Abstract

Suspension bridges with very long spans and slender designs are susceptible to large-amplitude dynamic excitation. Monitoring systems installed on bridges can provide measurement data (e.g. accelerations) and therewith valuable information on the true dynamic behaviour. This pilot study examines the possible use of recently developed methods for real-time response estimation at unmeasured locations. The methodology for response estimation is tested in a case study on the Hardanger Bridge, a 1310 m long suspension bridge in Norway, which has a network of twenty accelerometers. Two techniques, a joint input-state estimation algorithm (JIS) and a dual Kalman filter (DKF), are used to estimate the full-field dynamic response using data measured at the bridge and a reduced order structural model. The results show that the DKF is able to estimate accelerations fairly accurately. The JIS estimate, however, suffer from ill-conditioning and consequently show severe errors. Possible reasons for this ill-conditioning are briefly discussed.

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