Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Structural Health Monitoring of Precast Concrete Box Girders Using Selected Vibration-Based Damage Detection Methods
Precast, prestressed concrete box girders are commonly used as superstructure components for short and medium span bridges. Their configuration and typical side-by-side placement make large portions of these elements inaccessible for visual inspection or the application of nondestructive testing techniques. This paper demonstrates that vibration-based damage detection (VBDD) is an effective alternative for monitoring their structural health. A box girder removed from a dismantled bridge was used to evaluate the ability of five different VBDD algorithms to detect and localize low levels of spalling damage, with a focus on using a small number of sensors and only the fundamental mode of vibration. All methods were capable of detecting and localizing damage to a region within approximately 1.6 times the longitudinal spacing between as few as six uniformly distributed accelerometers. Strain gauges configured to measure curvature were also effective, but tended to be susceptible to large errors in near support damage cases. Finite element analyses demonstrated that increasing the number of sensor locations leads to a proportional increase in localization accuracy, while the use of additional modes provides little advantage and can sometimes lead to a deterioration in the performance of the VBDD techniques.
Structural Health Monitoring of Precast Concrete Box Girders Using Selected Vibration-Based Damage Detection Methods
Precast, prestressed concrete box girders are commonly used as superstructure components for short and medium span bridges. Their configuration and typical side-by-side placement make large portions of these elements inaccessible for visual inspection or the application of nondestructive testing techniques. This paper demonstrates that vibration-based damage detection (VBDD) is an effective alternative for monitoring their structural health. A box girder removed from a dismantled bridge was used to evaluate the ability of five different VBDD algorithms to detect and localize low levels of spalling damage, with a focus on using a small number of sensors and only the fundamental mode of vibration. All methods were capable of detecting and localizing damage to a region within approximately 1.6 times the longitudinal spacing between as few as six uniformly distributed accelerometers. Strain gauges configured to measure curvature were also effective, but tended to be susceptible to large errors in near support damage cases. Finite element analyses demonstrated that increasing the number of sensor locations leads to a proportional increase in localization accuracy, while the use of additional modes provides little advantage and can sometimes lead to a deterioration in the performance of the VBDD techniques.
Structural Health Monitoring of Precast Concrete Box Girders Using Selected Vibration-Based Damage Detection Methods
Zhengjie Zhou (Autor:in) / Leon D. Wegner (Autor:in) / Bruce F. Sparling (Autor:in)
2010
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Metadata by DOAJ is licensed under CC BY-SA 1.0
Launching precast prestressed concrete girders
Engineering Index Backfile | 1960
|PRECAST-PRESTRESSED CONCRETE - CAMBER VARIATION IN PRECAST GIRDERS - Florida DOT field monitoring
Online Contents | 1999
|PRECAST CONCRETE Precast girders with cast in-situ slab
Online Contents | 2010
|Lateral Buckling of Precast Reinforced Concrete Girders
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2012
|