Abstract

With innovation and aesthetics playing leading roles, the landscape of footbridge design continues to evolve towards lightweight, landmark structures, increasing the emphasis on mitigating lively dynamic responses. To satisfy architectural constraints, auxiliary control devices are being used to control the response under infrequent peak-loading events. Nearly all implemented control devices are permanent installations of passive systems, such as viscous dampers or tuned mass dampers (TMDs), that are tuned to a particular structural property and hence specific to the particular application. Recently, the concept of deployable, autonomous control systems has been presented, in which a robotic platform is combined with an active control device to yield a system that is capable of providing short-term control for a range of structures. This concept is particularly attractive in relation to footbridge applications, where the systems can be deployed during predictable peak-loading events such as marathons or used with temporary footbridges where the need for control depends on the intended use. In this paper, analytical modeling of a prototype system is presented to validate experimental identification. Furthermore, the role of the control–structure interaction (CSI) is described and compensated for through an active controller formulation and the use of a position feedback controller for disturbance rejection. The performance of the prototype system is evaluated experimentally and assessed relative to an equivalent passive TMD device. The experimental study validates the controller formulation and demonstrates the effectiveness of the prototype system.

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