Structural Health Monitoring
According to the Los Alamos National Laboratory, structural health monitoring (SHM) can be defined as "the process of implementing a damage detection strategy for aerospace, civil and mechanical engineering infrastructure. The SHM process involves the observation of a system over time using periodically sampled dynamic response measurements from an array of sensors."¹ The sites below contain useful resources and online articles about structural health monitoring.
Websites
- Bridge Engineering Center: Structural Health Monitoring
- Bridge Engineering Center
- Center for Intelligent Material Systems and Structures: Virginia Polytechnic Institute
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute
- International Society for Structural Health Monitoring of Intelligent Infrastructure
- International Society for Structural Health Monitoring
- Los Alamos National Laboratory: Structural Health Monitoring
- Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Ohio State University: The Intelligent Structures and Systems Laboratory
- Ohio State University
- Stanford University: Sensing, Monitoring, Control and Intelligent Structures
- Stanford University
- Structural Health Monitoring: An International Journal
- Structural Health Monitoring
Articles
- A Wireless Sensor Network for Structural Health Monitoring: Performance and Experience
- Embedded Networks Laboratory
- Bayesian Analysis of the Phase II IASC-ASCE Structural Health Monitoring Experimental Benchmark Data
- Caltech University
- Fundamentals for Remote Structural Health Monitoring of Wind Turbine Blades – a Preproject
- Risų National Laboratory
- Recent Advances of Structural Health Monitoring in Mainland China
- MCEER – University at Buffalo
- Structural performance identification of the existing SRC building with seismic observation results
- Public Works Research Institute
- Validation of a large-scale wireless structural monitoring system on the Geumdang Bridge
- Stanford University – Engineering Informatics Group