Smart Structures and Systems
Volume 21, Number 3, 2018, pages 305-320
DOI: 10.12989/sss.2018.21.3.305
Prediction of the remaining service life of existing concrete bridges in infrastructural networks based on carbonation and chloride ingress
Ivan Zambon, Anja Vidović, Alfred Strauss, Jose Matos and Norbert Friedl
Abstract
The second half of the 20th century was marked with a significant raise in amount of railway bridges in Austria made of reinforced concrete. Today, many of these bridges are slowly approaching the end of their envisaged service life. Current methodology of assessment and evaluation of structural condition is based on visual inspections, which, due to its subjectivity, can lead to delayed interventions, irreparable damages and additional costs. Thus, to support engineers in the process of structural evaluation and prediction of the remaining service life, the Austrian Federal Railways (oBB) commissioned the formation of a concept for an anticipatory life cycle management of engineering structures. The part concerning concrete bridges consisted of forming a bridge management system (BMS) in a form of a web-based analysis tool, known as the LeCIE_tool. Contrary to most BMSs, where prediction of a condition is based on Markovian models, in the LeCIE_tool, the time-dependent deterioration mechanisms of chloride- and carbonation-induced corrosion are used as the most common deterioration processes in transportation infrastructure. Hence, the main aim of this article is to describe the background of the introduced tool, with a discussion on exposure classes and crucial parameters of chloride ingress and carbonation models. Moreover, the article presents a verification of the generated analysis tool through service life prediction on a dozen of bridges of the Austrian railway network, as well as a case study with a more detailed description and implementation of the concept applied.
Key Words
service life; bridge management system; infrastructure management; concrete bridges; deterioration; concrete carbonation; chloride ingress
Address
Ivan Zambon, Anja Vidović and Alfred Strauss: Department of Civil Engineering and Natural Hazards, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Peter-Jordan-Strabe 82, 1190 Vienna, Austria
Jose Matos: Civil Engineering Department, Campus de Azurém, Minho University, Guimaraes, Portugal
Norbert Friedl: Bridge Construction and Structural Engineering, OBB-Infrastruktur AG, Nordbahnstrabe 50, 1020 Vienna, Austria