TECHNICAL PAPERS
Jan 1, 2007

Monitoring Temperatures on a Real Box-Girder Bridge and Energy Budget Analysis for Basic Information on Bridge Cooling and Surface Freezing

Publication: Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 12, Issue 1

Abstract

A prestressed concrete (PC) box-girder bridge was instrumented to enable monitoring of its surface and body temperature. The daily variations of temperature in the pavement and upper beam of the bridge were greater the deeper from the surface. During daytime on a fine day, bridge surface temperatures were higher than air temperatures, and at nighttime on a fine night, temperatures at the surface were lower than air temperatures. It is well known that sensible heat transfers depend on wind speed and surface temperature. The wind speed measured at the bridge and on the road revealed that the wind speed at the bridge was higher than at the road due to their topography. This wind effect during the daytime causes the surface temperature at the bridge to be lower than that at the road. Thus, the reason why only bridge surfaces may freeze while roads do not can be explained by the fact that the surface temperatures of bridges are usually lower than those of roads, which can be attributed to their energy budget patterns caused by the wind speed differences between bridges and roads.

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Acknowledgments

This study was partly supported by a research grant from the Shinshu Agriculture and Forestry Science Promotion Foundation (Shinshu Norin Kagaku Shinko Zaidan) in 1992. The writers thank Dr. Takata Yoshiharu for his useful suggestions on road meteorology. This work was completed while Jun Suzuki worked as a visiting scientist at CSIRO Land & Water in Canberra, Australia. The first writer, Jun Suzuki, is very grateful to Mr. Doug Errington for his help in completing this paper.

References

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Murakuni, M. (1993b). “Chemical materials use for winter road surface management: Prior spraying effect of chemicals for road surface.” Yuki, 11, 87–94 (in Japanese).
Takata, Y. (1988). “Meteorological condition of road: 1.” The Meteorological Phenomenon Utilization Research, 1, 54–57 (in Japanese).
Takata, Y. (1989). “Meteorological condition of road: 2.” The Meteorological Phenomenon Utilization Research, 2, 66–69 (in Japanese).
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Takata, Y. (1991). “Meteorological condition of road: 4.” The Meteorological Phenomenon Utilization Research, 4, 94–97 (in Japanese).
Takata, Y. (1992). “Meteorological condition of road: 5.” The Meteorological Phenomenon Utilization Research, 5, 75–78 (in Japanese).
Takeichi, Y. (1993). “Study on pavement freezing prediction.” Trans. Civil Engine., 4(20), 175–184 (in Japanese with English abstract).
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Published In

Go to Journal of Bridge Engineering
Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 12Issue 1January 2007
Pages: 45 - 52

History

Received: Mar 7, 2003
Accepted: May 16, 2005
Published online: Jan 1, 2007
Published in print: Jan 2007

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Authors

Affiliations

Jun Suzuki
Associate Professor, Institute of Rural Environment and Engineering, Shinshu Univ., 8304 Minamiminowa, Nagano 399-4598, Japan. E-mail: [email protected]
Yoshito Ohba
Deputy General Manager, Overseas Civil Engineering Division, Shinshu Corporation, 2-3, Shibaura 1-choume, Minatoku, Tokyo 105-8007, Japan.
Yoshiyuki Uchikawa
Research Associate, Institute of Rural Environment and Engineering, Shinshu Univ., 8304 Minamiminowa, Nagano 399-4598, Japan.
Kazutoshi Hoshikawa
Professor, Institute of Rural Environment and Engineering, Shinshu Univ., 8304 Minamiminowa, Nagano 399-4598, Japan.
Kazuhiro Kimura
Professor, Institute of Rural Environment and Engineering, Shinshu Univ., 8304 Minamiminowa, Nagano 399-4598, Japan.

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