Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges

The bottom flanges of steel plate girder bridges can be considered fracture-critical elements depending on the number of girders and bridge configuration. For such cases, it is required that inspection of these bridges be carried out using costly “arms-length” approach. New techn...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Abedin, Armin B. Mehrabi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Infrastructures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2412-3811/4/3/42
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spelling doaj-422e9c666d6f458c8abda98ba1dc42b52020-11-25T01:53:40ZengMDPI AGInfrastructures2412-38112019-07-01434210.3390/infrastructures4030042infrastructures4030042Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder BridgesMohammad Abedin0Armin B. Mehrabi1Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33174, USADepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33174, USAThe bottom flanges of steel plate girder bridges can be considered fracture-critical elements depending on the number of girders and bridge configuration. For such cases, it is required that inspection of these bridges be carried out using costly “arms-length” approach. New techniques in structural health monitoring (SHM) that use non-contact sensors and self-powered wireless sensors present alternative approach for inspection. Application of such techniques would allow timely detection and application of repair and strengthening, in other word, providing for more resilient bridges. This paper investigates the feasibility of using a handful of self-powered wireless or non-contact sensors for continuous or periodic monitoring and detection of fracture in steel plate girder bridges. To validate this concept, vibration measurements were performed on an actual bridge in the field, and detailed finite element analyses were carried out on a multi-girder bridge. The records obtained show that vibration amplitude was significantly increased for fractured girder, and a distinct pattern of strain variation was registered in the vicinity of fracture, all of which can be detected effectively with relevant sensors. Moreover, the amplitude and frequency of the vibration was shown to be significant enough for providing the required power for typical sensor(s).https://www.mdpi.com/2412-3811/4/3/42steel bridgesfracture criticaldamage detectionhealth monitoringlaser vibrometerself-powered sensorwireless sensorsnon-contact sensor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammad Abedin
Armin B. Mehrabi
spellingShingle Mohammad Abedin
Armin B. Mehrabi
Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
Infrastructures
steel bridges
fracture critical
damage detection
health monitoring
laser vibrometer
self-powered sensor
wireless sensors
non-contact sensor
author_facet Mohammad Abedin
Armin B. Mehrabi
author_sort Mohammad Abedin
title Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
title_short Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
title_full Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
title_fullStr Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
title_full_unstemmed Novel Approaches for Fracture Detection in Steel Girder Bridges
title_sort novel approaches for fracture detection in steel girder bridges
publisher MDPI AG
series Infrastructures
issn 2412-3811
publishDate 2019-07-01
description The bottom flanges of steel plate girder bridges can be considered fracture-critical elements depending on the number of girders and bridge configuration. For such cases, it is required that inspection of these bridges be carried out using costly “arms-length” approach. New techniques in structural health monitoring (SHM) that use non-contact sensors and self-powered wireless sensors present alternative approach for inspection. Application of such techniques would allow timely detection and application of repair and strengthening, in other word, providing for more resilient bridges. This paper investigates the feasibility of using a handful of self-powered wireless or non-contact sensors for continuous or periodic monitoring and detection of fracture in steel plate girder bridges. To validate this concept, vibration measurements were performed on an actual bridge in the field, and detailed finite element analyses were carried out on a multi-girder bridge. The records obtained show that vibration amplitude was significantly increased for fractured girder, and a distinct pattern of strain variation was registered in the vicinity of fracture, all of which can be detected effectively with relevant sensors. Moreover, the amplitude and frequency of the vibration was shown to be significant enough for providing the required power for typical sensor(s).
topic steel bridges
fracture critical
damage detection
health monitoring
laser vibrometer
self-powered sensor
wireless sensors
non-contact sensor
url https://www.mdpi.com/2412-3811/4/3/42
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