Smart Structures and Systems
Volume 24, Number 5, 2019, pages 617-630
DOI: 10.12989/sss.2019.24.5.617
A completely non-contact recognition system for bridge unit influence line using portable cameras and computer vision
Chuan-Zhi Dong, Selcuk Bas and F. Necati Catbas
Abstract
Currently most of the vision-based structural identification research focus either on structural input (vehicle location) estimation or on structural output (structural displacement and strain responses) estimation. The structural condition assessment at global level just with the vision-based structural output cannot give a normalized response irrespective of the type and/or load configurations of the vehicles. Combining the vision-based structural input and the structural output from non-contact sensors overcomes the disadvantage given above, while reducing cost, time, labor force including cable wiring work. In conventional traffic monitoring, sometimes traffic closure is essential for bridge structures, which may cause other severe problems such as traffic jams and accidents. In this study, a completely non-contact structural identification system is proposed, and the system mainly targets the identification of bridge unit influence line (UIL) under operational traffic. Both the structural input (vehicle location information) and output (displacement responses) are obtained by only using cameras and computer vision techniques. Multiple cameras are synchronized by audio signal pattern recognition. The proposed system is verified with a laboratory experiment on a scaled bridge model under a small moving truck load and a field application on a footbridge on campus under a moving golf cart load. The UILs are successfully identified in both bridge cases. The pedestrian loads are also estimated with the extracted UIL and the predicted weights of pedestrians are observed to be in acceptable ranges.
Key Words
structural health monitoring; displacement; unit influence line; computer vision; structural identification
Address
Chuan-Zhi Dong and F. Necati Catbas: Department of Civil, Environmental, and Construction Engineering, University of Central Florida,
12800 Pegasus Drive, Suite 211, Orlando, Florida 32816, USA
Selcuk Bas: Department of Civil, Environmental, and Construction Engineering, University of Central Florida,
12800 Pegasus Drive, Suite 211, Orlando, Florida 32816, USA;
2Department of Civil Engineering, Bartin University, Bartin, Turkey