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            Transportation infrastructure experiences distress due to aging, overuse, and climate changes. To reduce maintenance costs and labor, researchers have developed various structural health monitoring systems. However, the existing systems are designed for short-term monitoring and do not quantify structural parameters. A long-term monitoring system that quantifies structural parameters is needed to improve the quality of monitoring. In this work, a novel Transportation Rf-bAsed Monitoring (TRAM) system is proposed. TRAM is a multi-parameter monitoring system that relies on embeddable backscatter-based, batteryless, and radio-frequency sensors. The system can monitor structural parameters with 3D spatial and temporal information. Laboratory experiments were conducted on a 1D scale to evaluate and examine the sensitivity and reliability of the monitored structural parameters, which are displacement and water content. In contrast to other existing methods, TRAM correlates phase change to the change in concerned parameters, enabling long-term monitoring.more » « less
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            Concrete exhibits time-dependent long-term behavior driven by creep and shrinkage. These rheological effects are difficult to predict due to their stochastic nature and dependence on loading history. Existing empirical models used to predict rheological effects are fitted to databases composed largely of laboratory tests of limited time span and that do not capture differential rheological effects. A numerical model is typically required for application of empirical constitutive models to real structures. Notwithstanding this, the optimal parameters for the laboratory databases are not necessarily ideal for a specific structure. Data-driven approaches using structural health monitoring data have shown promise towards accurate prediction of long-term time-dependent behavior in concrete structures, but current approaches require different model parameters for each sensor and do not leverage geometry and loading. In this work, a physics-informed data-driven approach for long-term prediction of 2D normal strain field in prestressed concrete structures is introduced. The method employs a simplified analytical model of the structure, a data-driven model for prediction of the temperature field, and embedding of neural networks into rheological time-functions. In contrast to previous approaches, the model is trained on multiple sensors at once and enables the estimation of the strain evolution at any point of interest in the longitudinal section of the structure, capturing differential rheological effects.more » « less
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            Abstract Structural health monitoring (SHM) is the automation of the condition assessment process of an engineered system. When applied to geometrically large components or structures, such as those found in civil and aerospace infrastructure and systems, a critical challenge is in designing the sensing solution that could yield actionable information. This is a difficult task to conduct cost-effectively, because of the large surfaces under consideration and the localized nature of typical defects and damages. There have been significant research efforts in empowering conventional measurement technologies for applications to SHM in order to improve performance of the condition assessment process. Yet, the field implementation of these SHM solutions is still in its infancy, attributable to various economic and technical challenges. The objective of this Roadmap publication is to discuss modern measurement technologies that were developed for SHM purposes, along with their associated challenges and opportunities, and to provide a path to research and development efforts that could yield impactful field applications. The Roadmap is organized into four sections: distributed embedded sensing systems, distributed surface sensing systems, multifunctional materials, and remote sensing. Recognizing that many measurement technologies may overlap between sections, we define distributed sensing solutions as those that involve or imply the utilization of numbers of sensors geometrically organized within (embedded) or over (surface) the monitored component or system. Multi-functional materials are sensing solutions that combine multiple capabilities, for example those also serving structural functions. Remote sensing are solutions that are contactless, for example cell phones, drones, and satellites. It also includes the notion of remotely controlled robots.more » « less
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            We propose a sensing system comprising a large network of tiny, battery-less, Radio Frequency (RF)-powered sensors that use backscatter communication. The sensors use an entirely passive technique to 'sense' the parameters of the wireless channel between themselves. Since the material properties influence RF channels, this fine-grain sensing can uncover multiple material properties both at a large scale and fine spatial resolution. In this paper, we study the feasibility of the proposed passive technique for monitoring parameters of material in which the sensors are embedded. We performed a set of experiments where the sensor-to-sensor wireless channel parameters are well-defined using physics-based modeling, and we compared the theoretical and experimentally obtained values. For some material parameters of interest, like humidity or strain, the relationship with the observed wireless channel parameters have to be modeled relying on data-driven approaches. The initial experiments show an observable difference in the sensor-to-sensor channel phase with variation in the applied weights.more » « less
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