Abstract

Software systems monitoring civil structures over their lifetime are exposed to the risk of aging much faster than the structures themselves. This risk can be minimized if we use models describing the structure, geometry, processes, interaction, and risk assessment as well as the data collected over the lifetime of a civil structure. They are considered as a unity together with the civil structure. These model-based systems constitute a digital twin of such a civil structure, which through appropriate operative services remain in permanent use and thus co-evolve with the civil structure even over a long-lasting lifetime. Even though research on digital twins for civil structures has grown over the last few years, digital twin engineering with heterogeneous models and data sources is still challenging. Within this article, we describe models used within all phases of the whole civil structure life cycle. We identify the models from the computer science, civil engineering, mechanical engineering, and business management domains as specifically relevant for this purpose, as they seem to cover all relevant aspects of sustainable civil structures at best, and discuss them using a dam as an example. Moreover, we discuss challenges for creating and using models within different scenarios such as improving the sustainability of civil structures, evaluating risks, engineering digital twins, parallel software and object evolution, and changing technologies and software stacks. We show how this holistic view from different perspectives helps overcome challenges and raises new ones. The consideration from these different perspectives enables the long-term software support of civil structures while simultaneously opening up new paths and needs for research on the digitalization of long-lasting structures.

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