Evaluation of the Use of IRI Data to Estimate Bridge Impact Factor

Project Details
STATUS

Completed

PROJECT NUMBER

21-757

START DATE

03/01/21

END DATE

11/29/22

FOCUS AREAS

Infrastructure

RESEARCH CENTERS InTrans, BEC
SPONSORS

Iowa Department of Transportation

Researchers
Principal Investigator
Brent Phares

Bridge Research Engineer, BEC

About the research

The objectives of this project were to correlate international roughness index (IRI) data (which are widely collected and directly related to bridge deck roughness) to impact factors and develop a process for determining the impact factor to use for all bridges in Iowa.To achieve the project objectives, a sample of 20 bridges was selected for bridge monitoring to collect dynamic strain data.

To estimate the static strain data, the locally weighted scatterplot smoothing (LOWESS) function was used to smooth the dynamic strain time history. The dynamic impact factor (DIF) value was then calculated using maximum dynamic and static strain data. IRI data were extracted from PathWeb, a web-based application provided by the Iowa Department of Transportation (DOT) for all bridges considered in the field test program. Once the bridge was identified in PathWeb, the IRI data from four locations near each bridge deck approach were extracted and used to study the relationship between the IRI and DIF. Based on the results from this research, these were the key findings:

  • The DIF value decreases as the bridge skew angle increases. Based on linear regression, the DIF value decreases about 0.037 to 0.043 per 10-degree increment of bridge skew.
  • The DIF value decreases as the bridge deck condition index increases, meaning that the dynamic response is lower when the bridge deck condition is better.
  • For bridges with zero skew, the DIF value increased by 0.006 per 100 in/mile increment of the IRI value.

Based on the research findings, an equation was developed for the prediction of DIF on existing bridges with consideration of the bridge skew and the maximum IRI value near the bridge deck approach. Although the proposed equation was validated using data from 13 bridges, the researchers recommend using the equation with the limitation that the actual bridge dynamic response could deviate ±10% from the equation-predicted value.

A follow-up study was carried out to further validate the proposed equation using data from nine additional bridges. The same approach used in the previous study was employed to process the field-collected data for these bridges, and the resulting DIF data associated with the bridge IRI data were used to verify the prediction equation. For the nine bridges included in the follow-up study, the proposed equation showed a deviation of ±5% from the actual bridge dynamic response. This relationship is considered to be quite good and accurate and thus validates the proposed equation for determining DIF when IRI data are available.

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