DOI: 10.3390/app16136322 ISSN: 2076-3417

Mechanical Behaviour and Parametric Analysis of the Hybrid Girder Bridges Joint Between Steel-Concrete Composite Girder and Prestressed Concrete Girder

Yiteng Lin, Qingtian Su, Fawas. O. Matanmi, Xingfei Yan, Shang Gao

This study focuses on a novel three-span hybrid continuous beam bridge, analyzing the force performance and key design parameters of the non-cellular post-support plate joint. A finite element model and parametric analysis were used to reveal the stress distribution patterns, the load-bearing characteristics of the connectors, and the load transfer path under negative bending moments. The study shows that the axial force within the joint is equitably shared among three load paths: the top slab concrete (20.7%), the bearing plate (40.1%), and the shear connectors (39.2%). Although interfacial friction contributes approximately 27.1% to the total shear resistance, it is conservatively recommended to neglect this effect in design due to inherent uncertainties. Parametric analysis reveals distinct marginal effects and efficiency thresholds: increasing the bearing plate thickness from 20 mm to 100 mm results in a mere 1.0 MPa reduction in the peak concrete stress, while extending the joint length beyond 1.0 times the beam height renders the central connectors ineffective. Furthermore, reducing the connector stiffness effectively lowers the non-uniformity coefficient from 2.3 to below 2.0. Notably, the first row of web PBLs carries 34.8% to 47.2% of the total shear force, with a stable non-uniformity coefficient of 1.05–1.06, establishing it as the critical control section for simplified design. These findings provide a theoretical basis and practical guidance for the design of similar joints in hybrid girder bridges.

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