Chuck(G) wrote:Here's a UofM 2001 bridge inspection report:
http://www.lrrb.org/pdf/200110.pdf
From what I've seen and heard, it wasn't the concrete that failed, but the steel. The report seems to indicate this as a source of concern.
Not really. They pointed out that some details were not designed in a way that was sensitive to fatigue, but they also determined that no fatigue cracking had occurred and that they didn't expect it to. Fatigue cracking of the exposed steel would have been first on the list of inspection items, especially with the sub-optimal details identified.
And this report isn't a bridge inspection report, but rather a research report looking at a specific potential failure mode. A bridge inspection would be less deep and much more comprehensive, looking at all potential failure modes. And it would likely not be done by grad students at UofM, but rather by consultants or MnDOT employees who are experts in bridge inspection. That doesn't mean the bridge inspections done recently (and much more recently than this research) aren't faulty--after all, the bridge fell down, so some failure mode or combination of failure modes were obviously missed.
Fatigue in steel, for those who don't know, occurs when loading reaches a high percentage of the yield strength, without yielding, for enough cycles to cause a crack to form and propagate. It's cause by stress hardening, which makes the steel brittle. A poor construction detail can provide a stress riser which can start a crack, and then repeated stress cycles cause the crack to travel. Steel is actually highly resistant to fatigue cracking at normal temperatures. Cast iron (used in some historic bridge trusses and truss components) and aluminum, for example, have much lower fatigue resistance. That's why airplane inspectors are so interested in evidence of fatigue--most of the structure of modern airplanes is made from aluminum.
My (specifically ignorant but generally educated) suspicion would tend more along Bloke's line. All concrete cracks, and cracks in the concrete can allow salty moisture to reach the reinforcing steel. That sort of corrosion is buried down in the concrete and a little harder to see. But that's not the issue raised in this report, at least I didn't see it in my quick scan, which was more concerned with the exposed steel components.
Rick "sharp inside corners in fatigue-prone structures = bad" Denney