In Situ Warning System to Provide Building Structural Health for Emergency Responders

Author(s):  
Daniel M Bock ◽  
Keehoon Kim
2021 ◽  
Vol 239 ◽  
pp. 112274
Author(s):  
Henry Helmer-Smith ◽  
Nicholas Vlachopoulos ◽  
Marc-André Dagenais ◽  
Bradley Forbes

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wentao Wang ◽  
Jerome P. Lynch ◽  
Curt Wolf ◽  
John Norton ◽  
Todd W. King ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Tuncay Kamas ◽  
Banibrata Poddar ◽  
Bin Lin ◽  
Lingyu Yu ◽  
Victor Giurgiutiu

The thermal effects at elevated temperatures mostly exist for pressure vessel and pipe (PVP) applications. The technologies for diagnosis and prognosis of PVP systems need to take the thermal effect into account and compensate it on sensing and monitoring of PVP structures. One of the extensively employed sensor technologies has been permanently installed piezoelectric wafer active sensor (PWAS) for in-situ continuous structural health monitoring (SHM). Using the transduction of ultrasonic elastic waves into voltage and vice versa, PWAS has been emerged as one of the major SHM sensing technologies. However, the dynamic characteristics of PWAS need to be explored prior its installation for in-situ SHM. Electro-mechanical impedance spectroscopy (EMIS) method has been utilized as a dynamic descriptor of PWAS and as a high frequency local modal sensing technique by applying standing waves to indicate the response of the PWAS resonator by determining the resonance and anti-resonance frequencies. Another SHM technology utilizing PWAS is guided wave propagation (GWP) as a far-field transient sensing technique by transducing the traveling guided ultrasonic waves (GUW) into substrate structure. The paper first presents EMIS method that qualifies and quantifies circular PWAS resonators under traction-free boundary condition and in an ambience with increasing temperature. The piezoelectric material degradation was investigated by introducing the temperature effects on the material parameters that are obtained from experimental observations as well as from related work in literature. GWP technique is also presented by inclusion of the thermal effects on the substrate material. The MATLAB GUI under the name of Wave Form Revealer (WFR) was adapted for prediction of the thermal effects on coupled guided waves and dynamic structural change in the substrate material at elevated temperature. The WFR software allows for the analysis of multimodal guided waves in the structure with affected material parameters in an ambience with elevated temperature.


2018 ◽  
Vol 178 ◽  
pp. 40-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Eleftheroglou ◽  
Dimitrios Zarouchas ◽  
Theodoros Loutas ◽  
Rene Alderliesten ◽  
Rinze Benedictus

2008 ◽  
Vol 105 (46) ◽  
pp. 17676-17681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Constantin de Magny ◽  
Raghu Murtugudde ◽  
Mathew R. P. Sapiano ◽  
Azhar Nizam ◽  
Christopher W. Brown ◽  
...  

The causative agent of cholera, Vibrio cholerae, has been shown to be autochthonous to riverine, estuarine, and coastal waters along with its host, the copepod, a significant member of the zooplankton community. Temperature, salinity, rainfall and plankton have proven to be important factors in the ecology of V. cholerae, influencing the transmission of the disease in those regions of the world where the human population relies on untreated water as a source of drinking water. In this study, the pattern of cholera outbreaks during 1998–2006 in Kolkata, India, and Matlab, Bangladesh, and the earth observation data were analyzed with the objective of developing a prediction model for cholera. Satellite sensors were used to measure chlorophyll a concentration (CHL) and sea surface temperature (SST). In addition, rainfall data were obtained from both satellite and in situ gauge measurements. From the analyses, a statistically significant relationship between the time series for cholera in Kolkata, India, and CHL and rainfall anomalies was determined. A statistically significant one month lag was observed between CHL anomaly and number of cholera cases in Matlab, Bangladesh. From the results of the study, it is concluded that ocean and climate patterns are useful predictors of cholera epidemics, with the dynamics of endemic cholera being related to climate and/or changes in the aquatic ecosystem. When the ecology of V. cholerae is considered in predictive models, a robust early warning system for cholera in endemic regions of the world can be developed for public health planning and decision making.


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