Materials Map

Discover the materials research landscape. Find experts, partners, networks.

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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The Materials Map is still under development. In its current state, it is only based on one single data source and, thus, incomplete and contains duplicates. We are working on incorporating new open data sources like ORCID to improve the quality and the timeliness of our data. We will update Materials Map as soon as possible and kindly ask for your patience.

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in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

Topics

Publications (1/1 displayed)

  • 2021A dynamic harmonic regression approach for bridge structural health monitoring22citations

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Ghosh, Bidisha
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Pakrashi, Vikram
1 / 13 shared
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2021

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  • Ghosh, Bidisha
  • Pakrashi, Vikram
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article

A dynamic harmonic regression approach for bridge structural health monitoring

  • Ghosh, Bidisha
  • Buckley, Tadhg
  • Pakrashi, Vikram
Abstract

<jats:p> Structural damage in a bridge is defined as a significant deviation in the structural response from its standard operating conditions, not explainable by variations in external environmental and operational effects. However, environmental effects such as temperature fluctuations can cause significant seasonal variations in the structural response of a bridge and can mask its changes due to structural damage. This poses a challenge for structural health monitoring of bridges where reliable diagnosis of damage or deterioration is often related to isolation of the responses. To address it, a statistical damage-detection methodology is introduced where strain data are modelled using a dynamic harmonic regression time-series model. Prediction intervals of multi-step ahead forecasts from the dynamic harmonic regression model are then used as statistical control limits within which the observed phenomenon should fall under standard operating conditions. This single recursive structural health monitoring framework for automatic fitting and multi-step ahead forecasting of 1-min interval time-series strain data includes recorded temperature values and diurnal trends as regressors in the model to account for environmental variations. The potential of this method as a robust automatic structural health monitoring strategy is demonstrated on strain data sampled at 1-min interval from a full-scale damaged pre-stressed concrete bridge – before, during and after repair. The proposed method can capture both sudden and daily changes in structural response due to temperature effects, and a rolling multi-step ahead interval forecast was able to identify damage on back-cast data transitioning from a healthy state to a damaged state. </jats:p>

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy