Abstract

Observing motion within a building in six degrees of freedom (three components of translational motion plus three components of rotational motion) opens completely new approaches to structural health monitoring. Inspired by inertial navigation, we can monitor the absolute motion of a building or parts of it without the need for an external reference. Rotational motion sensors can directly measure harmful torsional modes of a building, which has always been challenging and prone to errors when using translation sensors only. Currently, we are developing methodologies including rotational motion observations for monitoring of material parameters in order to locate and characterize structural damage. Within the framework of the GIOTTO project (funded by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research, BMBF) we explore these approaches.Here, we introduce a newly developed 6C sensor network for structural health monitoring. It consists of 14 inertial measurement units (IMU50 from exail, former iXblue, France) that were adapted to the needs of seismology and structural health monitoring. We performed experiments at the BLEIB test structure of the Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung (BAM), a 24 m long concrete beam serving as a large scale bridge model. We present results on detecting changes in material properties (seismic wave speed) of the beam with varying pre-stress and load, as derived from a novel approach by comparing amplitudes of translational to rotational motions at a single measurement point. We compare our findings to results obtained with coda wave interferometry using rotational as well as translational motions.

Full Text
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