Abstract

This paper presents a novel damage identification technique for bridges based on the dynamic response of a moving vehicle. A quarter car vehicle model instrumented with two accelerometers and an inertial profilometer is used for this purpose. The method involves the coupling of Tikhonov regularization scheme with signal averaging technique to handle the problem of measurement noise and road roughness. In the first stage, a damage-dependent road roughness profile is estimated from measured acceleration response by minimizing a Tikhonov regularized least squares cost function. The second stage involves the minimization of the profile roughness residual function that depends on the location and magnitude of damage. This objective function compares the roughness profile computed from the first stage and that measured by the inertial profilometer. It is proved that efficient damage detection ensues from considering multiple runs of the vehicle and choosing the appropriate regularization parameter. The present study considers various aspects, such as the uniqueness of results, robustness of results to measurement noise, effect of modelling error, effect of vehicle speed, and uncertainty in estimation. Numerical results show that the approach is capable of detecting the magnitude as well as the location of damage. In addition, the problem of road roughness and measurement noise is handled competently.

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