Bridge maintenance
Maintenance of bridge infrastructure presents many challenges. Transportation engineering and maintenance personnel must maintain around the clock service to millions of people each year while maintaining millions of cubic meters of concrete distributed throughout their facilities. This infrastructure includes bridges. Presently only a limited number of accurate and economical techniques exist to test these structures for integrity and safety as well as insure that they meet original design specifications.
No single technology can locate all physical anomalies in and below the concrete, these techniques along with data fusion can assist in the following investigations, to name a few:
- Locating voids and delaminations in bridge pavements and scour around bridge support columns.
- Determining location and types of reinforcing steel in concrete
- Ensuring quality control on new concrete installations
Techniques
Infrared thermography and ground-penetrating radar
and ground-penetrating radar have been developed to locate voids and delaminations in concrete structures such as bridge decks, highways and airport pavements. Being able to locate voids and delaminations means the structural maintenance engineer can measure the actual cracking and weakening of concrete pavements before catastrophic failures can occur.Concrete objects, such as bridges, emit energy based upon the absolute temperature of its surfaces and the surface temperatures are dependent upon the internal conditions of the concrete. These internal conditions can include physical conditions like:
- Density changes in concrete
- Voids caused by erosion beneath the concrete slabs
- Horizontal delaminations caused by rust expansion of rusting internal reinforcing steel.
Ground-penetrating radar gives information valuable in determining such characteristics as: target material, voids, fluids, soil or backfill strata, and quantity of reinforcing steel present.