Abstract

<p>Civil infrastructures (i.e bridges, galleries ...) are crucial parts of the road asset and their possible degradation, with related consequences, may have great social, economical and safety impacts. On these grounds, the periodic monitoring of such infrastructures, from a static and dynamic point of view, is required for identifying possible changes in the structure properties, in order to prevent serious damages and disasters.</p><p>In this study we propose an integrated geophysical approach by using non-invasive and non-destructive seismic and electromagnetic techniques with standard and low-cost sensors. It has been implemented to understand the static and dynamic properties of the Gravina bridge and its interaction with foundation soils. Gravina Bridge is a bow-string bridge located few km far from Matera (Southern Italy) and developing for 144 m along a steel-concrete deck. First, the properties of the foundation soils were studied by carrying out three high-resolution geo-electrical tomographies, one bi-dimensional seismic array and two single-station seismic noise measurements. Then, the structural characteristics of the bridge were inferred through seismic and electromagnetic sensing. The former was performed by means of recordings by accelerometers and velocimeters. The accelerometers were installed in a continuous acquisition mode, along the deck and on the top of the arch. In that way, several local and regional earthquakes were recorded and detected. The velocimeters were deployed along different seismic array configurations for on-demand ambient noise recordings, in normal traffic conditions and during vibration tests. The latter were executed by using vehicles as dynamic sources.</p><p>The electromagnetic sensing was performed by using the Microwave Radar Interferometer: it was placed below the deck to measure the displacements of all the scenario illuminated by the antenna beam providing a continuous mapping of the static and dynamic displacements of the entire target.</p><p>The acquired dataset was analyzed both in frequency and time-frequency domain in order to characterize the stationary and non-stationary response of the monitored bridge in terms of fundamental frequencies of vibration, equivalent viscous damping factors and modal shapes. The consistency between the results retrieved by different geophysical techniques provides therefore an importan hint about the reliability of the described approach.</p>

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