuckling strength, and allowable stress design
(ASD), load factor design (LFD), and LRFD codes have taken advantage of this
strength for straight girders. According to Basler (1961), the ability of a plate girder
to behave in a manner similar to a truss was recognized as early as 1898. The work
of Basler led to a theory that agreed with tests and provides criteria to ensure that
truss action can be developed within the web. By considering truss action, the shear
strength is raised from that based on buckling to a condition corresponding to shear
yield in classical beam theory.
Early analytical work on the elastic stability of stiffened cylindrical shells sub-
jected to pure shear was conducted by Batdorf (1947) and Batdorf et al. (1947) and
then by Stein and Fralich (1949) and Stein and Yeager (1949). Mariani et al. (1973)
later extended the work of Stein and Yeager to include the case of the curved plate
with multiple stiffeners under pure shear and developed an optimal stiffener spacing
criterion to establish stiffener requirements for curved girder webs. Experimental
research on the ultimate and postbuckling reserve strength of curved girders has
been conducted by Ilyasevitch and Klujev (1971) and by Mozer et al. (1971) as
part of the CURT project. It was observed that there is a decrease in the postbuck-
ling strength with an increase in curvature, although the measured shear strengths
are within 10% of the ultimate shear strength from straight girder theory, which
could be considered to be within the range of acceptable experimental error. Also,
the experimental investigation by Mozer et al. indicated that, in areas of negative
bimoment (tending to bend the compression flange inward), the web behaves more
like that of a straight girder and can carry the ultimate shear strength predicted for
a straight girder with similar proportions.
The Japanese researchers conducted a series of experimental tests on the ulti-
mate strength of curved web panels under pure shear, pure bending, and combined
bending and shear (Nakai et al., 1984a,b,c, 1985a,b,c). Their results also indicate
that curvature has little effect on the elastic critical shear load but that there is some
decrease in ultimate strength. Like the Guide Specifications, the Japanese design
specifications do not recognize postbuckling reserve strength for curved plate gird-
ers due to lack of research in this area (Hanshin, 1988; Japan Road Association,
1990).
Lee and Yoo presented experimental and analytical investigations on the behav-
ior of flat thin-web plate girders subjected to shear (Lee and Yoo, 1998, 1999a,b,
Lee et al., 2002, 2003). Yoo and Lee (2006) asserted that, although the currently
used approaches for defining shear strength results in acceptable accuracy for
design applications, underlying assumptions are flawed. They demonstrated that a
self-equilibrating force system is developed in the web panel that does not depend
on the flanges and stiffeners. Lee and Yoo (1998) studied the bifurcation buckling
and ultimate-strength analysis of curved web panels subjected to pure shear. They
430 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

used the finite element method with combined geometric and material nonlinear
solution sequences to analyze typical plate-girder web panels of various curvatures.
The aspect ratios of the panels were varied to compare the effects of transverse
stiffener spacing for curved panels to that of straight. The results from the buck-
ling analyses agreed with previous research that showed the elastic critical load
of the curved panel is greater than that of the comparable flat panel. The analysis
revealed that curved web panels are capable of developing considerable postbuck-
ling strength after the bifurcation point and that most research findings on straight
plate girders can be applied to curved I-girders. Results also suggest that the straight
girder equations developed by Lee et al. (1994; Lee and Yoo, 1999b) can be used
to predict the shear strength of curved web panels subjected to pure shear. Because
transverse stiffeners improve the handling and shipping of long slender curved gird-
ers, it was recommended that the same provisions for straight girders be applied
to curved girders.
Zureick et al. (2002) reported the results of four full-scale curved steel I-girder
component tests conducted to examine their shear behavior and to determine their
ultimate strengths. The girders were made of AASHTO M270 Grade 345 steel
and had a nominal web depth and web thickness of 1219 mm (48 in.) and 8 mm
5
( 16 in.), respectively. The resulting nominal web slenderness ratio D/tw is 154.
Two of the girders had a nominal radius R = 63,630 mm (208.75 ft) and a trans-
verse stiffener spacing such that the ratio do /D is 3 and 1.5 (producing do /R values
of 0.0575 and 0.0287). The other two components were identical except that their
radii were 36,580 mm (120 ft), resulting in do /R = 0.10, 0.050. All of the girders
were braced against radial deflections at intervals of 3658 mm (12 ft) along the
girder arc. Therefore, the ratio Lb /R is equal to 0.0575 for two specimens and
0.10 for the other two, where Lb is the distance between the bracing systems along
the girder arc. Jung and White (2006) reported results of finite element studies of
the four curved steel I-girder shear components tested as well as parametric exten-
sions of these tests. The models incorporated the measured material stress–strain
relationships and section dimensions from the physical tests, detailed arrangments
of the test boundary conditions, residual stresses due to flame cutting and weld-
ing, and initial geometric imperfections in the form of buckling mode shapes. The
load transfer mechanisms of the test girders were investigated via elastic buckling
and full nonlinear analyses. Parametric studies demonstrated the effects of resid-
ual stresses, geometric imperfections, and the influence of reduced flange size on
the peak shear capacity and moment–shear interaction. These studies concluded
that transversely stiffened curved I-girders can be designed for maximum-strength
loading conditions based on the AASHTO (2004) LRFD I-girder shear capacity
equations, including the consideration of postbuckling strength, at least up to the
following limits of do /D ≤ 3, D/tw ≤ 160, and do /R ≤ 0.10. The results also
supported the conclusion that moment–shear interaction need not be considered
in straight and/or curved I-girders designed using the AASHTO (2004) LRFD
specifications.
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 431

Combined Bending and Shear Although most regions of the girder will be
subjected to both transverse shear and vertical bending moment, it is generally
accepted for straight girders that the strength in bending is not influenced by shear,
and vice versa. In slender webs where “bend buckling” may occur, the bending
stress is redistributed so that the flanges carry an increased share. The ultimate
shear strength, however, is not reduced as a result of bend buckling because most
of the shear resistance results from tension-field action. In stockier webs bend
buckling does not occur, but high web shear in combination with bending may
cause yielding of the web adjacent to the flange.
Japanese researchers Mikami and Furunishi (1981) presented work including
shear along with bending in Japanese journals and later in the ASCE Journal of
Engineering Mechanics (1984). From these investigations it was concluded that the
presence of shear along with bending adversely affects the moment-carrying capac-
ity of the beam but no formulations for design use were presented. Abdel-Sayed
(1973) studied the prebuckling and elastic buckling behavior of curved web panels
under pure bending, pure shear, and combined bending and shear and showed that
in all cases the elastic critical load of the curved panel was greater than that of the
comparable flat panel. Nakai and co-researchers (Nakai et al., 1984a,b, 1985a,c)
conducted experimental studies on the buckling and ultimate-strength behavior of
the curved I-girder web panels under combined bending and shear. An interaction
curve was fitted to the buckling values from the tests. Interaction curves were also
derived for the ultimate strength of the curved girders involving the theoretical
nominal strengths for pure shear and pure bending. Davidson et al. (2000a) used
finite element simulations to demonstrate that the elastic buckling load under any
combination of shear with vertical bending stresses results in higher critical loads
for the curved panel over that of the straight. It was concluded that the use of
design equations presented for pure bending will result in conservative designs up
to V /Vn = 0.6, where V is the calculated shear force over the web and Vn is the
nominal shear resistance defined for pure shear.
Lee et al. (2003a) conducted research on the ultimate shear strength of trans-
versely stiffened curved web panels using nonlinear finite element analysis. They
showed that the presence of high-intensity shear reduces the ultimate bending
strength significantly in thick web panels when the shear strength is governed by
the shear yield strength and the bending strength is governed by the yield moment.
In the case of thin curved web panels, however, in which elastic shear buckling
and bend buckling will occur prior to yielding, the presence of shear does not have
any appreciable impact on bending if the bending moment is limited to the critical
bending moment. They also found that the aspect ratio of the curved girder web
panel can be extended to 3.0 or greater, whereas the 2003 guide specifications limit
this ratio to 1.0.

Transverse Stiffener Rigidity Requirements Culver et al. (1973) and Mar-


iani et al. (1973) studied curved web panels under pure shear using the Donnell
432 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

shell equation and the Galerkin method. They concluded that the required stiffener
rigidity for a curved web is less than that for a straight web if the panel aspect ratio
a/d is less than 0.78, where a is the distance between transverse stiffeners and d is
the depth of the web. For 0.78 ≤ a/d ≤ 1, the required stiffener rigidity increases
with curvature by the amount 1 +√(a/d − 0.78)Z 4 /1775, where Z is a curvature
parameter defined as Z = (a 2 /Rt) 1 − v 2 , with a/d ≤ 1. In these equations, R is
the radius to the centerline of the web, t the thickness of the web, and v Poisson’s
ratio. The study was limited to curved girders in which 0 ≤ Z ≤ 10.
Nakai et al. (1984b, 1985b) presented a beam-column model to estimate the
strength of transverse stiffeners in curved girders. The results were compared with
experiments conducted by Nakai et al. (1984a), which led to a recommendation
that the relative rigidity parameter β, defined as the ratio between required rigidity
of a transverse stiffener in horizontally curved girders to that in straight girders,
must be:

For stiffeners attached to one side of the web plate




⎨1.0 + (α − 0.69)Z [9.38α − 7.67
β= −(1.49α − 1.78)Z ] for 0.69 ≤ α ≤ 1.0 (9.1)


1.0 for < 0.69
and for stiffeners attached to both sides of the web plate


⎨1.0 + (α − 0.65)Z [12.67α − 10.42
β= −(1.99α − 2.49)Z ] for 0.65 ≤ α ≤ 1.0 (9.2)


1.0 for < 0.65

where α = a/d .
Using nonlinear finite element analyses, Lee et al. (2003a,b) and Yoo and Lee
(2006) showed that the rigidity of the transverse stiffener should be increased six
times the value obtained from AASHTO (2003) to develop the maximum potential
postbuckling strength. In the case of thick web panels, however, when the shear
design is governed by shear yielding, the stiffener rigidity does not have to be
increased.
The behavior and design of one- and two-sided transverse stiffeners in straight
and horizontally curved steel I-girders was also investigated by Kim et al. (2007)
using nonlinear finite element analysis. Unified recommendations for design of
transverse stiffeners were developed by combining the results from FEA stud-
ies with the results from a number of prior research studies. Furthermore, it was
demonstrated that stiffener design based on providing adequate bending trans-
verse stiffener stiffness and strength is a more important consideration in devel-
oping shear postbuckling resistance than the satisfaction of an area or axial force
requirement.
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 433

9.5.3 Global Buckling and Lateral Bracing Requirements


Lateral–Torsional Buckling There have been many theoretical developments
pertaining to the elastic lateral–torsional buckling behavior of curved members. A
comprehensive review and comparison of these theories was presented by Kang
(1992) and Kang and Yoo (1994a,b). Yoo (1982) and Rajasekaran and Ramm (1984)
used the minimum potential energy principle to obtain solutions for the elastic
flexural torsional buckling loads for in-plane and out-of-plane buckling modes of
thin-walled curved beams that do not undergo local buckling. Yoo and Pfeiffer
(1983; Pfeiffer, 1981) investigated the elastic buckling behavior of a thin-walled
curved member through a variational based finite element formulation. Solutions
to different cases pertaining to the stability of curved beams were obtained and
compared to solutions presented by Timoshenko and Gere (1961), Vlasov (1961),
and Culver and McManus (1971) and were shown to be significantly different.
The discrepancies were attributed to incorrect formulations in the Timoshenko and
Vlasov cases and to the fact that the governing differential equation was viewed
as a deflection amplification problem rather than a classical eigenvalue problem.
Later, Yoo and Pfeiffer (1984) presented a solution to the stability of curved beams
with in-plane deformation and continued to assert their earlier conclusion related
to the discrepancies with existing solutions, including the work of Vacharajittiphan
and Trahair (1975), which is based on Vlasov’s formulation. In 1985, Yoo and
Carbine conducted a series of laboratory tests on 12 simply supported curved
beam specimens subjected to concentrated loads. Papangelis and Trahair (1986,
1987) examined the work of Yoo (1982) and Yoo and Pfeiffer (1983, 1984) by
conducting tests on circular aluminum arches. They concluded that the theoretical
loads obtained from the work of Yoo differed substantially from analytical and
experimental results of various researchers.
The conflict among curved beam theories was also discussed in a series of pub-
lications by Yang et al. (1991; Yang and Kuo, 1986, 1987; Rajasekaran et al.,
1988), who derive the nonlinear differential equation of equilibrium for horizon-
tally curved I-beams by making use of the principle of virtual displacements to
establish the equilibrium of a bar in its buckled configuration. Numerical results
were obtained and compared with those resulting from Yoo’s (Yoo, 1982 and Yoo
and Pfeiffer 1983) as well as Vlasov’s (1961) theories. The discrepancy between
Yang’s results and Yoo’s was attributed to the fact that Yoo not only neglected
both the radial stress effect and the contribution of shear stresses to the poten-
tial energy but also substituted the curvature terms of the curved beam in the
potential energy equation of a straight beam. Kuo and Yang (1991) further criti-
cized the work of Vlasov and Yoo by solving numerically the buckling problem
of a curved beam with a solid cross section under uniform bending and uniform
compression.
Based on an elastic buckling finite element analysis study, Kang and Yoo
(1990) showed that initial curvature and warping do not significantly affect the
434 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

lateral–torsional buckling strength of curved girders with a subtended angle


between two adjacent cross frames up to 0.1 radian, the maximum value allowed
in the 1993 Guide Specifications. In 1994, Kang and Yoo (1994a,b) presented
companion papers on the buckling and large-displacement behavior of thin-walled
circular beams based on theory derived using the principle of minimum potential
energy. Closed-form solutions were obtained for limited loading and boundary
conditions and used for a comparison to the theory of other researchers.
As part of the CURT project, Culver and McManus (1971; McManus, 1971)
presented a second-order analysis in which the equilibrium equations are formulated
on the deformed structure. Results were compared to those of lateral buckling tests
conducted by Mozer et al. (1971, 1975a,b; Mozer and Culver, 1975). The study
recommended a set of formulas that were later adopted into the Guide Specifi-
cations.
Nishida et al. (1978) presented work that used the large-deflection theory of
curved members to derive an expression for predicting the critical elastic moment
for a horizontally curved beam subjected to equal end moments (Eq. 9.3). They
showed that the critical moment approaches that of the straight girder as the radius
of curvature approaches infinity. Their development, however, was derived for
simple support end conditions with equal end moments and no intermediate lateral
bracing, which limits its applicability. The equation appears as
  2  
L2 π EIy π 2 ECw
Mcr = 1− 2 2 GJ + (9.3)
π R L2 L2

where L = unbraced length, R = radius of curvature, Iy = minor axis moment of


inertia, E = Young’s modulus, G = shear modulus, J = torsional rigidity of the
section, Cw = warping constant, b = flange width, tw = web thickness, and h =
depth between flange centroids.
Kang (1992) demonstrated that a large variation in torsional rigidity ratio has
little effect on the critical load ratio of the lateral buckling of horizontally curved
girders loaded normal to the plane of curvature and that the subtended angle is the
dominating parameter. The results from finite element analyses were used to form
the following regression equation for the reduction in lateral–torsional buckling
capacity of the curved girder over that of the straight girder (Yoo et al., 1996):

α
y = 1 − γ xβ (9.4)

where y is the critical moment ratio (curved/straight), x the subtended angle in


radians, α = 2.152, β = 2.129, and γ = 0.1058.
For horizontally curved beams loaded normal to the plane of curvature, a
large-displacement analysis gives more meaningful design information than the
bifurcation buckling analysis. Significant deflections occur in such structures prior
to reaching the predicted bifurcation load and, hence, the bifurcation buckling load
represents an upper bound of elastic instability. Developments on the nonlinear
theory of curved beams have been made by many of the researchers discussed
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 435

above, with a comprehensive review and comparison of these theories presented


by Kang (1992, 1994a). Subsequent to the curved beam element developments by
Yoo and co-researchers, Pi and Trahair (1997) introduced a curved beam element
formulation and used it to study the nonlinear behavior of elastic I-beams curved
in a plan subjected to equal end moments.
Culver and McManus (1971) used second-order analyses and the finite
difference technique to solve bifurcation buckling and large-deflection problems
of curved beams. Their research became the basis of the ASD strength equations
in the Guide Specifications (AASHTO, 1977a,b). As pointed out by Yoo and
Pfeiffer (1983), the solution, however, cannot be accurate because the critical
moment ratio (the ratio of the critical moment of the curved beam to that of the
comparable straight beam) derived from their results approaches unity as the
subtended angle approaches 90◦ .
Japanese researchers have also conducted analytical work on the large-deflection
behavior. Nishida et al. (1978; Fukumoto et al., 1980; Fukumoto and Nishida, 1981)
provided analytical results on the elastic lateral instability of horizontally curved
beams based on large-deflection theory, and their work resulted in an equation that
predicts critical moment. All of the lateral instability investigations involved the
isolated curved member with simplified boundary conditions.

Brace Spacing In straight girder bridges, the primary function of the cross
frames and diaphragms is to prevent premature lateral buckling of the girder;
therefore, the cross-frame members are designed as secondary members. In curved
bridge systems, however, the cross frames and diaphragms have the added responsi-
bility of restraining the rotation of the girder, thereby reducing the warping stresses
in the flanges and the vertical deflection of the system. Hence, the spacing interval
between cross frames becomes a critical design parameter. Furthermore, there is
growing sentiment in the bridge engineering community to minimize the number
of cross frames due to increased fabrication and construction costs and fatigue
concerns.
In 1986, Yoo and Littrell used a computer program to study the effects of
cross-bracing in curved bridges. Bridge models were analyzed under dead and live
loads for different curvatures. In 1989, Schelling et al. presented a study con-
cerning the construction effects of bracing on curved I-girders. The investigation
produced a set of equations that define the dead-load distributions throughout the
superstructure system, which was analyzed by the two-dimensional grid method.
Davidson et al. (1996a) investigated the cross-frame spacing requirements of hori-
zontally curved I-girder bridges. The finite element method was used to determine
dominant parameters and to develop an equation for the preliminary design of the
cross-frame spacing needed to achieve a required warping-to-bending stress ratio
(fw /fb ). With a preliminary design target fw /fb = 0.25, the resulting equation is
  −1.52
Rbf
Smax = L − ln (9.5)
αL2
436 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

where Smax (m or ft) is the design spacing between cross frames, L (m or ft) the
span length of the exterior girder, R (m or ft) the radius of curvature of the exterior
girder, and bf (mm or in.) the compression-flange width and α = 2000 when metric
units are used and α = 24 with imperial units. Using existing bridge designs, results
obtained from Eq. 9.5 were compared to that of a similar equation developed by Yoo
and Littrell (1986) and to that obtained from using a simple distributed lateral load
approximation. The comparisons revealed a good correlation is obtained between
Eq. 9. 5 and the lateral load approximation but indicated that the Yoo–Littrell
equation produces less accurate results.

9.5.4 Ultimate Bending Resistance and Strength Design


Analytical and experimental ultimate-strength investigations have been made by
several researchers. Culver and McManus (1971) studied the inelastic behavior of
horizontally curved girders and made design recommendations that were adopted
into the LFD portion of the AASHTO guide specifications. Yoo and Heins (1972)
studied the plastic collapse of horizontally curved girders and presented a yield
criterion and design charts along with equations for practical applications. Yang et
al. (1989; Yang and Fan, 1988) presented yield surface formulations for I-sections
with nonuniform torsion and bimoments; similar work was presented by Imai and
Ohto (1987) in Japan. A series of extensive analytical studies of horizontally
curved beams that included the effects of large displacement and material non-
linear behavior was performed by Japanese investigators using the transfer matrix
method and assuming ideal elastic–perfectly plastic material behavior (Yoshida
and Imoto, 1973; Fukumoto and Nishida, 1981; Maegawa and Yoshida, 1981;
Yoshida and Maegawa, 1983, 1984). Later, similar results were obtained using a
flat six-degree-of-freedom triangular plate shell finite element developed by (Lee
1987; Lee and Yoo, 1988a).
The LFD portion of the Guide Specifications is based on research by Galambos
(1978) as an extension of work performed in the CURT project at Carnegie Mellon
University. The parts of the design equations that represent the reduction in strength
due to curvature are complex and cumbersome and have been shown to be quite
conservative. Hall et al. (1999) demonstrated that the lateral flange bending stress
(fw ) due to curvature in the McManus–Culver predictor equation in the Guide
Specifications is double counted. Therefore, the lateral flange bending stress due
to curvature at the critical cross-frame location must be set equal to zero.
The Hanshin Expressway Public Corporation proposed an interaction formula
for limiting the stresses in horizontally curved I-girders for adoption into its Guide-
lines for the Design of Horizontally Curved Girder Bridges (Hanshin, 1988; Nakai
and Yoo, 1988). The equations represent an interaction for allowable stress in the
compression flange and include the presence of warping and the reduced lateral
buckling strength of the girder due to curvature. They are based on theoretical
and experimental research in the elastic range by Nakai and co-researchers (Nakai
and Kotoguchi, 1983; Nakai et al., 1983). In research by Fukomoto and Nishida
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 437

(1981) using the transfer matrix method for both the elastic and inelastic ranges, an
approximate ultimate-strength formula was presented involving the plastic moment
capacity of the section, the elastic buckling moment of the straight beam with the
same length and cross-section dimensions, and the elastic buckling load of the
entire section about the minor axis. Nakai et al. (1985a) presented an empirical
equation for the ultimate moment based upon 19 tests in which the elements com-
prising the cross sections are classified as compact and the a/d ratio is less than 1
(where a is the distance between transverse stiffeners and d is girder depth).
In several investigations (Kang, 1992; Yoo and Pfeiffer, 1983; Yoo et al., 1996),
it was demonstrated that (1) a large variation in the torsional rigidity ratio has
little effect on the critical load ratio (curved/straight) for the lateral buckling of
horizontally curved girders loaded normal to the plane of curvature and (2) the
subtended angle is the dominating parameter. A curvature reduction formula was
derived from regression of data resulting from an elastic finite element investiga-
tion using curved beam elements that include warping (Kang, 1992). Although this
strength reduction equation was developed based upon an elastic analysis, it was
proposed that the reduction in the critical moment of curved girders results from
the presence of the rotational component of the girder behavior, and likewise there
would be a similar reduction in ultimate moment capacity (Yoo et al., 1996). Ulti-
mate strength tests by others on curved I-girders appear to verify this hypothesis
(Yadlosky, 1993).
Yoo and Davidson (1997) presented yield interaction equations that are based
on the static equilibrium of the I-shape girder under vertical moment and lateral
flange moments. Seventeen interaction equations were developed encompassing
noncomposite and composite sections that are doubly symmetric, singly symmet-
ric, I-shaped compact, flange-compact, noncompact, cracked, and uncracked. It was
assumed that only singly symmetric compact sections can be made hybrid. For
compact-flange and noncompact sections, however, a homogeneous section was
assumed because hybrid construction will not yield significantly higher moment
capacities. The radius of curvature, cross-frame spacing, material properties, and
cross-section geometry were included as variables of the interaction equations. A
computer program was developed and the reduction due to curvature was demon-
strated for a number of hypothetical cases.
Davidson and Yoo (2000) and Yoo and Davidson (2002) presented the results of
finite element models of the curved three-girder FHWA-CSBRP test frame. Linear
elastic static, buckling, and combined material and geometric nonlinear analyses
were conducted using models that represent the test frame and component test
specimens. The results were compared to various predictor equations developed
from analytical work by other researchers, including Japanese research. Predic-
tor equations were also compared for such parameters as warping stress, elastic
flange buckling curvature reduction, and curved web maximum displacement and
maximum stress.
Singapore researchers have conducted experimental and analytical investigations
on the ultimate strength of I-beams curved in plan. Liew et al. (1995) used finite
438 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

element models that were verified using available experimental results to study
the ultimate strength of horizontally curved I-beams. Residual stress effects and
intermediate bracing effects were considered, and an equation was derived for the
ultimate resistance. Shanmugam et al. (1995) reported the results of experiments
involving both rolled curved beams and built-up sections with varying curvatures.
Observations and comparisons were presented regarding the impact of residual
effects on the ultimate-strength behavior of rolled and built-up sections. Thevendran
et al. (1999, 2000) reported experimental and analytical studies on the ultimate-load
capacity of steel–concrete composite beams curved in plan. Shanmugam et al.
(2003) conducted experimental and finite element studies on the ultimate strength of
curved plate girders with varying curvatures and plate slenderness, with particular
emphasis on the ability of the girders to develop tension-field action. Lian and
Shanmugam (2003, 2004) conducted experimental and finite element studies on
the ultimate strength of curved plate girders with varying-size circular openings.
Australian researchers have also conducted extensive experimental and analyt-
ical research on the ultimate strength of beams curved in plan. Pi and Trahair
(1994) presented findings on the inelastic behavior of I-beams under combined
bending and torsion based on the finite element method. They showed that the cir-
cular interaction equation provides a lower bound estimate of the ultimate strength
of a straight I-beam under combined bending and nonuniform torsion only when
lateral displacements of the beam are continuously prevented. When the lateral
displacements of the beam are not fully prevented, the interaction equation may
lead to an overestimate of the ultimate strength. Pi et al. (1999, 2000) presented a
curved beam finite element model for the geometric and material nonlinear analy-
sis of I-beams curved in plan. The von Mises yield criterion, the associated flow
rule, and the isotropic strain-hardening rule were used in the development of an
elastic–plastic incremental model. The model was validated using prior experi-
mental results. It was demonstrated that, when the initial curvature of a curved
beam is small, bending is the major action and the nonlinear inelastic behavior is
similar to the inelastic flexural–torsional buckling of a straight beam. They also
showed that when the curvature is more significant, both nonuniform torsion and
bending are dominant with nonlinear inelastic behavior developing very early in the
loading process. Pi and Bradford (2001) investigated the nonlinear elastic–plastic
behavior of steel I-section beams curved in plan. The strength interactions between
bending and torsion of continuously braced, centrally braced, and unbraced curved
beams were studied. It was demonstrated that the conventional circular interaction
equation overestimates the bending/torsion interaction strength of steel I-section
curved beams because it does not consider the effects of secondary torsion and
minor axis bending actions and the included angle of the curved beam. Formulas
were proposed and validated against rational finite element results and existing
experimental results.
As part of NCHRP Project 12-38, Hall et al. (1999) extended the interaction
strength definitions presented by Nakai and Yoo (1988) and Schilling (1996). It was
STABILITY OF CURVED I-GIRDERS 439

proposed that the allowable flange stress based on first-order elastic calculations
be limited to the yield stress minus one-third of the lateral bending stress, which
became known as the “one-third rule.” This approach was adopted into the 2003
AASHTO Guide Specifications (AASHTO, 2003). White et al. (2001) extended the
one-third rule concept and rigorously demonstrated its accuracy and applicability
using finite element results from the CSBRP. Two limit-state definitions were
proposed and subsequently adopted into the 2004 AASHTO Standard Specifi-
cations (AASHTO, 2004) as a “unified” approach for considering lateral flange
bending:

fbu + 1
3 f ≤ φf Fn (9.6)
Mu + 1
3 f Sx ≤ φf Mn (9.7)

where fbu = flange major axis bending stress


fl = flange lateral bending stress
φf Fn = factored flexural resistance in terms of the flange major axis
bending stress
Mu = member major axis bending moment
Sx = elastic section modulus about the major axis of the section to the
flange under consideration, taken generally as Myf /Fyf
φf Mn = factored flexural resistance in terms of the member major axis
bending moment
Myf = yield moment corresponding to the flange under consideration,
calculated as defined in Appendix D of AASHTO (2004)
accounting for the influence of noncomposite, long-term
composite, and short-term composite loadings
Fyf = specified minimum yield strength of the flange under consideration

Equation 9.6 is used to check slender-web noncomposite members, slender-web


composite members in negative bending, and noncompact composite members in
positive bending. In the limit that the flange lateral bending stress fl is equal to
zero, this equation reduces to the conventional format for checking the above types
of members subjected to major axis bending only. The maximum potential value of
φf Fn is φf Fyf , but φf Fn can be less than φf Fyf due to slender-web bend buckling
and/or hybrid-web yielding effects or due to compression-flange lateral–torsional
or local buckling limit states.
Equation 9.7 is used to check the strength limit states of noncomposite members
or composite members in negative bending that have compact or noncompact webs
and for checking of compact composite members in positive bending. For these
member types, φf Mn can be as large as φf Mp , where Mp is the section plastic
moment resistance.
440 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

9.6 STABILITY OF CURVED BOX GIRDERS

In recent years, many states in the United States have favored the use of curved
box-girder bridges over open I-girders simply because of their superior torsional
stiffness.1 As a part of the CURT project, Culver and Mozer (1975a,b) and Mozer
and Culver (1974) conducted a series of static tests that included stiffened and
unstiffened compression flanges and trapezoidal and rectangular boxes. Most of
the test results were reflected in the original guide specifications, with the 2003
edition retaining many of these test results, particularly those on local buckling.

9.6.1 Curvature Effects on Box-Girder Compression Flanges


The compression flange of a box girder in the high negative vertical bending
moment zone is typically stiffened by longitudinal stiffeners. The gradient of the
compressive normal stress (warping stress) in a horizontally curved box flange
occurs due to warping caused by curvature and distortional stress. Because the
longitudinal warping stress must not exceed 10% of the longitudinal stress due to
vertical bending at the strength limit state, internal cross frames and intermediate
bracing are necessary. Under this condition, Choi and Yoo (2005) found that the
minimum stiffness requirements developed by Yoo et al. (2001) for straight box
girders can also be used for curved box girders. Based on the AASHTO definition
for the minimum moment of inertia of the longitudinal stiffeners, structural tees
are the most efficient shape. The minimum moment of inertia of the longitudinal
stiffener required is

Is = 0.3α 2 nwtf3 (9.8)

where α = the aspect ratio of a subpanel bounded between adjacent longitudinal


stiffeners or box web and adjacent transverse stiffeners
n = the number of longitudinal stiffeners
w = the width of the subpanel
tf = the thickness of the compression flange

Choi et al. (2007) developed the optimum stiffness and spacing required for
transverse stiffeners to be placed along with the longitudinal stiffeners mentioned
above. It was found that the critical compressive stress of the compression flange
is more effectively determined by the dated CRC (1960) column curve (inverse
parabola), because the initial imperfection allowed by the American Welding Soci-
ety (AWS, 2002) significantly reduces the critical compressive stress in the transi-
tion zone of the subpanel width-to-thickness ratio.

1 On the other hand, this additional stiffness can present fit-up problems during erection, a situation which
is not often encountered with the more flexible open I-girders. As such, any significant fabrication errors
can only be corrected in the shop.
STABILITY OF CURVED BOX GIRDERS 441

9.6.2 Effects of Curvature on Box-Girder Web Plate Strength


and Stability
Pure Bending Material presented in Section 9.5.2 on pure bending is generally
applicable to web plates of curved box girders. Longitudinal stiffeners must be
continuous when they are placed on the curved box webs to prevent bend–buckling.
Given that most curved box girders in the United States and Canada are trapezoidal,
having a web inclination of 4 to 1, developing the proper longitudinal stiffener
geometry often presents an additional fabrication challenge.

Pure Shear Again, material presented in Section 9.5.2 on pure shear is generally
applicable. The St. Venant shear flow from torsion is additive to vertical bending
shear in one of the two box-girder webs. Because the web in most box girders
is inclined, the shear flow in the web resulting from vertical shear is increased
slightly. For very thin web panels, it may be necessary to account for the true
vertical bending shear flow characteristic of a closed box section.

9.6.3 Lateral Bracing and Intermediate Internal Bracing Requirements


Lateral Bracing Open-top tub girders have minimal torsional stiffness and
strength. Field experience indicates that even in straight box girders significant
torsional moments can develop due to eccentrically applied loads from the unhard-
ened concrete deck and construction equipment. To provide adequate torsional
rigidity during construction, the top opening must be laterally braced with double
diagonals or Warren truss-type single diagonals, resulting in a pseudobox section
(Fig. 7.29). Fan and Helwig (1999, 2002) presented one of the few comprehensive
studies on the behavior of such a system and the forces that develop in the lateral
bracing members. Kim and Yoo (2006b) extended the method adopted by Fan and
Helwig (1999, 2002) to better predict the bracing forces in single diagonal-type
lateral bracing members coupled with X-type internal cross frames.

Internal Cross Frames Kim and Yoo presented a complete interaction of top
lateral and K-type internal bracing systems (2006d) and X-type internal bracing
(2008). With the results of these two studies, it is now possible to design lateral
and internal bracing systems in tub girders so that a complete interaction between
these two systems is maintained. Contrary to prevailing ideas, there exists a strong
interaction between these two systems, particularly in curved tub girders. The inter-
nal and lateral bracing systems of curved box girders cannot be designed separately
without considering the complete interaction.

9.6.4 Ultimate Bending Strength


Nakai and Yoo (1988) summarized most of the early Japanese research on curved
box girders. Nakai and Kitada (1992) and Nakai et al. (1990, 1992) continued their
study on curved box girders including their experimental study on the ultimate
strength of thin-walled box beams subjected to bending and torsion. Kim and Yoo
(2006a, 2008) presented an improved ultimate-strength definition for box beams.
442 HORIZONTALLY CURVED STEEL GIRDERS

9.6.5 External Bracing between Box Girders


External bracing is provided between curved box girders to facilitate concrete deck
placement by controlling the vertical deflection and rotation of the girder with
respect to its longitudinal axis. External bracing, however, has shown to adversely
affect the fatigue behavior of box girders. Therefore, many owners of curved bridges
call for the removal of external bracing except those on abutments or piers, which
can be costly. Kim and Yoo (2006c) demonstrated that only a single external
bracing per span is effective in most horizontally curved box-girder bridges, thereby
minimizing the need and cost of external bracing.

9.7 CONCLUDING REMARKS

Horizontally curved steel girders provide an efficient design approach for develop-
ing curved roadway alignments, and hence, the need for horizontally curved plate
and box girders continues to grow as populations in major urban areas become
denser. The simple addition of horizontal curvature, however, greatly affects the
strength and stability of the system and therefore complicates behavior, design,
and construction. This chapter outlines stability issues associated with curvature,
provides a brief review of the most important literature, and describes the trends for
improved design and construction of bridges using curved plate and box girders.
During the past 10 years, enormous progress has been achieved in defining
the effect of curvature on the stability and resistance of curved girders, but much
additional work remains. Future emphasis is expected to be on the use of hybrid
girders for curved alignments, construction and erection issues, fatigue, system
ultimate strength, and dynamic effects.

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