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Monitoring of Changes in Bridge Response Using Weigh-In-Motion Systems
Author(s)
Date Issued
2013-07
Date Available
2014-12-12T09:34:20Z
Abstract
Weigh-In-Motion (WIM) and Bridge Weigh-In-Motion (B-WIM) are systems that allow obtaining the axle weights of road vehicles in motion, at normal traffic speeds. While WIM employs sensors embedded in the road pavement, B-WIM use the strain recordings of a bridge to infer the traversing vehicle axle weights. Both systems have been heavily improved over the past decades, and commercial versions are currently in operation. The two main applications of these systems are: (1) to assess the traffic loading on the infrastructure, and (2) to enforce the maximum weight limits. This paper suggests a novel application of these two systems to identify changes in bridge stiffness. It requires the bridge to be instrumented with a B-WIM system and a WIM system nearby. The principle is to use both systems to evaluate the gross weight of vehicles passing over the bridge and correlate their predictions. Changes in correlation of the predicted axle weights over time will indicate either structural damage or faulty sensor. A finite element model of a coupled vehicle-bridge system with different damage scenarios is used to test the approach numerically. Vehicle mechanical properties and speeds are randomly sampled within a Monte Carlo simulation. Results show how correlation changes as damage increases and how this correlation can be employed as a damage indicator.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications
Journal
Key Engineering Materials
Volume
569-570
Start Page
183
End Page
190
Copyright (Published Version)
2013 Trans Tech Publications
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Cantero_etal2013_Monitoring_of_changes_in_bridge_response_using_Weigh-In-Motion_systems.pdf
Size
364.03 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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