Study on the Technical Status of Old Concrete Truss-Arch Bridge Based on Vehicle-Bridge Interaction

With the rapid development of the country’s economy, a large number of heavy vehicles are being used due to the expansion of transportation demand and increased transportation costs. For the old concrete truss-arch bridges built in the last century, the bridges may hardly meet the modern traffic volume. With respect to old bridges in poor condition, it takes more time and resources to evaluate the technical status by field load tests, and there are some safety risks. A finite element method based on vehicle-bridge coupled vibration theory was proposed for evaluating the technical status of concrete truss-arch bridges in this paper. An old concrete truss-arch bridge in the suburbs of Suzhou, China, was selected as the research object. The field static and dynamic load tests were conducted and the results are consistent with the results of the numerical simulation based on the method proposed in this study. It can be concluded that the proposed numerical method can be widely used to assess the technical state of the old concrete truss-arch bridges in poor condition.


Introduction
On August 24, 2012, an appalling accident occurred in Harbin. e collapse of the bridge caused numerous deaths and injuries, as illustrated in Figure 1. On October 10, 2020, National Highway 312 in Jiangsu Province collapsed due to heavy vehicles, as illustrated in Figure 2. Bridge collapse accidents have occurred in many countries in recent years, and most of these accidents were caused by the lack of maintenance of aging bridges. According to incomplete statistics, thousands of bridge collapse accidents have occurred in this century, causing tens of thousands of casualties. Nearly half of the small and medium-span concrete bridges in our country were built from the 1950s to the 1980s, and most of them were in "disease-carrying" condition, which made it di cult to meet modern tra c levels according to past design norms. Bridges have lagged behind as infrastructure and have become a "feature" of the last century. e bridge structure will be damaged to a certain extent under the long-term load of heavy vehicles. Especially for old bridges with medium and small spans, the vibration of bridges under the action of heavy vehicles is becoming more and more obvious. erefore, a systematic technical status assessment is needed for the aging concrete bridges with small and medium spans. Technical status assessment refers to a comprehensive on-site inspection of the existing status of severely damaged and old bridges, detection of various parameters of bridge components, identi cation of bridge damage and development trends, and systematic assessment of the carrying capacity of old bridges to determine whether the current carrying capacity of bridges meets the needs of tra c, providing a technical basis and recommendations for bridge maintenance and repair. e dynamic response characteristics of bridges are usually expressed using impact factors, which are comprehensive coe cients in uenced by a number of important factors and can re ect the impact of heavy vehicles on bridges. e de ection and strain under heavy vehicles are usually tested in the eld load experiments and the ratio of dynamic de ection to corresponding static de ection is the impact factor. It is often determined by national codes using a single parametric formula through a large amount of test data, making it di cult to fully re ect the actual vibration conditions of di erent types of bridges. e bridge design code takes the fundamental frequency of the bridge as the parameter in China [1]. Li Yuliang of Jilin Institute of Transportation Science collected more than 6,600 impact coefficient sample data from seven bridges of different spans and collated them to obtain the relationship equation between bridge frequency and impact factor, which was adopted by the revision of China's General Specification for Highway Bridge and Culvert Design (JTG D60-2015) [1]. e relationship between bridge span and impact factor is generally inversely proportional in bridge design codes such as in Japan and the United States.
In general, field load testing is an effective method to investigate the fundamental behavior and establish the essential data of bridges. For most researchers, it is an effective method that the aging bridge can be achieved through field load tests to assess the capacity of the damaged and deteriorated portions of the bridge. is method can overcome the problem of the material properties, field conditions, and uncertainties in the present situation partially. e field load tests can be used for bridge load rating [2], the strength of components [3], and bridge performance [4]. Nondestructive field testing has been used in the past to better understand the behavior of steel girder bridges [5]; Tevfik Terzioglu tested the spread slab beam bridge to evaluate constructability and structural performance under static and dynamic vehicular loads [6]; the longest cable-stayed bridge in Taiwan was selected with 40 loading cases to investigate the bridge's behavior by field load test [7].
However, most old bridges need to be repaired and continue to serve with the disease, while dynamic and static load tests require a lot of time and money to ensure the safety of the bridge in the long term. Even for some old concrete bridges with serious damage, if the field load test is carried out directly, it will affect the safety of the bridge. erefore, we need a safe and effective method that can quickly and systematically evaluate the technical status of many old bridges. Finite element simulation has been proposed to measure the dynamic response characteristics of bridges quickly. e expression of impact factor was proposed for small and medium-span aged bridges with poor road surface conditions [8]. Deng Lu studied on dynamic impact factors of simply-supported prestressed concrete girder bridges under vehicle braking [9] and the IF(impact factor) of shear force and bending moment of simply-supported and continuous bridges were studied [10]. Nan Zhang used the pseudoexcitation method to evaluate the safety of the simply-supported girder bridge under a high-speed train based on vehicle-bridge interaction [11]. Dynamic response of viscoelastic asphalt pavement under vehicle-bridge interaction load was studied [12]. Some scholars consider the service performance of bridges from fatigue damage and damage detection for ageing bridges. A simultaneous identification method for identifying bridge damage and vehicle parameters is proposed [13]. e life of an ageing prestressed concrete bridge under fatigue damage is estimated by numerical simulation [14]. e maintenance of old bridges is always ignored in most countries because of a lack of related drawings and data that make maintenance difficult to complete. Safety evaluation is of great significance for aged bridges and has attracted extensive attention in recent years. However, few scholars have studied the carrying capacity of old bridges with disease, and most of the relevant specifications are based on empirical formulas that make it difficult to accurately assess the real situation of bridges. Filed load tests are mostly used in this field of old bridges, and it is unsustainable that dynamic and static load tests require a lot of time and money to ensure the safety of the bridge in the long term. At this stage, hundreds of thousands of old concrete bridges in China need to be urgently analyzed by the finite element method to ensure their safety and continue to serve with the disease. erefore, considering the condition of bridge damage, the technical status of the old concrete truss-arch bridges was systematically evaluated using the vehicle-bridge interaction theory in this article.
More than 300 old concrete bridges in the suburbs of Suzhou in China were selected for on-site damage detection. Compared with other types of bridges such as concrete slab bridges and concrete beam bridges, concrete truss-arch bridges were selected because of their special structural forms. A large number of cracks have been generated under the action of long-term heavy vehicles. At the same time, there are few studies on truss-arch bridges in the field of vehicle-bridge interaction. A concrete truss-arch bridge with serious damage and many cracks was studied in this article.
Field detection was carried out to preliminarily evaluate the old bridges and imported important parameters (such as component damage, cracks, and roughness of the road surface) into the finite element analysis. e technical status  of the old bridges was evaluated through the change value of the impact factor and the limit value of the relevant bridge specifications. Finally, the field load test will be compared with the results obtained by this method to verify the accuracy of the finite element simulation. is method can provide a theoretical basis for the maintenance and management of many old bridges accurately and quickly and has important engineering significance.

Algorithms of Vehicle-Bridge Interaction
Numerical investigations have been conducted on the vehicle-bridge interaction problem by many researchers. Wang [15] and Harris [16] contributed to the improved modelling of vehicles.
ree-axle vehicles and five-axle vehicles were proposed according to the American bridge design codes and European vehicle model statistics. e proposed theory is classical by Huang and Wang. e cable stayed bridge considering the road surface roughness is a classic impact analysis for Huang and Wang [17]. e theoretical development research is sorted out, and the impact factor was proposed by Deng [18] for vehicle-bridge interactions. Zhen Sun [19] presented a practical and efficient iterative method for predicting the vehicle-induced response of bridges. Milan Sokol presented the SHM (structural health monitoring) to use static and dynamic load tests to confirm the load-bearing capacity of the bridge with numerical simulations [20]. Lu Zhang proposed the dynamic vibration property of the vehicle-bridge expansion joint coupled system with the proposed model [21]. e complex vehicle-bridge interaction can be explained by the following formula [22], and these equations can also be expressed by a matrix.
where f(t) is the contact force between the wheel and the bridge deck at time t, which can be expressed by vehicle speed v, response function b, road surface roughness r, and gravity acceleration g. Functions V and B represent the two independent subsystems of the vehicle and bridge, respectively. In the calculation process, the whole vehicle-bridge system is divided into two independent subsystems, and the vehicle modelled by MATLAB is imported into the bridge in ABAQUS for finite element analysis.

Bridge Description.
e term "truss-arch bridge" means that the two sides of the arch circle support the superstructure with truss members, and the two parts of the arch circle are combined with a deck plate and transverse connection system. e truss member mainly bears the axial force of the truss-arch bridge, and the arch ring has enough horizontal thrust to reduce the midspan bending moment of the bridge, so the truss-arch bridge has the advantages of both truss and arch bridges. e truss-arch bridge can give full play to the material properties of the full section of each component, save more material than other girder bridges of the same span, has the characteristics of integrity, light mass, good structural forces, etc., and can be built on soft soil foundations. erefore, truss-arch bridges with medium and small spans were widely built in the last century. Since the truss-arch bridge structure is more complex and the truss rods are more slender and mostly made of reinforced concrete, cracks are prone to occur at some bridge tension, bending, and rigid nodes under long-term vehicle action.
e Zhihong Bridge in Taicang City was selected as the research object.
ere are large production workshops around the bridge that are often affected by heavy vehicles, and the damage to components is serious. When heavy vehicles pass the bridge, the bridge vibrates violently, and there is no load limit sign on either side of the bridge, which will cause the bridge to be very dangerous. e truss-arch bridge is a 41 m single-span bridge with a width of 7.0 m. e thickness of the deck is 0.2 m, and the concrete cover is 35 mm. e reinforced concrete deck is supported by truss girders. e superstructure is truss-arch, and the supporting structure is a mortar block stone gravity abutment with a shallow foundation, as illustrated in Figure 3

Field Measure for Bridge Damage.
We detected a comprehensive field measurement of various components of the bridge. Although bridges were built in the last century without accurate data, we need to identify the defects and severity of components to evaluate their impact on the bearing capacity of bridges. Technical evaluation can be conducted according to bridge components, superstructure, bearer, and pavement through field investigation, adopting  Advances in Civil Engineering hierarchical comprehensive evaluation of bridge control indicators and then conducting overall evaluation. According to the experience of engineers, the current use safety of bridges is preliminarily judged. e bridge deck had varying degrees of abrasion, and the components of the bridge were damaged. e strength of concrete was approximately 52.8∼53.8 MPa by the ultrasonic rebound method. e ratio of the characteristic value of the protective layer thickness of the concrete structure to the design value was between 1.22 and 1.25, and the influence of the protective layer durability of the structural reinforcement was not obvious. However, the carbonation depth of concrete is relatively large if the continuous development will cause damage to the passive film on the surface of steel bars, resulting in gradual corrosion of steel bars and reducing the bearing capacity of bridges. e damage is shown in Figure 5 for parts of the bridge. e preliminary professional evaluation of Zhihong Bridge was carried out, and the main components of the bridge have large defects, which affect the function of the bridge. ese tests are to obtain more accurate information about bridges. Bridge detection is essential for older bridges (specialized agencies conduct tests at one to three month intervals in many regions) and needs to be carried out on a long-term basis to prevent the sudden expansion of previous cracks or the appearance of new cracks on bridges. e strength and stiffness of components are difficult to achieve within the design parameters of drawings for ageing bridges. Conventional bridge inspection can adjust the information of design drawings and even the bridge data are provided for bridges without drawings.

Test Vehicle.
ere are two means of investigating the complicated bridge-vehicle interaction problem as follows: experimental and analytical approaches. We investigated some passing heavy vehicles, of which most of them were three-axle heavy vehicles with a load limit of 35 tons made in China, which is commonly chosen in the experiment. e vehicle model was taken as that used by Kim [23] and was simulated with a realistic 3D vehicle model (bilateral symmetry) that could represent the design vehicle load and actual vehicle dynamic characteristics. We calibrated the vehicle precisely. e model assumes that the body is rigid, consisting of three mass blocks and connecting rods with eight degrees of freedom, and that wheels are connected to the ground by damping springs, as illustrated in Figure 6.

Static Load Test.
e traditional field load test requires that the deflection and strain of the bridges do not exceed the specification requirements and analyzes the value of the impact factor to determine the structural performance of bridges. According to the Chinese norm "load test methods for highway bridges," the unfavourable positions of the structure of the section layout were selected. e static load test selected the mid-span, a-quarter-span, and arch springing to set the strain gauge. e numbers were J1, J2, and J3, respectively, and four strain gauges were set at the bottom of the bridge deck. As illustrated in Figures 7  and 8, the internal force equivalent principle was chosen to grade the load, which was divided into three loading levels. First, a heavy vehicle traveled to the present position to measure the strain and deflection of the bridge deck. en, another heavy vehicle was parallel to it and remained stationary for secondary loading. Two heavy vehicles left the bridge to measure the residual strain. e loading test took no more than 20 minutes per cycle [24], as illustrated in Figure 9.
In the process of the test, the implementation of loading should be unified and commanded by professionals to grasp all aspects in time. It is necessary to ensure the safety of the structure and personnel; meanwhile, we should observe whether the strain and deflection of the bridge exceed the theoretical value. e static load test results are shown in Tables 1 and 2. e strain value exceeds the theoretical value at the middle span of the bridge under a heavy vehicle load, indicating that the actual working state of the test section is     Advances in Civil Engineering worse than the theoretical condition, and the local static strength does not meet the requirements. After unloading the test load, the residual strain is less than 20%, indicating that the structure is in an elastic working state. e strain is too large at the J1-3 joint, mainly due to U-shaped cracks at the mid-span. e a-quarter and arch foot of the crosssection meet the requirements, and the structure is in elastic work. e upper structure of the bridge is a truss arch. Before the test, several transverse cracks were found at the bottom of the middle span. During the test, the strain data gradually increased, and there was no sudden increase, indicating that no new cracks were found.

Dynamic Load Test.
e pulsating method was used to excite the vibration of the bridge structure for the dynamic load test and then determine its natural frequency, damping ratio, vibration mode, etc. Sensors were installed on the bridge and collected signals synchronously. Various disturbances in the environment are regarded as input signals; the signal collected by the sensor is regarded as the output signal of the bridge. e collected time domain signal was transformed into a frequency domain signal by a fast Fourier transform (FFT), and the peak value of the frequency domain signal curve corresponds to the natural frequency of the bridge. In this test, the measuring points were arranged   Advances in Civil Engineering in eight different locations, and the measuring points were arranged on both sides of the bridge in the transverse direction. Each test point is numbered as points 1∼9, keeping the same straight line as illustrated in Figure 10. ree different speed conditions were selected, 10 km/s, 20 km/s, and 30 km/s, and a brake experiment was completed when a vehicle reached the test position at a constant speed of 10 km/h to implement an emergency brake to generate greater braking force and form a certain impact. e strain value at the middle span of the bridge in the dynamic load test is shown in Figure 11. e frequency of the bridge can be measured, as shown in Table 3.

Advances in Civil Engineering
According to the bridge width and section form, the relevant formulas of truss-arch bridges were searched from the General Specifications for Design of Highway Bridges and Culverts (JTG D60-2015). e Chinese code is based on the fundamental frequency of the bridge and the empirical formula, which is a safety-oriented design. e formulas for the impact factor are as follows [1]: When f < 1.5 Hz, μ � 0.05, When 1.5 Hz ≤ f ≤ 14 Hz, μ � 0.1767Inf − 0.0157, When f > 14 Hz, μ � 0.45, where f is the fundamental frequency of the structure and μ is the impact factor in the formula. e impact factor based on the fundamental frequency of the bridge can be calculated (the maximum allowable value of the impact factor in the specification): μ � 0.1767Inf − 0.0157 � 0.307 (theoretical: 0.261). e impact factor can also be calculated by definition and the calculation expression is where Y dmax is the maximum dynamic strain or deflection of the observation point in the dynamic load test; Y jmax is the maximum static strain or deflection of the observation point in the static load test. e results are shown in Table 4. e impact factor of the bridge is increased after the vehicles speed up. Bridge vibration is easier when the vehicle excitation frequency is close to the bridge frequency [25].  Table 5. e properties' values were reduced accordingly for the damaged components. e arch and diaphragm beam were modelled by the solid element C3D8R, the bridge deck was modelled by the shell element, and the beam was modelled by the B31 beam element, as illustrated in Figure 12.

Mode Shape in Finite Element Model.
Mode shape is the inherent vibration characteristic of a structural system. Higher order modes contribute less to bridge vibration, and the modal synthesis method can reduce operation time effectively. Modal dynamic analysis in ABAQUS was chosen, and superposition of the first six modes was used in this bridge [26,27]. e first mode had the greatest influence on the bridge, and higher modes had little effect on the bridge structure. When the bridge frequency is close to the vehicle excitation frequency, the bridge vibrates easily; the first six modes are shown in Figure 13. Table 6 is an introduction to the finite element model data.

Fundamental
Assumption. e vehicle model assumes the following three points: (1) the mass of the tire can be neglected since it is small when compared to the total mass of the vehicle (2) tires close to the ground, even with the effect of road surface roughness (3) the height of the tires and suspensions is the same when the ground is flat and the vehicle is still. e following conditions should be satisfied in numerical analysis: (1) vehicles travel through bridge structures at a constant speed. (2) e bridge is stationary initially. (3) Vehicles are driven in the prescribed lanes.

Road Surface Roughness.
e model of the bridge deck is difficult to be established in the finite element method, especially if the bridge deck is damaged. e road surface  Spring constant of suspension k 11 1577000 N/m k 21 4724000 N/m Damping of suspension C 11 11200 N/(m/s) C 21 33420 N/(m/s) Spring constant of tire k 11 3146000 N/m k 21 4724000 N/m k 31 4724000 N/m Damping of tire C 11 13300 N/(m/s) C 21 10000 N/(m/s) C 31 10000 roughness needs to be simulated to reflect the damage to the bridge deck in MATLAB. e road surface roughness is one of the main factors and is distributed in a random fashion continuously, which affects the dynamic behavior of both the vehicle and the bridge. According to the road level, the random road surface roughness model under certain circumstances can usually be generated by an inverse Fourier transform based on the corresponding power spectral density function, and the power spectrum describes the mean square amplitude of road geometry deviation as a function of the spatial frequency of the irregularities. When programmed as a stationary Gaussian random process, the road surface roughness can be represented as [28] r(x) � N k�1 ��������� � 2G d n k Δn cos 2πn k + rθ k , where G d (n k ) � a/(2πn k ) 2 is the power spectrum analysis (PSD) function in MATLAB and a is the roughness coefficient, which represents different coefficients according to the road conditions. e International Standard Organisation (ISO) divides road surface roughness into four conditions: A-D (from good to poor), and the value of a is illustrated in Table 7. rough our investigation, coefficient "a" is chosen as 8 × 10 −6 , which corresponds to an average surface condition. ∆n is the frequency interval; ∆n � n max − n min /N here n max dn min presents the upper and

Condition
Roughness coefficient a(10 −6 ) Condition "Very good" 0∼2 "Very good" "Good" 2∼8 "Good" "Average" 8∼32 "Average" "Poor" 32∼128 "Poor"  Advances in Civil Engineering lower cut-off frequencies, respectively; n k represents the frequency of each wave, where n k � n min + (k − 1)∆n coefficient "N" represents the wave number; and θ k is the random phase angle uniformly distributed from 0 to 2π. e road surface roughness is calculated by Kim, and the road surface roughnesses of the left and right wheel paths resemble each other, as illustrated in Figure 14.

Contact
Point. e tires of vehicles and bridges always change at all times. e tires will cause the subsidence of the bridge and also affect itself during the movement. When a vehicle tire contacts the road surface, the vehicle tire deforms and contacts the road to form a rectangular contact surface.
is is called multipoint contact [28]. When the road surface roughness is poor, this model can improve the calculation accuracy of the tire friction. By treating the contact condition between the tire and the road surface as a point contact, one point may overestimate the dynamic deflection of the bridge, and the design is conservative.
When vehicles cross the bridge, road surface roughness will affect the property of the vehicle, which means that tires are close to the ground while eight degrees of freedom of the vehicle model change uninterruptedly [29]. erefore, we imported the data into the vehicle model and established the corresponding model in MATLAB. e specific method can be seen in Dr. LU's graduation thesis [30], using a differential equation to calculate the subprogram SIMULINK. Due to the length of the article, this article does not give too much explanation. e motion equation of the vehicle can be derived from the Lagrange equation: e motion equation of the vehicle can be derived from the Lagrange equation:M v , C v , and K v are the mass, damping, and stiffness matrices of the vehicle, respectively; Kr and Cr are the tire stiffness and damping matrices, respectively. € u, _ u, and u are acceleration, velocity and displacement vectors of vehicle motion; F g is the gravity vector; F c is the vector of force and moment applied to the vehicle by the bridge; and f b is the load unit acting on the bridge. e position of the vehicle is always changing during driving. e dynamic characteristics of the vehicle-bridge coupling system are represented by a block submatrix. Road surface roughness was imported into the vehicle model. e bridge deck contact force calculation is shown in Figure 15   the bridge together, and vehicles are located in the middle of the lane to test the maximum strain and deflection of the bridge, as illustrated in Figure 16.

Results for Finite Element
Method. e contact force applied on the bridge deck in ABAQUS was used to simulate various different working conditions through the general solver. For the process of the vehicle crossing a bridge, the displacement and contact force between the bridge deck and the wheel need to be balanced through the contact point, the bridge model can be discretized by the finite element method through the commonly used the Newmark-β method. e equation at each discrete time is obtained by direct numerical integration calculation. Time is used as a parameter for iteration, and the matrix form is used to ensure the convergence of bridge displacement within each time step. e impact factor can be expressed by the ratio of the deflection under moving vehicle loading and the deflection under static loading (the formula is usually used in numerical simulation), and the mid-span deflection is the largest in the finite element model. e expression of the impact factor is [31] contact δ d is the maximum dynamic vertical deflection, and δ s is the maximum static vertical deflection. Five working conditions were simulated at different speeds (10 km/s, 15 km/s, 20 km/s, 25 km/s, and 30 km/s). Because it is a small-and medium-span concrete bridge, the speed cannot be too fast. ere is little difference in bridge deflection at different speeds, taking 15 km/h and 30 km/h as examples to compare nondestructive bridges, as illustrated in Figure 17. It shows that the damage has a great influence on bridge vibration under heavy vehicles. e impact factor (IM) at mid-span of the bridge is illustrated in Figure 18. e truss-arch bridge is the most disadvantaged structure in mid-span. e measured bridge is more seriously damaged than the finite element simulation bridge under the action of long-term heavy load. e impact factor obtained at the support and a quarter of the bridge is consistent with the measured data, as illustrated in Figure 19. e impact factors derived from field load tests are similar to the finite element simulation, and the impact factors are slightly higher than the finite element simulation data with a maximum error of approximately 6%. It is shown that the finite element simulation of the dynamic response of bridges based on vehicle-bridge interaction theory can effectively evaluate the technical status of bridges, and the damage detection of bridges (bridge maintenance) can provide data in real-time for finite element models to ensure the safety of bridges.

Conclusion
(1) Since most countries easily ignore the late management of bridges, and the impact factor to judge whether a bridge is good or bad is mostly based on experience, which makes it difficult to determine the real vibration of the bridge. For the old truss-arch bridge built in the last century, due to concrete cracking, reinforcement corrosion, and bridge cracking occurring, there are the problems of horizontal thrust reduction, uneven forces on the bars, and greater deflection of the arches. erefore, a fast and safe detection method based on vehicle-bridge interaction theory is proposed. It is necessary to analyze specific problems and adjust parameters according to different bridge structures and vehicle conditions. e parametric analysis of the bridge illustrates that bridge damage can seriously affect the load carrying capacity and the dynamic impact factor IM, this method can be used to assess the service performance of the bridge in various conditions. e impact factors are all lower than the specification through rapid inspection by finite element software and comparative analysis of load tests, and the bridge is in a safe condition for service. e bridge vibrations all occur under elastic deformation, but during heavy vehicle crossings, the bridge deck vibrates at a higher amplitude and the deflection changes of the arches need to be controlled. In order to ensure the safety, serviceability, and durability of the bridge, the bridge defects identified by the finite element simulation results need to be repaired in a timely manner.
(2) According to field inspection, damage to old bridges is generally characterized by multiple cracks in the bottom slab, cracking of the expansion lower diagonal bars, and loosening of concrete by cracking, which will affect the life of the bridge. e structural performance of the bridge deteriorates continuously under the impact of modern traffic flow and heavy vehicles, which will lead to serious structural damage.
A vicious cycle will be formed due to the long-term neglect of bridge maintenance, accelerating the destruction of concrete bridges, so bridge damage needs to be detected in time. By this method, the damage to the bridge deck is expressed in FEM by the parameter of road surface roughness, which can effectively reflect the effect of road roughness on bridge vibration and even investigate the jumping problem caused by the damage to the expansion joint filler. e data of the damaged parts of the bridge are imported into the bridge model to analyze the dynamic increase effect of the vehicle on the bridge under various traffic conditions, which can replace the dynamic load test to set up the required test points at the damaged parts and evaluate the technical status of the bridge rapidly at this stage according to the catastrophe values of the dynamic impact factor.

Data Availability
e data used to support the findings of this study are included within the article.

Conflicts of Interest
e authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.