Rapid evaluation and damage assessment of instrumented highway bridges |
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Authors: | Virginia Mosquera Andrew W. Smyth Raimondo Betti |
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Affiliation: | Department of Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, Columbia University, , New York, NY, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | This study focuses on the use of strong motion data recorded during earthquakes and aftershocks to provide a preliminary assessment of the structural integrity and possible damage in bridges. A system identification technique is used to determine dynamical characteristics and high‐fidelity first‐order linear models of a bridge from low level earthquake excitations. A finite element model is developed and updated using a genetic algorithm optimization scheme to match the frequencies identified and to simulate data from a damaging earthquake for the bridge. Here, two criteria are used to determine the state of the structure. The first criteria uses the error between the data recorded or simulated by the calibrated nonlinear finite element model and the data predicted by the linear model. The second criteria compares relative displacements of the structure with displacement thresholds identified using a pushover analysis. The use of this technique can provide an almost immediate, yet reliable, assessment of the structural health of an instrumented bridge after a seismic event. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | damage detection system identification model updating genetic algorithm pushover analysis nonlinear analysis |
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