The present invention relates in general to roadside safety devices and more specifically to mounting posts for roadside safety devices. In particular, the present invention relates to improved energy-absorbing breakaway posts for roadside safety devices, such as guardrail, guardrail terminals, and crash cushions, mounted in a foundation of rigid or semi-rigid earthen or artificial materials.
Many highway agencies across the nation have begun to use barrier layers, such as Portland cement or asphaltic mow strips, to prevent the growth of vegetation under roadside safety devices such as guardrail. Mow strips consist of a narrow strip of pavement placed under the length of a guardrail to limit the growth of vegetation. When Portland cement concrete is used, the guardrail is normally erected first and the concrete is poured around the mounting posts and under the barrier. Alternatively, the guardrail posts may be driven though an asphalt pavement barrier layer laid and compacted in the area of the guardrail. Although mow strips effectively eliminate the growth of vegetation, they also have a profoundly negative impact on the safety performance of roadside safety devices such as W-beam guardrails.
Guardrail posts are normally embedded vertically in soil at a depth that allows the post to rotate laterally upon the impact of an errant vehicle on the face of the guardrail. The guardrail is attached to the post by a bolt placed in a slot in the W-beam element which allows the guardrail to detach from the post when it begins to rotate laterally. Typically, the posts will absorb lateral forces in the neighborhood of 10 kips before rotating in the soil for 1.25 to 1.5 feet in order to absorb approximately 12.5 to 15 kip-ft. The lateral rotation of mounting posts in soil is one of the primary and intended mechanisms by which guardrails dissipate the energy of an impacting vehicle.
When a guardrail post is installed in a rigid foundation, such as a mow strip, the base of the post is prevented from rotating in the soil. Thus, wooden guardrail posts placed in a rigid foundation fracture quickly upon impact without absorbing significant amounts of energy. When wide-flange steel beam posts are placed in a rigid foundation, the post often fails in an unstable manner due to lateral torsional buckling. Initially, high lateral forces of 12 kips or more are generated before a steel post begins to yield. After only a short lateral deflection, a steel post begins to rotate due to lateral torsional buckling, which causes the post to twist until it is loaded about the weak axis. When the post twists until it is loaded about the weak axis, the resistance force drops dramatically and the energy dissipated by the post is greatly reduced. The twisting motion also causes the bolt between the post and the guardrail to slide along the W-beam until it contacts the end of the slot in the guardrail. When the bolt reaches the end of the slot, pullout is inhibited which can cause the guardrail to be pulled below the impacting vehicle with the lateral rotation of the post and thus degrade safety performance of the guardrail.
Full-scale crash testing and accident records indicate that W-beam guardrails installed in rigid foundations are not capable of meeting current safety performance evaluation criteria. (See, e.g., U.S. Dept. of Transp., Federal Highway Admin., Memo No. HSA-10/B64-B (Mar. 10, 2004).) Testing has also shown that this problem is not alleviated by using conventional breakaway guardrail posts that do not absorb energy during fracture. When guardrail posts fail quickly without absorbing sufficient energy, the W-beam guardrail often ruptures and the impacting vehicle is thereby allowed to penetrate through the barrier. Currently, most highway agencies resolve this problem by leaving open areas or cutouts in the mow strips in the area around the posts. Cutouts can defeat the purpose of the mow strip by allowing vegetation to grow up in the area around the posts. Some states attempt to resolve this problem by specifying that the cutout area around posts should be filled with a very low strength grout. However, low strength grouts are difficult to obtain in the field because most construction materials are specified by a minimum strength rather than a maximum allowable strength. Accordingly, the grouts actually used in cutouts are often found to be much stronger than the specified maximum strength and the effectiveness of the guardrail can therefore be seriously compromised. In addition, the installation of mow strip cutouts, whether open or grout-filled, increases the labor associated with the construction of a mow strip and thereby also increases overall costs.
Cold winter weather in northern climates may also present difficulties for roadside safety devices. In these climates, the soil may freeze during the winter to a depth of one foot or more. This type of frozen ground condition can result in the creation of a rigid foundation similar to a concrete mow strip. Unfortunately, there is no known post foundation treatment that mitigates the safety degradation associated with a rigid foundation caused by frozen soil.
There currently exist designs for energy absorbing breakaway posts, such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,254,063 (hereby incorporated by reference). These designs generally utilize two post sections joined together by an energy-absorbing splice and are designed such that the upper post section is intended to break away from the lower section at a predetermined impact force. The energy absorbing post splice is typically created by utilizing cable restraint systems, bending of metal tabs, and/or bolts placed in slotted splice plates. These designs have been shown to absorb significant amounts of energy. However, the cost and/or reliability of these designs is believed to be a concern. Cable restraint designs rely on energy dissipation associated with the friction of a cable slipping through a cable clamp. Similarly, bolts placed in slotted splice plates rely on energy dissipation through friction between the bolt head and the splice plate. Energy dissipation systems that rely on friction can be sensitive to even a minor variance in installation details, such as the application of improper torque when tightening the splice or cable clamp bolts. In addition, the reliability of friction-based systems can also be adversely affected by corrosion of the friction components. Systems utilizing metal tabs that dissipate impact energy by bending are generally more reliable and less susceptible to corrosion, but the energy absorption capacity of these systems is lower and their fabrication cost is higher.
In view of the foregoing and other considerations relevant in the field, the present invention represents an improvement over conventional breakaway guardrail posts to increase energy absorption and thereby allow guardrails and other roadside safety devices to provide adequate safety performance even when installed in a rigid foundation. Further, the present invention provides an effective solution to the problems associated with rigid post foundations created by both concrete mow strips and frozen soils. These and other characteristics of the present invention are achieved by enhancing energy absorption in breakaway posts by facilitating bolt tear-out and the creation of out-of-plane stresses in the connection area of the upper and lower post sections.
In general, a lower post section is mounted in a foundation. An upper post section is vertically aligned and spliced or welded to the lower post section. The upper post section has a generally flat lateral side facing the anticipated direction of a lateral impact. When the upper post section is struck by an errant vehicle, impact energy is absorbed either by bolt tear-out in the connection, or by direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing in the splice plate or lateral face of the upper or lower post section.
Several preferred embodiments are described in more detail below, including the following:
Several embodiments utilize a through bolt extending through a splice connection between the upper post section and the lower post section. The through bolt preferably includes a head facing the anticipated direction of a lateral impact and a fastener opposing the bolt head. At least one splice section created by the through bolt does not include additional compressive fasteners that restrict out-of-plane deformation between the underlying splice plate and the post flange. During an impact, energy is absorbed by bolt tear-out of the flange material. By utilizing the through bolt, as opposed to two or more standard compressive fasteners, the through bolt will produce energy absorbing tear-out even when located at greater distances from the edge of the post section.
Several additional embodiments utilize tear-out facilitators to reduce initially high forces required to initiate bolt tear-out. Examples of facilitators described in more detail below include a saw cut located at the edge of the bolt hole in the material undergoing tear-out, as well as an out-of-plane pre-buckle formed in the edge of the bolt hole in the material undergoing tear-out. In other embodiments, initially high bolt tear-out forces may be reduced by orienting the through bolt at a non-perpendicular angle with respect to the material undergoing tear-out. Two or more of the tear-out facilitators may be combined to even further reduce initially high tear-out forces.
The embodiments with a through bolt may also be utilized in terminal applications by using a single through bolt to connect the splice between the upper and lower post sections. By using a single through bolt, the upper post section is allowed to pivot freely during an end on impact while still absorbing impact energy during a lateral impact. To provide added stability in these applications, additional splice fasteners may be utilized by mounting the additional fasteners closer to the edge of the upper or lower post section, by removing post material near the other fasteners to similarly decrease the edge distance, or by removing a vertical slot of post material extending from the edge of the bolt hole to (or near to) the edge of the post.
In an alternative embodiment, bolt tear-out may be facilitated even without utilizing a through bolt by locating a soft or compressible gasket under the head or nut of a splice bolt. Here, upon impact, the compressible gasket material permits angular deflection of the bolt in the hole and thereby reduces the energy required to initiate and sustain bolt tear-out as a means for energy absorption.
Still other embodiments absorb impact energy by direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing in the splice plate or lateral face of the upper or lower post section. Here, energy absorption by direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing in the splice plate may be accomplished by extending a tab cut out or formed from a portion of the splice plate near the abutting ends of the post sections. One end of the splice plate is rigidly attached to the upper or lower post section by conventional means. The end of the tab is rigidly attached to the other post section such that deflection of the upper post section during an impact absorbs energy by out-of-plane tearing in the splice plate near the tab extension.
Alternatively, direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing in the lateral face of the upper or lower post section may be accomplished by forming slots in the lateral face of the upper or lower post section. One end of the splice plate is rigidly attached to the upper or lower post section by conventional means. The other end of the splice plate is welded or attached to the lateral face of the other post section adjacent to the slots. On a lateral impact, angular deflection of the upper post section causes direct out-of-plane tearing in the lateral face of the post at or near the slots.
Still other embodiments provide energy absorption by direct out-of-plane tearing in a weld area between the splice plate and the upper or lower post section. One end portion of the splice plate is rigidly attached to the upper or lower post section by conventional means. The other end portion of the splice plate is bent over on itself and its back side is welded by one or more vertically oriented welds to the other post section. In this manner, the upper and lower post sections are joined by opposing planar sides of the splice plate. Upon impact, angular deflection of the upper post section causes direct out-of-plane loading of the weld material between the back side of the splice plate and the underlying lateral post face.
In any of the embodiments absorbing energy by direct Mode 3 tearing, the generation of out-of-plane forces may be facilitated by locating a small spacer between the splice plate and lateral post face. In this manner, a small out-of-plane angle is formed between the splice plate and the lateral post face such that even initial forces are directed out-of-plane.
The foregoing and other features and aspects of the present invention are best understood with reference to the following detailed description of particular embodiments of the invention, as read in conjunction with and in light of the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIGS. 10A-C are partial cut-away side views of alternative through bolt embodiments of the present invention.
FIGS. 13A-C are side views of an additional embodiment of the present invention adapted for terminal applications.
FIGS. 14A-D are alternative side views of an embodiment of the present invention adapted for absorbing impact energy by direct tear-out in the splice plate.
FIGS. 16A-C are alternative side views of a further embodiment of the present invention adapted for absorbing impact energy by direct tear-out in a welded area between the splice plate and post flange.
Refer now to the drawings in which the depicted elements are not necessarily shown to scale and like or similar elements are designated by the same reference numeral throughout the several views.
In several embodiments, the present invention utilizes bolt tear-out as a mechanism for energy absorption. Bolt tear-out normally occurs when there is insufficient material between the edge of a bolt hole and the edge of a metal plate. In this situation, in-plane shear stresses produced by the bolt bearing on the plate material exceed the capacity of the metal and the plate fails in a double Mode-II fracture. Traditional structural design guidelines recommend that bolt tear-out can be prevented by increasing the bolt edge distance (the distance from the bolt hole to the margin or edge of the bolted material) to at least 1.5 times the bolt diameter. (See Shigley, J. E. & Mischke, C. R., Mechanical Engineering Design 360 (5th ed.) (1989) (noting that failure due to tear-out “may usually be neglected” with large edge distances).) As shown in
With a large edge distance d, the material resistance is sufficient to prevent the bolt 10 from tearing out from the material of flange plate 30 due to Mode 2 fracture. In this case, the bolt 10 tears out from the material of flange plate 30 when two cracks develop in the margin material of flange 30 (as indicated by arrows 13 on each side of the bolt 10) and eventually a small piece of the material forming flange 30 is torn out. On the other hand, buckling in the material of flange 30 allows the material of flange 30 to deform out-of-plane and become loaded in Mode 3, out-of-plane shear.
As shown in
As shown in
Local buckling of the material surrounding the through bolt helps to initiate Mode-III tearing of the plate material used in the splice. Although classical solutions can be used to predict local buckling of metal plates, these analysis techniques are not readily applicable to the dynamic loading conditions associated with the present invention. However, dynamic testing of a large number of bolted splice configurations has shown that the tear-out initiation forces are at least equal to the force required to yield all of the material below the through bolt and create slip planes on each side of the bolt as approximated below.
where:
The shear strength of the through bolt must be sufficient to initiate the tear-out process. The strength of the through bolt can be approximated by,
where:
Accordingly, in order to initiate tear-out, the relationship between the size and strength of the bolt and the thickness and strength of the plate material much be such that,
In the equations above, it should be noted that as the bolt diameter is reduced, both the tear-out initiation force and bolt strength diminish. However, the reduction in bolt strength is directly related to the square of its diameter. Accordingly, bolt strength tends to decrease much more rapidly.
Larger diameter through-bolts 40 produce higher tear-out forces and higher post energy absorption, but the deflection of the post at failure is not significantly affected by the bolt size, but rather is controlled primarily by the post edge distance d. As bolt size increases, the resistance to bolt tear-out can become so large that the post fails in other modes, such as fracture through the flange 30. Also, smaller diameter through-bolts 40 may not have sufficient shear capacity to produce long tear-out distances because the bolt itself tends to fracture in shear before sufficient force is generated in the material of flange 30. While though bolts 40 have been illustrated throughout the figures, it should be understood that other elongate rod members could be used instead.
It has been found that Grade 5 through-bolts 40 with diameters between 9/16 inch and 1 inch appear to provide the optimal behavior and produce consistent energy dissipation through tear-out. Higher grade through-bolts 40 with smaller diameters may also be able to provide adequate shear capacity to facilitate energy dissipation through tear-out. Optimally, the threaded portion of the bolt is kept out of the shear plane (i.e., oriented on the back of the post) to improve the reliability of energy absorbing posts with long tear-out distances. Here, in some instances the bolts themselves can fracture in two pieces due to stress concentrations in the threaded portion of the bolts located on the back side of the post and thus greatly restrict energy dissipation.
Ideally, an energy absorbing post in accordance with the present invention will exhibit little or no plastic deformation until the lateral load reaches a desired level, typically 10 to 12 kips. The ideal post would then sustain the initial force until it reaches the desired deflection limit, when the post would finally fracture completely. As shown in
As shown in
Alternatively, as shown in
As shown in
In yet another alternative embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
In
Alternatively, as shown in
As would be appreciated by persons of ordinary skill in the field, guardrail posts used for mounting end terminals or crash cushions should break easily during end-on impacts. The present invention includes embodiments adapted for use in these end-on impact applications. For example, while side-impact applications might ordinarily utilize a plurality of through-bolts 40, alternatively, as shown in
Alternatively, as shown in FIGS. 13A-C, two through-bolts 40 can be used in a breakaway guardrail post for terminal applications if the flange material below the upstream bolt 40U has a low tear-out distance d, and therefore a lower resistance to tear-out during end on impacts. To create such a low tear-out distance d, the material of flange 30 below the upstream bolt 40U can be removed (
As shown in FIGS. 14A-F, another alternative embodiment of the present invention involves loading the splice plate 60 or the flange 30 of the post to allow direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing of the splice plate. FIGS. 14A-F demonstrate mechanisms for loading the post splice plate and the post flange in Mode 3 out-of-plane shearing when a lateral load is applied to the top of the post. Although these figures show specific examples for loading the splice plate 60 or post flange 30 to facilitate tearing, a person of ordinary skill in the field with reference to this specification would be able to substitute alternate structures for loading the splice plate 60 or the post flange 30 in order to allow direct Mode 3 out-of-plane tearing of the splice plate.
Referring to FIGS. 14A-D, there is shown an embodiment of the present invention for loading the splice plate 60 to facilitate out-of-plane tearing. In this embodiment, a tab 130 is cut in the splice plate 60 and the tab 130 is thereafter bent outward by 90 degrees or more. The front flange 30 of the upper portion of the post is then welded to the tab 130. Those of ordinary skill should recognize that the weld 132 between the tab 130 and the post flange 30 must be of sufficient strength to propagate the out-of-plane crack in the splice plate 60. Here, a wider tab (indicated as width w in
When a lateral load is applied to the top of the post in the embodiment of FIGS. 14A-D, the front flange 30 is placed in tension. The tension load is transmitted into the tab 130 in the splice plate 60. As the tab 130 is pulled upward, an out-of-plane tearing stress is applied to the base of the tab 130 and it begins to tear away as shown in
FIGS. 15A-C illustrate a similar embodiment that produces out-of-plane tearing in the post flange 30. In this embodiment, a small generally horizontal slot 140 is created in the post (e.g., punched out of the flange 30) and the splice plate 60 is welded to the flange 30, just below slot 140. When tensile loads are applied to the post flange 30, the misalignment between the post flange 30 and the splice plate 60 thereby causes a moment to be applied to the flange 30 just below the slot 140. This moment produces out-of-plane deformation that creates out-of-plane tearing stresses at the ends of the slot 140 and eventually leads to Mode 3 tearing of the post flange 30. In this embodiment, vertical slots 142 may be added to facilitate initial out-of-plane deformation of the flange 30 and initiate the Mode 3 tearing. As would be recognized by persons of ordinary skill with reference to this specification, this embodiment is merely another example of many involving out-of-plane tearing of the post flange 30 or splice plate 60.
FIGS. 16A-C illustrate another embodiment of the present invention in which energy is absorbed by direct out-of-plane tearing. In this embodiment, the top of the splice plate 60 is bent over on itself and its back side is welded directly to the upper or lower post section, or to an intermediately plate (not shown) attached to the upper or lower post section. The welding process used can be either fillet welds on the edge of the splice plate or resistance seam welding to produce lines in the middle of the splice plate. In
From the foregoing detailed description of several specific embodiments of the present invention, it should be apparent that novel and non-obvious, energy-absorbing breakaway posts for use with various roadside safety devices, including those mounted in a rigid foundation, have herein been disclosed. Although specific embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in some detail, this has been done solely for the purposes of describing various features and aspects of the invention. Moreover, it is contemplated that various substitutions, alterations, and/or modifications may be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. Such may include but are not limited to the substitution of rods or other rigid elongate members for through-bolts, the substitution of splice plates integral with the upper or lower post section, or the substitution of splice plates located on the flange back side, as well as the implementation details known to those of skill in the art to which the present invention pertains. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is defined by the following appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10913738 | Aug 2004 | US |
Child | 11019013 | Dec 2004 | US |