Open access
Technical Papers
Sep 1, 2017

Experimental Study and Residual Performance Evaluation of Corroded High-Tensile Steel Wires

Publication: Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 22, Issue 11

Abstract

To evaluate the residual service performance of corroded high-tensile steel wires, a batch of in situ wires that had served for 13 years in the hangers of an arch bridge was investigated. Four types of corroded wires were derived from the in situ wires by placing them in the indoor environment for 1.5 years (Type A) or treating them in an alternate dry–wet environment for 0.25–1.5 years (Types B, C, and D). The mechanical properties of the corroded wires were investigated with tensile and fatigue tests, and the fracture characteristics were observed. Fatigue tests on Type A wires with different stress ranges were conducted, and the stress intensity factor range ΔKp at the bottom of crack-initiation pits was analyzed. According to the S-N curve for Type A wires, the crack-propagation characteristics of steel wires were investigated. The linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) approach was used to predict the residual life of corroded wires in two systems of arch bridges. The tests show that the ultimate strain of corroded wires decreased with an increase in degree of corrosion. The fatigue properties of wires were found to degrade significantly at the early corrosion stage, and the degradation rate slowed down with further development of corrosion. The correlation between the fatigue life and the stress intensity factor range ΔKp at the bottom of corrosion pits shows that larger pitting size tended to have shorter life under the same stress range, and fatigue cracks were difficult to initiate at the corrosion pits below the fatigue threshold. The crack-growth parameters of the Paris law identified from the S-N curve of Type A wires were m = 2.87, C = 8 × 10 −12 under the stress ratio R = 0.5. The residual life predicted by LEFM shows that in a dry environment, corroded wires with an initial pitting depth of 0.6 mm can serve for more than 30 years in arch–beam combination-system bridges, whereas they can only serve for 5 years in floating-system arch bridges.

Formats available

You can view the full content in the following formats:

Acknowledgments

This study was sponsored by National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 51378460). The authors also acknowledge X. Pan and T. Zhang for their previous work on tensile tests and theoretical research.

References

ASTM. (2015). “ Standard test method for measurement of fatigue crack growth rates.” E647-15e1, West Conshohocken, PA.
Barton, S. C., Vermaas, G. W., Duby, P. F., West, A. C., and Betti, R. (2000). “ Accelerated corrosion and embrittlement of high-strength bridge wire.” J. Mater. Civ. Eng., 33–38.
Beretta, S., and Matteazzi, S. (1996). “ Short crack propagation in eutectoid steel wires.” Int. J. Fatigue, 18(7), 451–456.
Betti, R., West, A. C., Vermaas, G., and Cao, Y. (2005). “ Corrosion and embrittlement in high-strength wires of suspension bridge cables.” J. Bridge Eng., 151–162.
Cui, W. (2002). “ Relation between crack growth rate curve and S-N curve for metal fatigue.” J. Ship Mech., 6(6), 93–106.
Dolley, E. J., Lee, B., and Wei, R. P. (2000). “ The effect of pitting corrosion on fatigue life.” Fatigue Fract. Eng. Mater. Struct, 23(7), 555–560.
Hamilton, H. R., III, Breen, J. E., and Frank K. H. (1995). “ Investigation of corrosion protection systems for bridge stay cables.” Rep. No. 1264-3F, Center for Transportation Research, Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX.
Hopwood, T., II, and Havens, J. H. (1984). “ Corrosion of cable suspension bridges.” Rep. No. UKTRP-84-14, Kentucky Transportation Research Program College of Engineering, Univ. of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
Lan, C. M. (2009). “ Study on life-cycle safety assessment methods for parallel wire stay cable.” Ph.D. thesis, Harbin Inst. of Technology, Harbin, China (in Chinese).
Li, S., Xu, Y., Li, H., and Guan, X. (2014). “ Uniform and pitting corrosion modeling for high-strength bridge wires.” J. Bridge Eng., 04014025.
Li, X. L., Song, X. H., and Liu, Y. Q. (1995). “ Investigation on fatigue reliability of high strength galvanized steel wires.” China Civil Eng. J., 2, 36–43 (in Chinese).
Li, X. Z. (2015). “ Research on mechanical performance degradation and tension force identification of arch bridge hanger.” Ph.D. thesis, Zhejiang Univ., Hangzhou, China (in Chinese).
Llorca, J., and Sánchez-Gálvez, V. (1987). “ Fatigue threshold determination in high strength cold drawn eutectoid steel wires.” Eng. Fract. Mech., 26(6), 869–882.
Llorca, J., and Sánchez-Gálvez, V. (1989). “ Fatigue limit and fatigue life prediction in high strength cold drawn eutectoid steel wires.” Fatigue Fract. Eng. Mater. Struct., 12(1), 31–45.
Mahmoud, K. M. (2007). “ Fracture strength for a high strength steel bridge cable wire with a surface crack.” Theor. Appl. Fract. Mech., 48(2), 152–160.
Martín, A., and Sánchez-Gálvez, V. (1988). “ Environmentally assisted fatigue crack growth in high strength eutectoid cold drawn steel.” Br. Corros. J., 23(2), 96–101.
Mayrbaurl, R. M., and Camo, S. (2001). “ Cracking and fracture of suspension bridge wire.” J. Bridge Eng., 645–650.
Medved, J. J., Breton, M., and Irving, P. E. (2004). “ Corrosion pit size distributions and fatigue lives—A study of the EIFS technique for fatigue design in the presence of corrosion.” Int. J. Fatigue, 26(1), 71–80.
Murakami, Y. (1985). “ Analysis of stress intensity factors of modes I, II and III for inclined surface cracks of arbitrary shape.” Eng. Fract. Mech., 22(1), 101–114.
Nakamura, S., and Suzumura, K. (2009). “ Hydrogen embrittlement and corrosion fatigue of corroded bridge wires.” J. Constr. Steel Res., 65(2), 269–277.
Nakamura, S., and Suzumura, K. (2013). “ Experimental study on fatigue strength of corroded bridge wires.” J. Bridge Eng., 200–209.
Nakamura, S., Suzumura, K., and Tarui, T. (2004). “ Mechanical properties and remaining strength of corroded bridge wires.” Struct. Eng. Int., 14(1), 50–54.
Newman, J. C., Jr., and Abbott, W. (2009). “ Fatigue-life calculations on pristine and corroded open-hole specimens using small-crack theory.” Int. J. Fatigue, 31(8), 1246–1253.
Oberparleiter, W., and Schütz, W. (1981). “Fatigue life prediction in a corrosive environment.” Integrity of offshore structure, D. Faulkner, M. J. Cowling, and P. A. Frieze, eds., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Paris, P., and Erdogan, F. (1963). “ A critical analysis of crack propagation laws.” J. Basic Eng., 85(4), 528–533.
SAC (Standardization Administration of the People’s Republic of China). (2008). “ Hot-dip galvanized steel wires for bridge cables.” GB/T 17101-2008, Standards Press of China, Beijing.
Tanaka, K., and Akiniwa, Y. (2002). “ Fatigue crack propagation behaviour derived from S–N data in very high cycle regime.” Fatigue Fract. Eng. Mater. Struct., 25(8-9), 775–784.
Toribio, J. (1998). “ Micromechanical modelling of time-dependent stress-corrosion behaviour of high-strength steel.” Mech. Time-Depend. Mater., 2(3), 229–244.
Toribio, J., Matos, J. C., and González, B. (2009). “ Micro- and macro-approach to the fatigue crack growth in progressively drawn pearlitic steels at different R-ratios.” Int. J. Fatigue, 31(11–12), 2014–2021.
Xu, J., Yang, Q., and Gu, R. (2014). “ Analysis on fatigue load effects of bridge cables based on traffic load simulation.” Proc., 7th Int. Conf. on Intelligent Computation Technology and Automation, IEEE, New York.
Ye, H. W., Huang, Y., Wang, Y. Q., and Qiang, S. (2015). “ Fatigue life estimation of corroded bridge wires based on theory of critical distances.” J. Southwest Jiaotong Univ., 50(2), 294–299 (in Chinese).
Yin, Z. P. (2012). Structural fatigue and fracture, Northwestern Polytechnical Univ. Press, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China.
Zhang, X. X., et al. (2010). “ Method on fatigue life evaluation and its application for hangers of arch bridges based on monitoring data.” J. Disaster Prev. Mitigation Eng., 30(S1), 314–317 (in Chinese).

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Bridge Engineering
Journal of Bridge Engineering
Volume 22Issue 11November 2017

History

Received: Nov 28, 2016
Accepted: May 4, 2017
Published online: Sep 1, 2017
Published in print: Nov 1, 2017
Discussion open until: Feb 1, 2018

Authors

Affiliations

Xianglong Zheng
Ph.D. Candidate, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Zhejiang Univ., Hangzhou 310058, China.
Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Zhejiang Univ., Hangzhou 310058, China (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Xiaozhang Li
Lecturer, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Mechanics, Kunming Univ. of Science and Technology, Kunming 650504, China.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

Cited by

View Options

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share