Abstract

Road and rail networks provide critical support for society, yet they can be degraded by seasonal soil movements. Currently, few transport network operators monitor small-scale soil movement, but understanding the conditions contributing to infrastructure failure can improve network resilience. Persistent Scatterers Interferometry (PSI) is a remote sensing technique offering the potential for near real-time ground movement monitoring over wide areas. This study tests the use of PSI for monitoring the response of major roads, minor roads, and railways to ground movement across six study sites in England, using Sentinel 1 data in VV polarisation in ascending orbit. Some soils are more stable than others—a national soil map was used to quantify the relationships between infrastructure movement and major soil groups. Vertical movement of transport infrastructure is a function of engineering design, soil properties, and traffic loading. Roads and railways built on soil groups prone to seasonal water-logging (Ground-water Gley soils, Surface-water Gley soils, Pelosols, and Brown soils) demonstrated seasonal subsidence and heave, associated with an increased risk of infrastructure degradation. Roads and railways over Podzolic soils demonstrated relative stability. Railways on Peat soils exhibited the most extreme continual subsidence of up to 7.5 mm year−1. Limitations of this study include the short observation period (~13 months, due to satellite data availability) and the regional scale of the soil map—mapping units contain multiple soil types with different ground movement potentials. Future use of a higher resolution soil map over a longer period will advance this research. Nevertheless, this study demonstrates the viability of PSI as a technique for measuring both seasonal soil-related ground movement and the associated impacts on road and rail infrastructure.

Highlights

  • Ground movement is the soil-related geohazard most damaging to infrastructure in the UK [1]

  • This study has applied a surface deformation investigation using Persistent Scatterers Interferometry (PSI) in six UK study sites to determine the impact that different soils have on the Line of Sight (LOS) deformation of roads and railways

  • Sentinel 1 has been shown to be effective at measuring surface deformation of these thin, linear infrastructure assets across a range of environmental settings, demonstrating PSI with Sentinel

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Summary

Introduction

Ground movement is the soil-related geohazard most damaging to infrastructure in the UK [1]. The ability to measure the impact of soil movement on infrastructure networks in a cost-effective manner offers great value to utilities, insurance companies, and governments. Infrastructure resilience can be compromised by infrastructure pressures (ageing assets, embrittlement, thinning, increasing demand and loading), environmental pressures (changing climate, soil movement), and financial pressures. A fully functioning and fault-resistant system of infrastructure is important for the critical operation of healthcare, transport, trade, and commerce. The UK government is set to invest £100 billion in infrastructure by 2021 to ensure that the UK’s infrastructure needs are met for future generations [2]. Monitoring the structural condition of infrastructure networks is essential to Remote Sens. Monitoring the structural condition of infrastructure networks is essential to Remote Sens. 2017, 9, 922; doi:10.3390/rs9090922 www.mdpi.com/journal/remotesensing

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