Rail crack identification of in-service turnout through Bayesian inference

Author:

Wang Jun-Fang1ORCID,Lin Jian-Fu2,Xie Yan-Long1

Affiliation:

1. National Key Laboratory of Green and Long-life Road Engineering in Extreme Environment, College of Civil and Transportation Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China

2. Center of Safety Monitoring of Engineering Structures, Shenzhen Academy of Disaster Prevention and Reduction, China Earthquake Administration, Shenzhen, China

Abstract

In-service railway turnout, suffering from multi-factor coupling of operational and environmental loadings and special wheel–rail interaction, is prone to structural damage. The paper aims to develop a Bayesian damage identification method for crack-alike damage of the turnout rail under uncertainties. It consists of three core parts, including a damage index (DI) constructed by the transformation of time–frequency components of responses for generating damage-sensitive relationships, Bayesian models describing the crack-sensitive relationships hidden in the members of the damage index, and a mechanism synthesizing individual assessment results associated with the different reference models for providing one quantitative solution. The abnormal change in the stable relationships derived from the index can reflect damage occurrence and severity. The Bayesian approach is adopted to model the relationships under uncertainties of in-service railway turnout. The models trained by using monitoring data of the turnout rail before being damaged serve as a reference for healthy state, and deviations of actual observations from model predictions may indicate the existence of damage. The synthesizing process helps to offer a more rational assessment result through the weighted summation of individual quantitative assessment results. Rail monitoring data of a railway turnout are acquired to examine the damage detection performance of the proposed method. By exempting loadings measurement and physical model derivation, this data-driven methodology is potentially capable of supporting the damage identification and quantitative assessment of other structures in railway engineering.

Funder

China Earthquake Administration’s Science for Earthquake Resilience Project

Shenzhen Science and Technology Program

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenzhen Sustainable Development Science and Technology Project

Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Structure Safety and Health Monitoring of Marine Infrastructures

Guangdong Major Talent Programe

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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