Assessment of bridge natural frequency as an indicator of scour using centrifuge modelling
KKGKD Kariyawasam, CR Middleton, G Madabhushi, KH Haigh, JP Talbot

TL;DR
This study uses centrifuge modeling to evaluate how bridge natural frequencies change with scour, demonstrating that frequency shifts can serve as indicators for scour detection, especially in deep foundation bridges.
Contribution
First centrifuge-based investigation into the sensitivity of bridge natural frequency to scour, providing quantitative data across different foundation types.
Findings
Up to 40% frequency variation for 30% embedment loss
Deep foundations show higher frequency sensitivity than shallow ones
Natural frequency can indicate both local and global scour levels
Abstract
One of the most prevalent causes of bridge failure around the world is scour, the gradual erosion of soil around a bridge foundation due to fast-flowing water. A reliable technique for monitoring scour would help bridge engineers take timely countermeasures to safeguard against failure. Although vibration-based techniques for monitoring structural damage have had limited success, primarily due to insufficient sensitivity, these have tended to focus on the detection of local damage. High natural frequency sensitivity has recently been reported for scour damage. Previous experiments to investigate this have been limited as a result of the cost of full-scale testing and the fact that scaled-down soil structure models tested outside a centrifuge do not adequately simulate full-scale behaviour. This paper describes the development of what is believed to be the first-ever centrifuge-testing…
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