Resilience Assessment for Corroded Reinforced Concrete Bridge Piers Against Vessel Impact
The resilience concept is well established in engineering, but the quantitative studies of vessel impact resilience for bridge structures remain limited. This paper presents an integrated framework for assessing vessel impact resilience under combined rebar corrosion and vessel collision effects. Fi...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
MDPI AG
2025-08-01
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| Series: | Buildings |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/15/15/2750 |
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| Summary: | The resilience concept is well established in engineering, but the quantitative studies of vessel impact resilience for bridge structures remain limited. This paper presents an integrated framework for assessing vessel impact resilience under combined rebar corrosion and vessel collision effects. First, a corroded reinforced concrete bridge is considered for nonlinear static analysis to quantify initial corrosion damage and for nonlinear dynamic analysis to evaluate post-impact function loss. Then, recovery for each damage state is modeled by using both negative exponential and triangular recovery functions to estimate restoration times and to obtain a vessel impact resilience index. The results show that increasing corrosion severity markedly reduces resilience capacity. Furthermore, resilience indices obtained from the negative exponential function generally exceed those from the triangular function, and this improvement becomes more significant at lower resilience levels. Resilience indices calculated by using negative exponential and triangular recovery functions show negligible differences when the concrete bridge is in the uncorroded initial state and the vessel impact velocity is below 1.5 m/s. However, as reinforcement corrosion increases, the maximum discrepancy between these two recovery functions also increases, reaching a value of 67% at a corrosion level of 15.0%. From the numerical results obtained from a case study, it is important to select an appropriate recovery model when assessing vessel impact resilience. For rapid initial restoration followed by slower long-term recovery, the negative exponential model yields greater resilience gains compared to the triangular model. The proposed method thus provides an effective tool for engineers and decision makers to evaluate and improve the vessel impact resilience of aging bridges under the combined corrosion and impact effects. This proposes a quantitative metric for resilience-based condition assessment and maintenance planning. |
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| ISSN: | 2075-5309 |