Centro de Território, Ambiente e Construção
Escola de Engenharia da Universidade do Minho
Campus de Azurém
4800-058 Guimarães, Portugal
Phone: + 351 253 510 200 (517 206)
Fax: + 351 253 510 217
Email: geral@ctac.uminho.pt
@conference {2791, title = {Assessing the Life Cycle of Existing Maritime Structures {\textendash} Application to a Harbour Bridge in Porto Port}, journal = {High Tech Concrete: Where Technology and Engineering Meet}, year = {2017}, month = {2017-08-06 00:00:00}, pages = {1707-1714}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Maastricht, The Netherlands}, abstract = {Since the construction industry is the one that bears most expenses,
}, keywords = {Deterioration mechanism, Deterministic and probabilistic models, Life cycle analysis, Maritime exposure, Performance assessment}, isbn = {978-3-319-59471-2}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-59471-2_196}, url = {https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-59471-2_196}, author = {Pereira, D. and Moreira, V. I. and Cam{\~o}es, A. and Matos, J. C.} }
both in financial and environmental terms, it is of the upmost importance that
these expenses originate a product with a long term exploitation, so as to mitigate
them. Having this problem in consideration, in this paper the bridge located in the
north of Portugal, near Porto, in the oil tanker terminal at the Leix{\~o}es port was
studied. This structure is located in one of the most aggressive environments for
concrete structures, a maritime zone. The most accepted durability models in the
country, related to deterioration induced by sea chlorides penetration, were then
implemented. Thereby, it was possible to identify which model better reflects
reality, since the structure in analysis is now at the end of its lifetime, after
50 years of service and shows advanced degradation due to chloride attack.
In the context of this work, the structure and the test methods relevant to the
theme being studied were described by inspection reports and in situ test results,
made available by the Douro and Viana do Castelo Port Authority. From this data it
was possible to study the structure deterioration by introducing them into durability
models. These models range from prescriptive to performance based approaches,
being possible to identify, from the later ones, a deterministic model, based on the
Model Code 2010, a semi-probabilistic based on the E465 specification from the
Portuguese National Laboratory for Civil Engineering (LNEC) and two probabilistic
models, based on the same standards, for which a computer code was
developed during this work. Through these deterioration prediction tools, different
project scenarios were established, originating a list of minimal concrete covers to
ensure 100 years of lifetime to a structure built in the studied exposure zone.
The Centre for Territory, Environment and Construction (CTAC) is a research unit of the School of Engineering of University of Minho (UMinho), recognised by the “FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia” (Foundation for Science and Technology), associated to the Department of Civil Engineering (DEC), with whom it shares resources and namely human resources.
Currently CTAC aggregates 25 researchers holding a PhD of which 20 are faculty professors of the Civil Engineering Department. Read more
Centro de Território, Ambiente e Construção
Escola de Engenharia da Universidade do Minho
Campus de Azurém
4800-058 Guimarães, Portugal
Phone: + 351 253 510 200 (517 206)
Fax: + 351 253 510 217
Email: geral@ctac.uminho.pt