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Detection of Bridge Dynamic Parameters Using an Instrumented Vehicle
Author(s)
Date Issued
2010
Date Available
2013-02-20T12:13:47Z
Abstract
Highway structures such as bridges are subject to continuous degradation primarily due to ageing and environmental factors. A rational transport policy requires the monitoring of this transport infrastructure to provide adequate maintenance and guarantee the required levels of transport service and safety. In Europe, this is now a legal requirement - a European Directive requires all member states of the European Union to implement a Bridge Management System. However, the process is expensive, requiring the installation of sensing equipment and data acquisition electronics on the bridge. This paper investigates the use of an instrumented vehicle fitted with accelerometers on its axles to monitor the dynamic behaviour of bridges as an indicator of its structural condition. This approach eliminates the need for any on-site installation of measurement equipment. A simplified half-car vehicle-bridge interaction model is used in theoretical simulations to test the possibility of extracting the dynamic parameters of the bridge from the spectra of vehicle accelerations. The effect of vehicle speed, vehicle mass and bridge span length on the detection of the bridge dynamic parameters are investigated. The algorithm is highly sensitive to the condition of the road profile and simulations are carried out for both smooth and rough profiles.
External Notes
Proceedings for the conference are available online as a .zip file from http://www.bridge.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/WCSCM5/5WCSCM_Paper.zip
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Publisher
World Conference on Structural Control and Monitoring
Copyright (Published Version)
2010, WCSCM
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
Journal
Proceedings of the 5th World Conference on Structural Control and Monitoring
Conference Details
5th World Conference on Structural Control and Monitoring, 12th-14th July, Tokyo, Japan
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
c107.pdf
Size
362.85 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
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