TECHNICAL PAPERS
Dec 13, 2002

Application of Dynamic System Identification to Timber Bridges

Publication: Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume 129, Issue 1

Abstract

A method of global nondestructive evaluation for identifying local damage and decay in timber beams was developed in previous analytical studies and verified experimentally using simply supported beams in the laboratory. The method employs experimental modal analysis and an algorithm that monitors changes in modal strain energy between the mode shapes of a damaged structure with respect to the undamaged structure. A simple three-girder bridge was built and tested in a laboratory to investigate the capability and limitations of the method for detecting damage in a multimember timber structure. The laboratory tests showed that the method can correctly detect and locate a simulated pocket of decay inflicted at the end of a girder as well as detect a notch removed from the midspan of a girder. The tests showed that the method can correctly detect damage simultaneously at two locations within the bridge, but also that large magnitudes of damage at one location can mask smaller magnitudes of damage at another location. When a calibrated baseline model is used to represent the undamaged state of the bridge, the results show that the method of nondestructive evaluation is able to detect each case of inflicted damage, but with some increase in localization error.

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References

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Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Structural Engineering
Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume 129Issue 1January 2003
Pages: 116 - 124

History

Received: Apr 10, 2001
Accepted: Apr 2, 2002
Published online: Dec 13, 2002
Published in print: Jan 2003

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Authors

Affiliations

S. T. Peterson
Engineer, BERGER/ABAM Engineers, Inc., Federal Way, WA 98003-2600.
D. I. McLean
Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA 99164-2910.
D. G. Pollock
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA 99164-2910.

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