Abstract

The role and importance of geodesists in the planning and building of civil engineering constructions are well known. However, the importance and benefits of collected data during maintenance in exploitation have arisen in the last thirty years due primarily to the development of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) instruments, sensors and systems, which can receive signals from multiple GPS systems. In the last fifteen years, the development of Terrestrial Laser Scanners (TLS) and Image-Assisted Total Stations (IATS) has enabled much wider integration of these types of geodetic instruments with their sensors into monitoring systems for the displacement and deformation monitoring of structures, as well as for regular structure inspections. While GNSS sensors have certain limitations regarding their accuracy, their suitability in monitoring systems, and the need for a clean horizon, IATS do not have these limitations. The latest development of Total Stations (TS) called IATS is a theodolite that consists of a Robotic Total Station (RTS) with integrated image sensors. Today, IATS can be used for structural and geo-monitoring, i.e., for the determination of static and dynamic displacements and deformations, as well as for the determination of civil engineering structures’ natural frequencies. In this way, IATS can provide essential information about the current condition of structures. However, like all instruments and sensors, they have their advantages and disadvantages. IATS’s biggest advantage is their high level of accuracy and precision and the fact that they do not need to be set up on the structure, while their biggest disadvantage is that they are expensive. In this paper, the developed low-cost IATS prototype, which consists of an RTS Leica TPS1201 instrument and GoPro Hero5 camera, is presented. At first, the IATS prototype was tested in the laboratory where simulated dynamic displacements were determined. After the experiment, the IATS prototype was used in the field for the purpose of static and dynamic load testing of the railway bridge Kloštar, after its reconstruction according to HRN ISO NORM U.M1.046—Testing of bridges by load test. In this article, the determination of bridge dynamic displacements and results of the computation of natural frequencies using FFT from the measurement data obtained by means of IATS are presented. During the load testing of the bridge, the frequencies were also determined by accelerometers, and these data were used as a reference for the assessment of IATS accuracy and suitability for dynamic testing. From the conducted measurements, we successfully determined natural bridge frequencies as they match the results gained by accelerometers.

Highlights

  • The process of acquiring data from experimental tests is inevitably influenced by the available technologies with their advantages and disadvantages

  • The maximal vertical displacement is detected in the second phase in the middle of the bridge span in point 3, line A and its value is 8.8 mm, while in line B it corresponds to 8.1 mm

  • From the results obtained in the fourth phase, we can conclude that the bridge returned to its initial state recorded in the first phase with the maximal residual of vertical displacements being 0.2 mm, which is within the allowed tolerances for this type of bridge

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Summary

Introduction

The process of acquiring data from experimental tests is inevitably influenced by the available technologies with their advantages and disadvantages. The common approach in data acquisition in civil engineering is based on contact point sensors (could be displacement, strain, velocity, or acceleration sensors) whose measurements are transferred via wired connections to the data acquisition hardware, which is rather complex, expensive, and time-consuming to set up. Vision-based vibration monitoring is possibly the solution that attracts a lot of the interest on the part of civil engineers, given that the advantages of contactless monitoring can be potentially obtained through simple and low-cost instruments [1]. There are alternative technologies to avoid the use of connection cables (given the difficulties and efforts in cabling large structures) with wireless sensors [2,3]. The focus is on contactless vision-based vibration monitoring using a low-cost geodetic IATS prototype

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