Show simple item record

contributor authorMin Liu
contributor authorDan M. Frangopol
date accessioned2017-05-08T21:25:20Z
date available2017-05-08T21:25:20Z
date copyrightJuly 2005
date issued2005
identifier other%28asce%291084-0702%282005%2910%3A4%28468%29.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/50849
description abstractDue to aggressive environmental stressors and increasing traffic loads, highway bridges are undergoing significant deterioration in both condition and safety. Timely and adequate maintenance interventions are therefore crucial to ensure the functionality of existing bridges in a network. Under budget constraints, it is important to prioritize maintenance needs to bridges that are most significant to the functionality of the entire network. In this paper, the network-level bridge maintenance planning problem is posed as a combinatorial optimization and is automated by a genetic algorithm (GA) to select and allocate maintenance interventions of different types among networked bridges as well as over a specified time horizon. Two conflicting objective functions are considered simultaneously: (1) The overall performance of a bridge network expressed by the time-dependent reliability of connectivity between the origin and the destination locations and (2) the present value of total maintenance cost over the specified time horizon. A variety of maintenance types, which differ in unit costs as well as in effects on bridge performance in terms of improvement in structural reliability levels, are used in the optimization. An event tree analysis is carried out to obtain a closed-form expression for the network connectivity reliability. As an illustration example, the GA-based procedure is applied to deteriorating deck slabs of an existing 13-bridge network located in Colorado. It is shown that the proposed maintenance planning procedure has the capability of both prioritizing scarce maintenance needs to deteriorating bridges that are most crucial to the network performance and cost-effectively distributing maintenance interventions over the time horizon.
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleBalancing Connectivity of Deteriorating Bridge Networks and Long-Term Maintenance Cost through Optimization
typeJournal Paper
journal volume10
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Bridge Engineering
identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)1084-0702(2005)10:4(468)
treeJournal of Bridge Engineering:;2005:;Volume ( 010 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record