Professional Documents
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Systems
By: Christopher Huck, Abigail Browder, Phillip Sutter
For: CHA Consulting, Inc. – Transportation Structures
8/5/2014
Abstract
With steel bridges representing approximately 34 percent of the over 600,000 highway bridges in
the United States, continual monitoring and early detection of deterioration in these structures is
vital to prevent expensive repairs or catastrophic failures. As one may be aware over two
hundred million trips are taken across deficient bridges each year. In total, one in nine of the
nation’s bridges are rated as structurally deficient, and the average age of the 607,380 bridges in
America is 42 years. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that to eliminate the
nation’s bridge deficient backlog by 2028, the government would need to invest $20.5 billion
annually, while only $12.8 billion is being spent currently.
Typically structures at risk for catastrophic failure are susceptible to scouring, fatigue,
progressive cracking or any other progressive structural deficiency. Bridge monitoring system(s)
(herein referred to as BMS) can determine structural integrity and warn of excessive and sudden
impact loading. Additionally, monitoring systems can provide overall bridge health information
such as wind speed, three-axis acceleration, humidity and strain loading. These systems provide
the advantage of having the ability to locate damage in areas where access is limited or
impossible. The data collected on a daily basis will help owners and maintenance authorities
make rational decisions in allocating maintenance and repair of bridges.
The goal of this study is to determine if/ how CHA may use BMS to improve and expand our
bridge inspection/evaluation capabilities and services we can offer. The research looks into the
various technologies that are on the market, limitations BMS might have, how others are
currently using it and its possible advantages to bridge owners and CHA. The primary
deliverable will include determining the feasibility of CHA using BMS to expand market share,
up-front/ development costs that CHA would need to expand and the potential benefit to CHA.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Case Studies 4
URS 4
IIS, Pennoni 5
Cost 8
Conclusion 9
Appendix
Table of Figures
Figure 1: Sensors Required per Span 8
1
using a vibration method. The cost of the wireless sensors is significantly lower, $100 versus
$15,000 per sensor. This allows for more sensors to be added to a given structure for improved
data collection of bridge monitoring information. With improvements in data retrieval, small and
large engineering firms are entering the market of BMS services.
URS is a global consulting firm of more than 50,000 employees. At the time of this paper,
AECOM has announced the acquisition of URS. Based out of Maryland, URS has complete in-
house capabilities. They “own multiple state-of-the-art test control and data acquisition systems
with wireless communication and solar capabilities, plus a suite of sensors and transducers for
the measurement of strain, displacement, crack movement, tilt, acceleration, and temperature.”
“Since 1994, URS has evaluated over 80 bridges of different structural types across the United
States using a variety of instrumentation and/or analysis techniques.” URS’s division of bridge
instrumentation and evaluation was started by a PhD in 1994.
URS offers the following applications through their division of bridge instrumentation and
evaluation:
Load Rating for Strength Evaluation: Helps understand actual structural behavior to
identify and quantify inherent load carrying mechanisms that are not considered in
conventional analysis. Usually results in improved load ratings.
Fatigue Life Assessment and Crack Repairs for Steel Bridges: Field measurement of
stress histograms at areas of concern quantify live load and temperature effects for
evaluation and retrofit of fatigue cracks, or assessment of remaining fatigue lives.
Tension Assessment in Cables or Post-Tensioning (P-T) Bars: Nondestructive Taut Cable
Vibration Measurement (TCVM) method for accurate determination of existing tension
in cables or Post-Tension bars.
Diagnosis/Retrofit of Structural Problems: Field measurements of key strains, movements
of aged/dysfunctional expansion bearings/joints, opening/closing of existing cracks, or
structural vibration characteristics are used to diagnose and develop effective retrofit
solutions.
(Continuous) Structural Health Monitoring: Provides value to bridge maintenance and
repair decisions using strains in and displacements/tilt of key elements, movement of
expansion bearings, and vibrations of flexible members reflect actual structural behavior
as well as magnitudes and distribution of loads including vehicles, temperature, and
winds.
Balancing, Performance Evaluation, and Problem Diagnosis of Movable Spans:
Balancing of trunnion-type bascules, lift, rolling lift, or swing spans can be evaluated
2
through field instrumentation by continuously recording the torque in the driving shafts
and/or hydraulic pressures in the driving cylinders as well as the motion of the leaves
during opening and closing.
Courtesy: URS Literature by
Y. Edward Zhou, PhD, PE
National Practice Leader - Bridge Instrumentation & Evaluation
Intelligent Infrastructure Systems (IIS) got its start in Philadelphia from two PhD’s from Drexel
University and they are still principals in the company today. At some point IIS became a
subsidiary of Pennoni Associates also based out of Philadelphia through an acquisition. Pennoni
Associates now employs more than 950 people. IIS’s goal is to be their own company in order to
better market their services to a wide range of companies instead of just Pennoni Associates.
Today, IIS uses PhD’s and PE’s to analyze a bridge and work with the bridge engineer to
develop a solution.
IIS offers the following applications:
Structural Testing
o Emergency Assessment Response (Fire, impact, etc.)
o Assessment of Overload Vulnerability
o Advanced Load Rating
o Prognosis of Deterioration & Structural Damage
o Seismic Vulnerability Assessment
o Vibration Diagnosis & Mitigation
o Identification of Critical Members
Structural Health
o Structural Health Monitoring
o Continuous Performance Monitoring
o Fatigue Assessment & Monitoring
o Construction & Retrofit Monitoring
Asset Management
o Asset Management
o Clustering & Stratification to Guide Maintenance
o Development of Custom Inspection Procedures
o Operation Management
o Risk-Based Prioritization for Maintenance & Replacement
o Support for Maintenance & Capital Improvement Programs
3
Case Studies
A few case studies from each firm are presented below.
URS:
4
Maryland (2006-2011) – I-68 over MD Route 55:
o Field instrumentation/monitoring and fatigue evaluation and retrofit of welded
steel girder bridge: Previously repaired connections had reoccurring distortion
induced fatigue cracks between the main girders and floor beams. Scope
included special inspections, finite element analysis, field instrumentation and
wireless monitoring, development of fatigue retrofit concept, and verification
load test using multiple test trucks upon completion of retrofit construction.
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Easton-Phillipsburgh Toll Bridge
o Rehabilitation Concept/Scoping Study: Opened to traffic in 1938. The main river
bridge consists of a 540-foot Petit through-truss span over the river, a 430-foot
five-span plate-girder viaduct at the New Jersey approach, and a 40 foot pre-
stressed concrete box beam span over Pennsylvania Route 611 on the
Pennsylvania approach. In 2010, the Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission
hired Pennoni Associates to evaluate the condition, vulnerabilities and
performance of the bridge through a comprehensive approach that merged
conventional engineering practices with advanced sensing and simulation
technologies. High speed strain gages were used to capture live load response,
vibrating wire gages to capture temperature induced response, and a suite of
accelerometers to capture ambient vibration response. Each of these sensing
applications were developed to inform the most uncertain aspects of the
bridge’s performance and were designed based on the results of a series of
simulations from a detailed 3D finite element model. These sensing and
simulation studies were able to demonstrate that the live load stresses in the
critical tension members were quite small and that the bridge (under current
operating conditions) can be expected to have infinite fatigue life. Additionally, it
was demonstrated that the floor system and wind braces were acting
redundantly with the bottom chord, so significant reserve capacity was available.
Given the desirable performance observed, no major retrofit was required.
However, to ensure that the bottom chord redundancy was maintained, some
repairs to deteriorated connections within the wind-bracing system were
recommended.
Courtesy: Pennoni.com
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Advantages to the Owner
BMS “help owners to assess aging infrastructure using advances in information, sensing and
communication technologies that have developed over the past decade.” “Given the very high
concentration of aging transportation and water infrastructure in the Northeastern US, many
infrastructure owners find themselves with extensive maintenance and preservation needs but
limited funding.” Through integrated simulation, sensor and information technology approach,
BMS can provide detailed and reliable information on the actual integrity of specific bridges.
This can directly aid clients in making sound business decisions on how to best spend their
limited financial resources. In addition, BMS can also assist in providing detailed maintenance
and/or renewal plans that focus resources where the largest benefit is possible. This allows
bridge owners to focus their rehabilitation, renewal and presentation efforts, as well as their
valued funding, on the precise areas of the inventory that need it the most. Applying continuous
bridge monitoring can possibly reduce the amount of inspections as well as the ability to flag
something that is not right. It is a great supplement to visual inspections and can allow the visual
inspections to be focused on a certain issue that was flagged by the system. Given these benefits
how can CHA get involved?
Since CHA currently does bridge work in Colonie, Buffalo, Indianapolis, Rocky Hill, Evansville,
Atlanta, Scranton, South Bend, Nashville and Columbus it would be fairly easy to expand and
get these systems into those locations. The main contingency that controls this whole operation is
whether or not CHA can partner with a software engineering or development firm to design and
build a central database system. Assuming this can be developed; all regional and mobile offices
can communicate with this database and share information regarding the network of national
bridges.
Another service CHA can provide with this system is consulting. This would mean going after
existing clients with new services as well as new services to new clients. (Courtesy to Mark
Tebbano for the business building outline). CHA would provide: program formulation and
planning, design of a system, implementation, and analysis. Professional engineers and project
engineers would oversee the first three items of that list and technicians would handle the
analysis and going out to the bridge and gathering other information/checking sensors for
damage and wear. This lowers the cost per person working on the project in hopes of complying
with the Pareto Principle or 80/20 rule and keeping project costs down.. If this cannot be
achieved in-house, CHA would need to subcontract it out to another firm or acquire a firm that
has this technology already and let them run it
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Cost
It is hard to gather a figure for what all this would cost but a rough estimate would be 0.1%-0.3%
of construction cost for a new bridge (Sétra) and to retrofit would be the total cost of all the
sensors needed plus 20% contingency. This percentage comes from odds and ends needed to
complete the system in which we don’t know the quantities yet. Additionally, the cost of
developing the database, training people and labor costs cannot be determined because the
quantities are not yet known. One thing is for certain; a wireless system is a lot cheaper than a
wired system, which as one can probably deduce, has wires that run the length of the span.
800
Sensors Required per Span
600
Sensors
400
200
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Spans
Fig. 1
From the Fig. 1, one can see that in general a BMS system has a fairly linear relationship
between number of sensors and spans in the bridge. However, this can change according to the
job and what the bridge owner wants to monitor.
Fig. 2
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Research and Development Use
Michael Brown of the Virginia Center for Transportation Innovation and Research said they are
“Using such a system to monitor structural stability and movement during the re-decking of a
pair of large delta-frame steel bridges. We have also used such systems (selectively) in the past
to assist in load rating of structures.” He also went on to say, “We conduct research, evaluations,
provide technical assistance, and provide training within those agencies. We evaluate emerging
technologies and look for ways that they may be applied to VDOT operations.” As far as any
concerns he may have, he said he doesn’t have any particular concerns about bridge monitoring
as a practice, so long as it is applied in a rational and targeted manner to answer specific
questions or concerns. He does not believe that a general practice of putting a suite of sensors on
every bridge would be helpful or practical.
The FHWA (Federal Highway Administration) has a program called NDE (Non-Destructive
Examination). Here they use BMS and modify its usage to capture different aspects of bridge
design and wear. They are testing a system to better detect and evaluate fatigue cracks in steel
highway bridges. They are also trying different ways to integrate nondestructive evaluation more
fully into bridge management systems. Some of these techniques include: Development of Dual-
Band Infrared Thermography Imaging System for Bridge Deck Inspection, Ground-Penetrating
Radar Imaging for Bridge Deck Inspection, Acoustic emission monitor, thermo-graphic imaging
for fatigue cracks. Specifically for fatigue loading they have modified BMS to include forced
vibration responses and electromagnetic acoustic transducers.
Conclusion
The fact is that the existing methods are not good enough to make sure that our nation’s bridges
are safe for the millions of people that use them every day. There needs to be a way to inspect
bridges on a more regular basis so that when the government does start closing the gap on
funding, that money won’t be going to waste. The BMS fills that void and can provide real time
data to owners and operators all over the world. The potential to expand the global market and
presence means more money and more business.
BMS needs more time in R&D before CHA becomes involved. There are a lot of good
technological advances that have been made thus far but there are too many unknown factors that
still need to be determined before any investment is to be made. It seems feasible to do but CHA
needs more data and market research. Up-front development costs cannot be accurately
determined at this time but development and construction of a central database would be one
large cost. CHA would also need to consider expanding offices with bridge groups
and/or acquiring a firm which does this already and has all their own equipment and has a proven
track record. In the latter case, most of the what-ifs would be nullified and the question would be
what it would cost to acquire such a firm.
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Appendix
Central CHA
Database
Regional CHA
Databases
County
State Bridges City Bridges
Bridges
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