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Digital Image Correlation for Assessment of Bridges' Technical State and Remaining Resource.

Authors :
Kopiika, Nadiia
Blikharskyy, Yaroslav
Rakicevic, Zoran
Source :
Structural Control & Health Monitoring; 9/4/2024, Vol. 2024, p1-23, 23p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Bridges enable communications and transportation of goods nationally and internationally, underpinning economic and social activities, and thus they are pylons of our prosperity and mobility. Bridges worldwide are constantly subjected to physical wear, ageing, deterioration, hazards, environmental influences, and increased loading. Loss of performance and functionality of bridge structures would have a crucial impact on overall infrastructural resilience and would cause significant negative economic and social consequences. Monitoring their behaviour for different loading conditions relies on accurate estimations of the stress‐strain state of various critical components and remaining capacities. These activities are of high importance for better planning and lifespan prolongation, that is, the extension of their service life and prevention of unforeseen collapses, in line with sustainability principles of well‐informed maintenance. In many cases, access to the structure is limited or even impossible, which causes the need for the deployment of remote and contactless methods. One such innovative technique, which has recently attracted attention in scientific and practical applications, is the digital image correlation (DIC). DIC is a contactless approach applicable for obtaining the full field of strains and deformations of full‐scale real structures. Although the DIC approach has been widely used in world engineering practice for monitoring bridges and has proved to be a reliable and accurate method, there is a lack of systematic integral review on previous practical applications, revealing limitations and perspectives. This is the main motivation and novelty of this study, which will describe selected case studies in which DIC was used on real full‐scale bridge structures and propose improvements for the method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15452255
Volume :
2024
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Structural Control & Health Monitoring
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179482248
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2024/1763285