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¶ Introduction:
Most evaluation of bridges, dams, schools and other
structures is still done by visual inspection, which is slow, expensive,
cumbersome and in some cases, dangerous.
Civil engineers at MIT, working with physicists at the
University of Potsdam in Germany, recently proposed a new method for continual
electronic monitoring of structures.
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In papers appearing in Structural
Control Health Monitoring (December 2010) and the Journal of
Materials Chemistry (April 2011), the researchers describe a flexible
fabric with electrical properties that could adhere to areas prone to cracking
— such as the undersides of bridges — and detect cracks almost immediately when
they occur.
Installing this “sensing skin” would be as simple as
unrolling it and gluing it to the surface of a structure. The rectangular
patches on the skin that detect changes in its electrical charge could be
tailored in a geometric design appropriate for the type of crack likeliest to
form in a particular part of a structure: for example, diagonal square patches
to detect cracks caused by shear, or horizontal patches to detect the cracks
caused by a sagging horizontal beam.
The formation of a crack would cause a tiny movement in
the concrete under the patch, changing the capacitance, or stored energy, of
the sensing skin. Once a day, a computer system attached to the sensing skin
would send a current to measure the capacitance of each patch and detect any
difference among neighboring patches. In this way, it could detect a flaw and
its exact location within 24 hours — a task that has proved difficult for other
types of sensors proposed or already in use, which tend to rely on detecting
global changes in the entire structure using a few strategically placed
sensors.
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In the MIT laboratory, researchers tested the 'sensing
skin' by attaching it to the underside of a concrete beam, then applying enough
force to cause tiny cracks to form in the beam under the skin. Photo / Simon
Laflamme
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“The sensing skin has the remarkable advantage of being
able to both sense a change in the general performance of the structure and
also know the damage location at a pre-defined level of precision,” said Simon
Laflamme Ph.D. ’11, who did this research as a graduate student in MIT
CEE. “Such automation in the health-monitoring process could result in great
cost savings and more sustainable infrastructures.” Laflamme worked with CEE
Professor Jerome Connor and University of Potsdam researchers Guggi
Kofod and Matthias Kollosche.
The researchers originally tested their idea using a
commercially available, inexpensive stretchy silicon fabric with silver
electrodes. While this worked in some lab experiments performed on both small
and large concrete beams under stress, the material ultimately proved too thin
and flexible for this application. The researchers have now developed a
prototype sensing skin made of soft stretchy thermoplastic elastomer mixed with
titanium dioxide that is highly sensitive to cracks; painted patches of black
carbon measure changes in the electrical charge of the skin. A patent for the
sensing method has been filed.
“The innovation of this proposed sensor design is in its
use of a material that provides mechanical flexibility and serves as a
capacitor,” said Professor Tzu-yang Yu of the University of Massachusetts at
Lowell, a structural engineer who specializes in the mechanical analysis of
structures and the design of nondestructive methods for testing infrastructure.
“This design allows the sensor to overcome the difficulties associated with
conventional piezoelectric sensors which have strict contact conditions between
the sensor and the structure’s surface. The proposed sensor is also superior to
conventional fiber-optic sensors in the way that two-dimensional readings can
be collected from one sensor.
“Like all innovations in the development stage, there are
additional issues this sensor needs to address, such as instrumentation,
packaging and environmental vulnerability. Naturally, the next step would be to
perform a small field test in order to investigate the field performance of the
sensor,” Yu said.
MIT CEE Professor Connor said. “The safety of civil
infrastructures would be greatly improved by having more detailed real-time
information on structural health.”