A Comparison of Greedy and Global Searches for Measurement-System Design in Bridge Load Testing

Open access
Date
2019Type
- Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Due to conservative design models and safe construction practices, infrastructure often has significant yet-unknown reserve capacity that greatly exceeds code requirements. Reserve-capacity assessments lead to better asset-management decisions through either avoiding unnecessary replacement or lowering maintenance expenses. Field measurements have the potential to improve the accuracy of model predictions. To fulfil this potential, measurements, must be associated with an adequate structural-identification methodology. Error-domain model falsification is an intuitive model-based methodology that explicitly represents systematic uncertainties that are typically associated with structural models. Additionally, model-updating outcomes depend on the design of the measurement system. Engineers usually select sensor types and place sensors based on experience and signal-to-noise estimations. The development of more rational strategies for measurement-system design has recently received research attention. Quantitative sensor-placement strategies differ either in the objective function for sensor placement or in the optimization algorithm used. This study presents a comparison of greedy-search (hierarchical) and global-search (such as genetic algorithm or Probabilistic global-search Lausanne) methodologies in terms of joint-entropy evaluations, recommended sensor configurations and qualitative characteristics using a full-scale test study, the Rockingham Bridge (Australia). Results show, for low number of sensors, that global-search algorithms only slightly over-perform the greedy-search algorithm in terms of information gain. However, this is at the expense of a longer computational time compared with greedy search. Nevertheless, global-search strategies provide other advantages such as finding multiple near-optimal sensor configurations. These advantages are illustrated sung the full-scale bridge case. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000384919Publication status
publishedBook title
Online Program: 5th International Conference on Smart Monitoring, Assessment and Rehabilitation of Civil Structures (SMAR 2019)Publisher
German Society for Non-Destructive TestingEvent
Organisational unit
08058 - Singapore-ETH Centre (SEC) / Singapore-ETH Centre (SEC)08060 - FCL / FCL
Related publications and datasets
Is part of: https://www.smar2019.org/Programme#s/Th.3.C
Notes
Conference lecture August 29, 2019.More
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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