thesis

System identification and structural health monitoring of bridge structures

Abstract

This research study addresses two issues for the identification of structural characteristics of civil infrastructure systems. The first one is related to the problem of dynamic system identification, by means of experimental and operational modal analysis, applied to a large variety of bridge structures. Based on time and frequency domain techniques and mainly with output-only acceleration, velocity or strain data, modal parameters have been estimated for suspension bridges, masonry arch bridges, concrete arch and continuous bridges, reticular and box girder steel bridges. After giving an in-depth overview of standard and advanced stochastic methods, differences of the existing approaches in their performances are highlighted during system identification on the different kinds of civil infrastructures. The evaluation of their performance is accompanied by easy and hard determinable cases, which gave good results only after performing advanced clustering analysis. Eventually, real-time vibration-based structural health monitoring algorithms are presented during their performance in structural damage detection by statistical models. The second issue is the noise-free estimation of high order displacements taking place on suspension bridges. Once provided a comprehensive treatment of displacement and acceleration data fusion for dynamic systems by defining the Kalman filter algorithm, the combination of these two kinds of measurements is achieved, improving the deformations observed. Thus, an exhaustive analysis of smoothed displacement data on a suspension bridge is presented. The successful tests were subsequently used to define the non-collocated sensor monitoring problem with the application on simplified model

    Similar works