
Figure 1: Padma (Ganges) and Jamuna (Brahmaputra)
Rivers,
and the site of the proposed
Paksey Bridge crossing of the Padma. |

Figure 2: The Hardinge Bridge crossing of the Padma River
near Paksey, Bangladesh, provides no capacity for vehicular
or pedestrian traffic. |

Figure 3: Friable banks composed of silt and fine sand lead
to shifting channels and a need for long channel revetments.
|

Figure 4: The proposed Paksey Bridge
across the Padma (Ganges) River in western Bangladesh. The Hardinge
Railway Bridge, built in 1915, is shown in the background, 300
m upstream. |

Figure 5: Curvilinear MIKE 21C grid
(223 H 34 cells) with Paksey Bridge guide bank extension. Cells
at the bridges are about 50 m square (540 square feet). |

Figure 6: Simulated bathymetry at
100-year flood peak. |

Figure 7: Finite element network of the Padma River in the vicinity
of the proposed Paksey Bridge crossing without bridges in place.
|

Figure 8: Isocolor plot of bed elevations that range
from - 32 m (106 feet) in the deepest parts of the winding thalweg
to more than 20 m (66 feet). |

Figure 9: Isocolor plot of of bed
elevations in the vicinity of the Hardinge and proposed Paksey
Bridges. Water flows from north to south. Large amounts of erosion
along the west side of the channel during floods makes estimating
both general and local scour depths critical tasks. |

Figure 10: Comparison of measured
and computed depth-averaged velocities of the 1998 flood at
Transect 4 located about 700 m downstream of the Hardinge Bridge.
Velocities were measured with an ADCP with global positioning
satellite georeferencing. |

Figure 11: Finite element network
in the vicinity of the Hardinge and Paksey Bridges showing various
element types. |

Figure 12: Velocity vectors and isocolors of water speeds for
the simulated 100-year flood peak flow with the proposed Paksey
Bridge in place. |

Figure 13: Pier B: - four vertical
cylindrical piles each 3 m (10 feet) in diameter with a hexagonal
cap 4 m (13 feet) high (looking upstream in the flume.) |

Figure 14: Pier A: four battered cylindrical piles each
2.25 m (7.4 feet) in diameter with a tapered cylindrical cap
7.5 m (24.75 feet) high (looking upstream in the flume.) |

Figure 15: Flume transects showing bed
elevations along the upstream and downstream faces of the two
piles after equilibrium conditions had been reached. Piers were
aligned with approaching streamflow (H = 0o) in this run.
|
One of the world's most densely populated nations, Bangladesh is also
one of the poorest. More than 125 million people live within this
South Asian country's total area of 144 000 km2, or 58,000
square miles (about the size of Wisconsin), which amounts to an average
of 868 persons per square kilometer (or almost 2,250 persons per square
mile.)
Rivers are the most important geographical features of Bangladesh.
Alluvial river plains, which dominate 90 percent of the country, are
very flat, never rising more than 10 m (33 feet) above sea level.
The two great rivers of the Indian subcontinent, the Ganges and Brahmaputra
(Figure 1), divide Bangladesh into six major regions that correspond
to the six governmental divisions. The Ganges, which drains the southern
slopes of the Himalayas, enters Bangladesh from the northwest and
is joined by the Brahmaputra in the center of the country to form
the world's third largest river after the Amazon and Congo.
The Ganges and Brahmaputra Rivers both receive new names once they
pass into Bangla-desh: the Ganges becomes the Padma, while the Brahmaputra
is known as the Jamuna. South of the capital city, Dhaka, the lower
Padma joins the Meghna River, which flows from the northeast. Lower
reaches of the Meghna expand in width from less than 1 km (0.6 mile)
to around 8 km (5 miles) during the wet season and much more during
large floods. The combined river delta is the largest in the world,
beginning more than 320 km (192 miles) from the Bay of Bengal.
Flooding along the Padma and Jamuna and the countless
distributary channels that flow from them during the monsoon season
(which lasts from mid-April to mid-October) often causes enormous
hardship and hinders economic development in Bangladesh. However,
deposits of rich silt from floods replenish fertile but overworked
farmland soils. Thus, the great river system is both the principal
resource of the country and its greatest hazard.
Highway transportation is complicated by the deltaic geography,
which requires frequent crossings of streams and rivers, especially
in east-west travel. Both the Padma and Jamuna are notorious for
their shifting subchannels and for formation of large silt islands
called chars. Because of changing river courses and expansive channels,
bridges are costly and, consequently, few in number.
The economy of Bangladesh is largely dependent on agriculture, which
accounts for more than a third of the gross domestic product and
provides employment for two-thirds of the labor force. Various crops,
including rice, wheat and bananas, are grown in the northwestern
region of Bangladesh; however, agricultural development there has
been impeded by an inadequate road system that lacks critical bridge
crossings of major rivers.
The Padma, which divides western Bangladesh, is bridged
only at a site north of Kushtia at the town of Paksey. The span,
known as the Hardinge Bridge (Figure 2), carries a broad-gauge railroad
across the river, but has no capacity for vehicular or pedestrian
traffic. Consequently, passengers and goods need to be ferried across
the river. River crossings are often delayed because of flooding
during the monsoon season or because of maintenance dredging needed
to provide access to ferry landings (known as ghats) during the
dry season.
Improved agricultural production in the northwest region of the
country would be assisted by a direct roadway connection to the
southwestern port city of Mongla. A proposed bridge across the Padma
a short distance downstream from the Hardinge Bridge will be an
important link in the road network. Funded by the Overseas Economic
Cooperation Fund (OECF) of Japan, this new bridge will provide an
uninterrupted transportation route between Bangladesh's three largest
cities: Dhaka, Chittagong and Khulna.
The overwhelming economic need for a highway crossing of the Padma
in Bangladesh makes the Paksey Bridge a crucial project. However,
friable and unstable banks (Figure 3), sediment loads of extraordinary
size and constantly shifting channels in one of the world's largest
rivers make design of a sound and dependable crossing challenging.
Hydraulic and Scour Analyses
PB conducted a comprehensive hydraulic and scour analyses
of the proposed crossing in collaboration with the Surface Water
Modelling Center (a not-for-profit research institute in Dhaka established
in 1996 by the Bangladesh Ministry of Water Resource), and the River
Research Institute (a division of the Bangladesh Ministry of Water
Resources) for the Roads and Highways Department of the Bangladesh
Ministry of Communications. This analysis consisted of three modeling
components:
- Long-term simulation of Padma River geomorphology using the
MIKE-21C two-dimensional finite difference computer
program
- Highly detailed analysis of two-dimensional depth-averaged
flow in the immediate vicinity of the crossing using the FESWMS
Flo2DH finite element computer program (Froehlich 1999)
- Small-scale physical model studies of scour around possible
pile group configurations.
Water-surface elevations, water velocities, hydrodynamic
forces, and potential depths of local and general scour were calculated
based on results from the numerical and physical models.
Data from two recent monsoon floods, consisting of water-surface
elevations, streambed elevations in the vicinity of the crossing
and acoustic-Doppler current profile measurements along numerous
channel transects were available to calibrate and test the numerical
models. Close agreement between measured and calculated water-surface
elevations, depth-averaged velocities and streambed elevation variations
suggested that maximum scour depths around pier foundations could
be decided with a high degree of confidence, and that the new bridge
would not create adverse impacts on the existing railway bridge
that would remain upstream of the new Paksey Bridge.
Paksey Bridge Site
The proposed Paksey Bridge (Figure 4) will be built
300 m (990 feet) downstream of and parallel to the Hardinge Bridge.
The bridge will have an overall length of 1786 m (5,893 feet) consisting
of 15 spans, each 109.5 m (361 feet) long and 2 end spans, each
72 m (239 feet) long, and it will carry two 7.5-m- (24.75-feet-)
wide vehicular traffic lanes and two 1.0-m- (3.3-foot-) wide pedestrian
walkways. Constrictions created by the massive pier foundations
of the Hardinge Bridge produce high-speed flow regions downstream
of the bridge, as shown by the hydraulic models. Consequently, spans
and piers of the Paksey Bridge are matched to those of the Hardinge
Bridge to avoid placing foundations in locations of potentially
large scour depths.
Dense sand having a median particle diameter D50
= 0.16 mm (0.0064 inch) is present to considerable depth at the
bridge site. Concrete piers will be placed on pile foundations with
two pile design options considered, driven steel piles and bored,
cast-in-place concrete piles. Each design consists of groups of
four piles. Cylindrical steel piles, each 2.25 m (7.4 feet) in diameter,
will be battered at 1:6 slopes (horizontal:vertical), while vertical
concrete piles will be 3 m (10 feet) in diameter.
The Padma (Ganges) River has undergone considerable lateral movement
upstream of the bridge site during the last two centuries. The deepest
part of the channel at the Hardinge Bridge has moved back and forth
between the abutments several times since the bridge was built.
Variable approach flow conditions have led to construction of extensive
guide banks upstream of the bridge. Guide banks covered by concrete
block revetement that control the course of flows through the Hardinge
Bridge and prevent bank erosion will be extended downstream through
the new crossing.
Stream gauge records have been collected at the Hardinge Bridge
continually since 1934. Based on the historical record, the 100-year
flood peak discharge is estimated to be Q100 = 89 200
m3/s, and the 500-year flood peak Q500 = 101
500 m3/s. Other hydrometric data available for model
calibration and testing include:
- Water stages at several locations upstream and downstream
from the bridge site
- Acoustic-doppler-current-profiler (ADCP) measurements along
several river transects downstream of the Hardinge Bridge taken
during the monsoon flood in September 1998, which reached a
record stage and a near-record peak flow rate (73 090 m3/s).
Bathymetric data from three surveys and limited topographic
measurements were used to develop a digital elevation model of the
Padma and surrounding floodplains. Satellite images were used to
establish bank lines and estimate flow resistance of floodplains
and chars.
Geomorphologic Model
Long-term changes in bed elevations and hydraulic
conditions of the Padma at the Paksey Bridge site were evaluated
using the two-dimensional depth-averaged flow and sediment transport
model MIKE 21C ("MIKE 21C - User Guide and Reference Manual,"
1996). Geometry of the study reach is represented by a curvilinear
finite difference grid containing 223 H 34 cells (Figure 5). Evolution
of bed elevations during characteristic monsoon floods lasting nearly
four months was simulated to evaluate general scour at both the
proposed Paksey Bridge crossing and the existing Hardinge Bridge.
Hydrodynamic and sediment transport calculations were carried out
sequentially in an uncoupled fashion using a time step of 20 minutes,
and bed elevations were updated continually throughout the simulations.
Testing of the morphological model was carried out
by simulating changes in bed elevations during the 1995 monsoon
flood. The curvilinear grid used in the test did not include the
Paksey Bridge guide bank extension. Comparison of the simulated
and measured bed elevations at the end of the flood, however, show
the model to predict the morphological changes accurately.
Time-dependent simulations show bed elevations at
the Paksey bridge to vary continuously during floods, increasing
as scour holes fill, then decreasing as flow rates increase significantly,
then increasing initially as floods recede. Bed elevations generally
reach their lowest levels near the flood peaks. Simulated bed elevations
at the peak of the 100-year design flood with the Paksey Bridge
guide bank extensions in place are shown in Figure 6. Minimum bed
elevations at the Paksey Bridge were found to be -41 m (-135 feet)
during the 100-year flood, and -44 m (-145 feet) during the 500-year
flood. Because some coefficients of the sediment transport algorithms
are not known with certainty, these parameters were varied to study
the effects of changes. Based on the findings, minimum bed elevations
for the 100-year flood at the Paksey Bridge could be as low as -48
m (158 feet).
Detailed Hydraulic Model
Detailed hydraulic analyses of the bridge crossing
for current and future conditions were carried out using the two-dimensional
depth-averaged flow and sediment transport module (Flo2DH) of the
Finite Element Surface-water Modeling System (FESWMS) developed
by Froehlich (1999) for the U.S. Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA). Flo2DH uses the finite element method to solve numerically
the set of partial differential equations that describe the flow
of water and sediment average over water.
An advantage of the finite element method in analyzing river flows
at bridge crossings is the use of an unstructured network or mesh
to discretize the area being studied. The reach of the Padma studied
in detail is more than 16 km (10 miles) long, and the finite element
network consists of more than 4,000 elements (Figure 7). Ground
elevations range from more than +20 m (+66 feet) to less than -32
m (-106 feet) referenced to mean sea level (Figures 8 and 9). Elements
are smallest in size in the central and narrowest portion of the
study reach at the locations of the Hardinge Bridge and the proposed
highway bridge. Elements are larger near the upstream and downstream
boundaries.
Without any adjustment of model coefficients, calculated
values for the September 1998 monsoon flood agreed extraordinarily
well with velocities measured along several channel transects. A
single velocity profile comparison is shown for transect 4, located
700 m (2,300 feet) downstream of the Hardinge Bridge (Figure 10).
Calculated water-surface elevations matched measured values closely
as well. Excellent agreement between measured and
calculated values for the 1998 flood provide a high level of confidence
in predicted velocities and elevations for the 100- and 500-year
floods with the Paksey Bridge included in the model.
The finite element network near the Paksey and Hardinge Bridges
contains small elements that describe the geometry and flow solution
in great detail (Figure 11). Individual pier foundations at the
Hardinge Bridge are modeled as small islands along whose boundaries
shear stresses are applied. Because pier foundations at the Paksey
Bridge consist of pile groups through which water may flow, they
have not been modeled directly. Instead, their impact on flow resistance
is taken into account by increasing the roughness coefficients of
elements in which the piers are located. Calculated velocity vectors
and magnitudes for the 100-year flood are shown in Figure 12, in
which the general movement of water towards the west side of the
channel and the large velocities that occur there are evident.
Historical trends and morphological simulations give
reasons for believing the shallow east side of the Padma under the
Hardinge Bridge, which is currently a large point bar, would be
stable for the foreseeable future. Simulations show the Paksey Bridge
would increase 100-year flood velocities along the east bank enough
to erode the eastside of the channel. Experience suggests that subsequent
deposition of eroded bed material might encourage formation of a
new char downstream of the Paksey Bridge with successive monsoon
floods.
Physical Model
Small-scale physical model studies of local scour
at two pier configurations considered for the Paksey Bridge (Piers
A and B as shown in Figures 13 and 14) were carried out at the River
Research Institute in Faridpur in a 2.2 -m- (7.25-foot-) wide laboratory
flume. Various combinations of water depth and velocity were studied
with the two model piers aligned with approaching stream flow at
angles of 0, 5, 10, 20, and 30 degrees. Sediment was applied at
the upstream end of the flume at a predetermined rate throughout
a run. Bed elevations were measured periodically along transects
on the upstream and downstream faces of the piers (Figure 15) until
equilibrium conditions were reached.
Results of the experiment indicate that during 100-year
flood conditions local scour depths at Pier A (four battered cylindrical
piles) could reach 9 m (30 feet) along the downstream face when
pier alignment angles are 10º to 20º, and that local scour
depths at Pier B (four vertical piles) could be as much as 12 m
(40 feet) along the downstream face when piers are aligned at 30º
to approaching stream flow. Local scour depth was calculated as
the vertical distance between the ambient bed elevation at each
pier estimated from the transect, and the lowest point measurement
along the transect at each pier. Numerical model results give reason
to believe that stream flows could approach any of the piers at
angles up to 30º.
A Summary and Conclusions
Three models (a numerical model of long-term geomorphic channel
changes, a detailed numerical model of hydraulic conditions at bridges,
and a physical model of local pier scour) were used to study hydraulics
and scour at the proposed Paksey Bridge on the Padma River in Bangladesh.
The approach establishes a comprehensive analytical procedure for
assuring safe and sound designs of bridges spanning large rivers
with easily erodible beds and banks.
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