Title: Infrasound Measurements of a Railroad Bridge
1Infrasound Measurements of a Railroad Bridge
- Dr. Mihan McKenna
- Ms. Sarah McComas, Ms. Alanna Lester, and Dr.
Paul Mlakar - U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development
Center - Geotechnical and Structures Laboratory
- Mihan.H.McKenna_at_erdc.usace.army.mil
- Infrasound Technology Workshop 2008
- Bermuda November 3-7
2Overview
- Experiment
- Seismic, Infrasound, Acoustic and Meteorological
measurements - Load testing
- Modeling
- Data Analysis
- Future work
3Motivations
- Two prior papers indicated that infrasound was
generated by bridges at sufficient energy to be
detected over background noise at certain times
of the day/year. - Traffic was not thought to be the source driver,
perhaps natural sources such as wind excites the
structure. - Acoustic ducting was required for propagation of
infrasound energy. - Bridge may act as a dipole very close to source.
- Donn, W., N. Balachandran, and G. Kaschak.
Atmospheric Infrasound Radiated by Bridges. J.
Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 56, No. 5, Nov. 1974.
1367-1370. - Kobayashi, Y. (1999) Infrasound Generated by a
Highway Bridge. Butsuri-Tansa Vol. 52, No. 1.
54-60. (in Japanese)
4Research Goals and Motivations
- Purpose
- To determine the feasibility of remote assessment
of bridges using infrasound acoustics in
combination with seismic, meteorological and
audible acoustic methods. - Desired Payoff
- Field personnel can deploy small-aperture
infrasound arrays to listen to a target
structure and reliably analyze the situation
without having to come into direct contact with
the structure.
Potential Results Understand the physics of
structure/atmosphere interactions resulting
infrasound propagation. Foundation to create a
catalog of bridge signatures to formulate
algorithms for rapid remote assessment of
infrastructure from bridges and other man-made
structures.
5Ft. Leonard Wood Deployment
- 3 SIAM arrays
- seismic, infrasound, acoustic and meteorological
sensors.
Array deployed at target bridge
2 standoff arrays
6Airport Site 2007-6-23
Actual sensor layout with scale
7Fort Leonard Wood
Test Area 2007-June
Rolla
Wastewater Range 19.9 km Az 45 degrees
Airport Range 26.867 km Az 39.4 degrees
8The Infrasound Source Driver
- Two 75 ton engines with eight flat cars of known
weight - Series of passes eight, four, two, no cars with
two engines, one engine, stopped and moving - Controlled source with limited access during the
experiment
- Generates the vibrational modes of the bridge
used to discriminate against other background
noise including several other bridges in the
area, both military rail and civilian interstate.
9Meteorological Measurements
- Three met stations deployed with one per array
consisting of temperature, pressure, wind speed,
wind direction, dew point, humidity, soil
moisture at two levels 0.5 m and 2 m to estimate
surface roughness. - Five local environmental monitoring stations on
post, recording temperature, wind speed, wind
direction every 15 minutes at two heights 3 m
and 10 m. - Collaboration with Hanscomb AFB for balloon
radiosonde measurements. Total of five launches
over the day of the test to 30 km by
state-of-the-art technology.
10Meteorological Analysis
- Only one inversion existed at the time of the
train loading, at 0600 local time, before the
test. There are no other ducting possibilities
that day.
11Propagation Modeling
- InfraMAP modeling of the radiosonde data yielded
only one successful run, at 6AM local time. - Data analysis searching for the bridge signature
will focus on the time frame from 4 AM to 8 AM
local time.
12Integration of Source and Propagation Modeling
- Identified the optimal time for observing a
possible signal from the target bridge between 4
AM and 8 AM local time. - What would the train signature look like?
- Frequencies?
- Continuous wave vs. discrete?
- How does the source driver affect the signal?
13Load Testing
- Bridge Description
- Type
- Pratt Truss (est. 1941)
- Material
- Steel (built-up)
- Span
- 7 Panels _at_ 23 ft.- 4 in.
- Height
- 30 ft.
- Width
- 15 ft.- 9 in.
- Skew
- 65
13
14Experimental Methodology
- Experimental load rating tests
- Strain Gage (44 Used)
- Main Structural Elements
- One Train Engine
14
15Experimental Methodology
- Example Strain Gages Results
-
Strain (me)
Measurements
16Experimental Methodology
- Example Strain Gages Results
-
Strain (me)
Measurements
17COMPUTER MODEL
- Mechanic of Materials
- Stress
- seE
- Axial Force
- F sA
- Obtain Analytical Internal Force
- Analytical Model (Frame)
- Main Steel Structural Elements
- Built-up Sections
18Summary of the Load Test and Analytical Model
19Source Modeling
- COMSOL Multiphysics Structural Mechanics Module
- Key components
- Simplified source to limit computational cost in
large model - Accurate represents sound emitted from bridge
- Technical difficulties
- Bridge models to determine natural frequencies
typically constructed using beam/truss elements - Beam/truss elements appear as point sources in
acoustic analyses - Geometry of beam important for acoustic response
- Natural frequencies of bridge do not provide
obvious simplification of bridge structure no
single area dominates acoustics (e.g., bridge
deck)
20Ft. Leonard Wood Bridge
z1
z2
x
z
- Pratt Truss Bridge
- Struts included by specifying equal
z-displacements at top of vertical member pairs
21Natural Frequencies - Overview
- Bridge shows 230 modes between 2 and 20 Hz
- Three General Categories of Modes
- Category 1 Relatively large deformation of many
components (10) - Category 2 Relatively large deformation of few
components (33) - Category 3 Relatively small deformation of
components (57) - First two categories should dominate acoustical
energy
22Natural Frequency Categories
Relatively large deformation of a few components
10.0 Hz
13.6 Hz
Relatively small deformation
All results plotted w/ same deformation scaling
factor
11.9 Hz
23Natural Frequencies Observation 2 hz
- Modes show deformation in z direction, stringer
stays in plane - No modes show significant deformation in y
direction - Bridge design requires large stiffness to resist
deformation in y direction (designed to prevent
cantilever bending)
24Methodology
- Rank bridge components based on source strength
- Cross sectional area (CSA) perpendicular to
direction of motion - Relative acceleration identified from natural
frequency analysis - Develop acoustic model of critical components of
bridge using shell elements of CSA - Develop detailed model using simple shape of beam
CSA - Apply deformation mode from natural frequency
analysis to each component - Use solution on outer boundary of acoustic model
to drive infrasound solution over large domain
25Effect of CSA on Acoustics
Deck Model
Beam Model
Geometry Effect
Models excited using same accelerations 150 m
from source, normal above (y)
26CSA Source Modelcenter to center spacing, real
measurements
- Representation of stringers (plan view)
- Apply source acceleration in y direction (n 1?5)
27Comparison with Continuous Model
- Do small gaps between stringers affect results
even at 1 Hz (l343 m, gap0.76 m)? - Small gaps (relative to l) affect acoustic
response YES
28Radiation Pattern4 Beam Model
4
3
29Summary
- Ft. Leonard Wood bridge shows complex frequency
response - Cross sectional area of beams has strong effect
on acoustics - Small gaps relative to wavelength have effect on
acoustics - Simple representation of bridge deck shows strong
directionality
30SIAM Data, raw infrasound
IML Airport
IML Airport
IML Airport
IML Bridge
IML Bridge
IML Bridge
IML Bridge
Interference infrasound generated by the train
31What frequencies does the train generate?
Bridge Array
Bridge Array 3019 NE of Bridge, further from
train
Bridge Array 3020 SW of Bridge, closest to
train at this time
50hz
40hz
From 183400 to 183430 UTC 133400 to
133430 Local
32What frequencies does the train generate?
Spectrogram of WTF and Airport Arrays for
183400 to 183430 UTC, 133400 to 133430
Local
3015 WTF Array
80hz
40hz
10hz
WTF has frequencies up to and including
40hz Airport has low frequency (up to 6hz) and
then high frequency (80hz)
33Bridge signal from WTF array
- Includes frequencies of interest (2, 10 and
13hz) - extremely low amplitude - Time series does not appear to have high
activity - Additional higher frequencies (42 and 56hz)
present and other additional transients (gt50hz) - Higher frequencies (40 50hz) are persistent
through the two hour time period
Difficult to find arrivals in signal 2hz signal
in time series FK analysis results correspond
with bridge azimuth
34Airport array frequencies
1005 UTC (0505 AM Local)
Greater dynamic of frequencies present at
airport Quiet times are clearer than WTF array
(30hz signal visible) Loud times have greater
frequency range
1052 UTC
Bridge signature is clearer at the airport array
despite the changing dynamics at the airport
35Bridge signature from Airport Array
- Station 3010 is not usable due to faunal
mastication (rabbit) during data acquisition - Frequencies of interest present with higher
amplitudes than at WTF array - Time series shows that the airport array is more
active than WTF array
FK analysis indicates correct azimuth and
apparent velocity
36Future Modeling and Data Synthesis
- The finite element model of the bridge created
during the load testing will be uploaded to a
multi-physics finite element package. - The bridge will be coupled into the atmosphere
and vibrated at the frequencies observed during
the test. - A representative source package will be
developed for use in infrasound propagation
modeling software.
37Questions?