Distributed Brillouin sensor for structural health monitoring
Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 34(3): 291-297
Article 2007 English
Authors
FR
Fabien Ravet
LZ
Lufan Zou
XB
Xiaoyi Bao
Abstract
1 min read
The distributed Brillouin sensor (DBS) was used to monitor the structural changes in a steel pipe and a composite column subjected to heavy loads. The column was made of concrete reinforced with fibre-reinforced-polymer (FRP) rods and sheets. The test reproduced earthquake-like conditions. The pipe had a length of 2.58 m and diameter of 0.75 m. The DBS measured the strain distribution in both the concrete column and the pipe under various loads. The DBS provided detailed information on the structure's health at the local and global level, before any deformation, cracks, or buckling was visible. This work demonstrates that the DBS is capable of extracting critical information useful to engineers: the engineer's experience and judgement, in conjunction with appropriate data-processing methods, make it possible to anticipate structural failures. The DBS is a promising tool for structural health monitoring.Key words: structural health monitoring, distributed Brillouin sensor, concrete structure, pipeline buckling, strain measurement.
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