| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Plano Fixed Bridges, Richardson Fixed Bridges, Allen Fixed Bridges,... planodentist.com | Chicago Bridges, South Shore Bridges, Beverly Bridges, Calumet Heights... dentaldreamteamchicago.co... | Bridge Dentistry Virginia, Dentist Bridges Virginia, Tooth Bridges... fixasmile.com | Affordable Dentures, Dental Bridges, Partial Bridges and Tooth Bridges katydentist.com |
This article is about suspended-deck type suspension bridges. For others, see Suspension bridge types.
A suspension bridge is a type of bridge in which the deck (the load-bearing portion) is hung below suspension cables on vertical suspenders. While modern bridges of this type date from the early 19th century, earlier bridges without vertical suspenders (simple suspension bridges) date from the 7th Century in Central America. This type of bridge has cables suspended between towers, plus vertical suspender cables that carry the weight of the deck below, upon which traffic crosses. This arrangement allows the deck to be level or to arc upward for additional clearance. Like other suspension bridge types, this type often is constructed without falsework. The suspension cables must be anchored at each end of the bridge, since any load applied to the bridge is transformed into a tension in these main cables. The main cables continue beyond the pillars to deck-level supports, and further continue to connections with anchors in the ground. The roadway is supported by vertical suspender cables or rods, called hangers. In some circumstances the towers may sit on a bluff or canyon edge where the road may proceed directly to the main span, otherwise the bridge will usually have two smaller spans, running between either pair of pillars and the highway, which may be supported by suspender cables or may use a truss bridge to make this connection. In the latter case there will be very little arc in the outboard main cables.
[edit] HistoryThe suspended-deck suspension bridge is one of the older forms of suspension bridge. Lacking a sufficiently level and stable deck, most simple suspension bridges are not suited for modern roads and railroads. Advances in materials and design led to the development of the suspended deck bridge, a modern bridge capable of carrying vehicles and light rail. In the late 7th Century, the Mayan empire had the earliest known suspended-deck suspension bridge, the Maya Bridge at Yaxchilan. Claims that suspension bridges with a horizontal deck (presumably a suspended deck) originated in Tibet or China remain largely unsubstantiated. The first design for a bridge resembling the modern suspended deck bridge in the West is attributed to Faust Vrančić, whose 1595 book “Machinae Novae” included drawings both for a timber and rope suspension bridge, and a hybrid suspension and cable-stayed bridge using iron chains. However, the first such bridge actually built was James Finley’s iron chain bridge at Jacob’s Creek, in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, in 1801. This was widely publicised from 1810 onwards, beginning a period of rapid development of the modern suspended-deck suspension bridge. Early British chain bridges included the Dryburgh Abbey Bridge (1817) and 137 m Union Bridge (1820), with spans rapidly increasing to 176 m with the Menai Suspension Bridge (1826). The Clifton Suspension Bridge shown above (designed in 1831, completed in 1864 with a 214 m central span) is one of the longest of the parabolic arc chain type. Development of wire cable suspension bridges dates to the temporary simple suspension bridge at Annonay built by Marc Seguin and his brothers in 1822. It spanned only 18 m.[1] The first permanent wire cable suspension bridge was Guillaume Henri Dufour’s Saint Antoine Bridge in Geneva of 1823, with two 40 m spans.[1] The first with cables assembled in mid-air in the modern method was Joseph Chaley’s Grand Pont Suspendu in Fribourg, in 1834.[1] The Otto Beit Bridge was the first modern suspension bridge outside the United States built with parallel wire cables.[2] [edit] Structural behavior[edit] Structural analysisThe main forces in a suspension bridge of any type are tension in the cables and compression in the pillars. Since almost all the force on the pillars is vertically downwards and they are also stabilized by the main cables, the pillars can be made quite slender, as on the Severn Bridge, near Bristol, England. In a suspended deck bridge, cables suspended via towers hold up the road deck. The weight is transferred by the cables to the towers, which in turn transfer the weight to the ground. Assuming a negligible weight as compared to the weight of the deck and vehicles being supported, the main cables of a suspension bridge will form a parabola (very similar to a catenary, the form the unloaded cables take before the deck is added). One can see the shape from the constant increase of the gradient of the cable with linear (deck) distance, this increase in gradient at each connection with the deck providing a net upward support force. Combined with the relatively simple constraints placed upon the actual deck, this makes the suspended deck bridge much simpler to design and analyze than a cable-stayed bridge, where the deck is in compression. [edit] Advantages over other bridge types
[edit] Disadvantages compared with other bridge types
[edit] Variations[edit] Underspanned suspension bridgeIn an underspanned suspension bridge, the main cables hang entirely below the bridge deck, but are still anchored into the ground in a similar way to the conventional type. Very few bridges of this nature have been built, as the deck is inherently less stable than when suspended below the cables. Examples include the Pont des Bergues of 1834 designed by Guillaume Henri Dufour[1]; James Smith’s Micklewood Bridge[3]; and a proposal by Robert Stevenson for a bridge over the River Almond near Edinburgh.[3] [edit] Suspension cable types Wire strand cables of Golden Gate Bridge The main suspension cable in older bridges was often made from chain or linked bars, but modern bridge cables are made from multiple strands of wire. This contributes greater redundancy; a few flawed strands in the hundreds used pose very little threat, whereas a single bad link or eyebar can cause failure of the entire bridge. (The failure of a single eyebar was found to be the cause of the collapse of the Silver Bridge over the Ohio river). Another reason is that as spans increased, engineers were unable to lift larger chains into position, whereas wire strand cables can be largely prepared in mid-air from a temporary walkway. [edit] Deck structure typesMost suspended deck bridges have open truss structures to support the roadbed, particularly owing to the unfavorable effects of using plate girders, discovered from the Tacoma Narrows Bridge (1940) bridge collapse. Recent developments in bridge aerodynamics have allowed the re-introduction of plate structures. In the picture of the Yichang Bridge, note the very sharp entry edge and sloping undergirders in the suspension bridge shown. This enables this type of construction to be used without the danger of vortex shedding and consequent aeroelastic effects, such as those that destroyed the original Tacoma Narrows bridge. [edit] Use other than road and rail Cable-suspended footbridge at Dallas Fort Worth Airport Terminal D The principles of suspension used on the large scale may also appear in contexts less dramatic than road or rail bridges. Light cable suspension may prove less expensive and seem more elegant for a footbridge than strong girder supports. Where such a bridge spans a gap between two buildings, there is no need to construct special towers, as the buildings can anchor the cables. Cable suspension may also be augmented by the inherent stiffness of a structure that has much in common with a tubular bridge. [edit] Construction sequence (wire strand cable type) Lions' Gate Bridge with deck under construction from the span's center Typical suspension bridges are constructed using a sequence generally described as follows. Depending on length and size, construction may take anywhere between a year and a half (construction on the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge took only 19 months) to as many as a decade (the Akashi-Kaikyō Bridge's construction began in May 1986 and was opened in May, 1998 - a total of twelve years).
[edit] The longest suspended-deck suspension bridge spans in the world The Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge, world's longest mainspan. Main article: List of longest suspension bridge spans Suspension bridge are typically ranked by the length of their main span.
[edit] Other suspended-deck suspension bridges Bosporus Bridge in Istanbul, connecting Europe (left) and Asia (right). The Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge is visible in the background.
[edit] Infamous suspended-deck suspension bridges
[edit] Gallery
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |