Truss bridges are one of the oldest types of modern bridges. The traditional truss bridge comprises a framed structure of connected elements which may be stressed from tension, compression, or sometimes both in response to dynamic loads. Typically the structural members are straight. However, it is the object of the present invention to depart from the traditional structural triangles and rectangles that are common elements of the many types of trusses that comprise bridge designs and employ for bridge construction a type of structure that is more akin to a semimonocoque type of aircraft fuselage without or with only partial skin.
The bridge of the present invention constitutes a tubular beam that is defined by a plurality of hoop shaped web members that are disposed diagonally and are antipodally interconnected in the general form of the web members of a Warren truss. The central axis of the hoop truss web members may be a straight line or a horizontally or vertically curved line. The beam-forming web member hoops are additionally interconnected with beam flanges which may be in the form of stringers that are attached to the hoop web members and run parallel to the central axis of the hoops. The beam flanges can also be in the form of a top and bottom skin that overlies and is attached to the hoop members. Depending on the required strength of the tubular truss beam, the flange members can be either or both stringers and skin. A road bed is disposed along the length of the tube in the position of a chord of the hoop shaped web members. For short spans the tube may be self supporting and for longer spans overhead support cables may be employed to supplement the self support of the tubular beam.
One of the novel aspects of this invention is that the hoops have a common central axis. which may be a straight or curved line. In all cases, adjacent hoops are angularly disposed with respect to each other and with respect to a vertical cross section of the tube 14 shown in
Every other hoop is interconnected at its antipodal points with the antipodal points on the intervening hoop. The configuration of the web member hoops is similar to that of the diagonal members of a typical Warren type of truss where longitudinal flange members are joined only by angled cross web members, forming alternately inverted triangle-shaped spaces along the length of the truss, ensuring that no individual strut, beam, or tie is subject to bending or torsional straining forces, but only to tension or compression.
To complete the total truss structure of the bridge 2, the hoop shaped members 4 that comprise the web of the truss beam and define the tube 14 are also interconnected with flange forming longitudinal stringers 6 that are disposed parallel to the central axis 16 of the hoops and are connected to spaced apart points around the inside or outside perimeter of the hoops 4.
In addition to or alternative to the foregoing described structure of flange forming stringer members, upper and lower flange-forming skins 10 and 12 may be attached to the hoop web members and applied to portions of the outside perimeter of the tubular bridge structure.
The bridge includes one or more load carrying decks 8 that run the longitudinal length of the tube 14 and are positioned as one or more chords of the truss hoops as best seen in
Each of the web member hoops 4 has a major axis, or, in the particular case of a circular hoop, a diameter 7. Antipodal nodes 15 exist at the intersections of the major axis with the top and with the bottom of the perimeter of each of the hoops 4. In the embodiment of the bridge where the central axis is a straight line, as shown in
In an alternate embodiment of the bridge as shown in
The tubular configuration of the bridge may take a combination of horizontal curves and vertical camber.
The foregoing description is only illustrative of the invention. Various alternatives, modifications, and variances can be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the present invention embraces all such alternatives, modifications, and variances that fall within the scope of the described invention.