Development of a bridge weigh-in-motion method considering the presence of multiple vehicles

2019 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 724-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shi-Zhi Chen ◽  
Gang Wu ◽  
De-Cheng Feng
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 11-22
Author(s):  
Sergio Lobo Aguilar ◽  
Richard E. Christenson

Bridge Weigh-In-Motion (BWIM) has been demonstrated to be reliable for obtaining critical information about the characteristics of trucks that travel over the highways. Continued improvements provides greater opportunity for increased use of BWIM. Traditional BWIM systems based on measuring the bending strain of the bridge have various challenges which has led to a class of BWIM methodologies that employ the use of shear strain in determining the gross vehicle weight (GVW) of crossing trucks. However, the known techniques of these shear-strain BWIM methods assume or measure the shear influence line for the calculation of the GVW. In this paper, an alternative shear-strain based BWIM technique is proposed. The method presented here is independent of the influence line, does not require a measurement of the speed of the truck, and is based on the difference in magnitude observed at the discontinuity of the shear strain record as a truck crosses over the sensor location on the bridge. A series of field tests is presented that demonstrate this shear-strain based BWIM method has error levels consistent with other more complex BWIM methods and as such has great potential to be used for determining the GVWs of trucks that travel on simple or multispan bridges in a consistent and reliable manner.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xudong Jian

Complicated traffic scenarios, including random change of vehicles’ speed and lane, as well as the simultaneous presence of multiple vehicles on bridge, are main obstacles that prevents bridge weigh-in-motion (BWIM) technique from reliable and accurate application. To tackle the complicated traffic problems of BWIM, this paper develops a novel BWIM method which integrates deep-learning-based computer vision technique and bridge influence surface theory. In this study, bridge strains and traffic videos are recorded synchronously as the data source of BWIM. The computer vision technique is employed to detect and track vehicles and corresponding axles from traffic videos so that spatio-temporal paths of vehicle loads on the bridge can be obtained. Then a novel method is proposed to identify the strain influence surface (SIS) of the bridge structure based on the time-synchronized strain signals and vehicle paths. After the SIS is identified, the axle weight (AW) and gross vehicle weight (GVW) can be identified by integrating the SIS, time-synchronized bridge strain, and vehicle paths. For illustration and verification, the proposed method is applied to identify AW and GVW in scale model experiments, in which the vehicle-bridge system is designed with high fidelity, and various complicated traffic scenarios are simulated. Results confirm that the proposed method contributes to improve the existing BWIM technique with respect to complicated traffic scenarios.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 745
Author(s):  
Sylwia Stawska ◽  
Jacek Chmielewski ◽  
Magdalena Bacharz ◽  
Kamil Bacharz ◽  
Andrzej Nowak

Roads and bridges are designed to meet the transportation demands for traffic volume and loading. Knowledge of the actual traffic is needed for a rational management of highway infrastructure. There are various procedures and equipment for measuring truck weight, including static and in weigh-in-motion techniques. This paper aims to compare four systems: portable scale, stationary truck weigh station, pavement weigh-in-motion system (WIM), and bridge weigh-in-motion system (B-WIM). The first two are reliable, but they have limitations as they can measure only a small fraction of the highway traffic. Weigh-in-motion (WIM) measurements allow for a continuous recording of vehicles. The presented study database was obtained at a location that allowed for recording the same traffic using all four measurement systems. For individual vehicles captured on a portable scale, the results were directly compared with the three other systems’ measurements. The conclusion is that all four systems produce the results that are within the required and expected accuracy. The recommendation for an application depends on other constraints such as continuous measurement, installation and operation costs, and traffic obstruction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 102440
Author(s):  
Sravanthi Alamandala ◽  
R.L.N. Sai Prasad ◽  
Rathish Kumar Pancharathi ◽  
V.D.R. Pavan ◽  
P. Kishore

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 610-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Longwei Zhang ◽  
Hua Zhao ◽  
Eugene J OBrien ◽  
Xudong Shao

This article outlines a Virtual Monitoring approach for fatigue life assessment of orthotropic steel deck bridges. Bridge weigh-in-motion was used to calculate traffic loads which were then used to calculate “virtual” strains. Some of these strains were checked through long-term monitoring of dynamic strain data. Field tests, incorporating calibration with pre-weighed trucks and monitoring the response to regular traffic, were conducted at Fochen Bridge, which has an orthotropic steel deck and is located in Foshan City, China. In the calibration tests, a 45-t 3-axle truck ran repeatedly across Lane 2, the middle lane in a 3-lane carriageway. The results show that using an influence surface to weigh vehicles can improve the accuracy of the weights and, by inference, of remaining service life calculations. The most fatigue-prone position was found to be at the cutout in the diaphragms. Results show that many vehicles are overweight—the maximum gross vehicle weight recorded was 148 t, nearly 3.6 times heavier than the fatigue design truck.


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