Structural Health Monitoring-Based Bridge Lifecycle Extension: Survival Analysis and Monte Carlo-Based Quantification of Value of Information

Author:

Valkonen Antti1ORCID,Glisic Branko1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA

Abstract

A key goal of structural health monitoring (SHM) systems applied to infrastructure is to improve asset management. SHM systems yield benefits by providing information that allows improved asset management decisions. Often, improvement is measured in monetary terms, whereby lower expenses are sought. The value of information (VoI) is often evaluated through the quantification of the incremental benefit, resulting from the information provided by the SHM system. The VoI can be considered as having two components: value derived from the improved operation of the infrastructure and value derived from increased useful life. This work focuses on the latter source of value in the context of concrete decks in US highway bridges. To estimate the lifecycle extension potential and the connected VoI, we need to simulate bridge deck condition degradation over time to support a discounted cash flow analysis of bridge replacement cost. We accomplish this by utilizing a neural network-based survival analysis combined with Monte Carlo simulation. We present a case study using the developed methods. We have chosen to study the southbound portion of the bridge on the US Highway 202, located in Wayne, NJ. The selected bridge is a representative concrete highway overpass, the type of which there are large numbers in the US. The case study demonstrates the applicability of the methods developed for the general evaluation of the VoI obtained via SHM. The results are encouraging for the widespread use of SHM for lifecycle extension purposes; the potential value in such applications is large.

Funder

Björn Savén Finnish American Scholarship

USDOT’s Office of Research, Development and Technology Programs and Activities

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,General Materials Science,Building and Construction,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference39 articles.

1. Bridges (2020, September 06). ASCE’s 2017 Infrastructure Report Card. Available online: https://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/cat-item/bridges/.

2. Strong Infrastructure and a Healthy Economy Require Federal Investment (2020, March 30). House Budget Committee Democrats, Available online: https://budget.house.gov/publications/report/strong-infrastructure-and-healthy-economy-require-federal-investment.

3. (2020, March 30). World Economic Forum, Strategic Infrastructure 2014, Available online: http://wef.ch/1rM4jzw.

4. Editorial: Structural Health Monitoring of Bridges;Hoult;Front. Built Environ.,2020

5. Structural health monitoring: Closing the gap between research and industrial deployment;Cawley;Struct. Health Monit.,2018

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