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MEASUREMENT OF DAM DEFORMATIONS BY TERRESTRIAL
INTERFEROMETRIC TECHNIQUES
Mario Alba 3 , Giulia Bemardini b , Alberto Giussani 3 , Pier Paolo Ricci b , Fabio Roncoroni 3 , Marco Scaioni 3
Paolo Valgoi c , Katherine Zhang d
3 Politecnico di Milano, DIIAR, Polo Regionale di Lecco, via M. d’Oggiono 18/a, 23900 Lecco, Italy
{mario.alba, alberto.giussani, fabio.roncoroni, marco.scaioni}@polimi.it
b IDS Ingegneria dei Sistemi S.p.A., via Livomese 1019, 56122 Pisa, Italy, www.ids-spa.it
{g.bemardini, p.ricci}@ids-spa.it
c A2A, ATO/SIE, Grosio (SO), Italy, paolo.valgoi@aem.it
d Beijing PT Equipment Co. ltd, 50 Xi San Huan Bei Road, 100044 Beijing, China
Commission I, WG 1/2
KEY WORDS: Interferometric SAR, Deformation Analysis, Dam Monitoring, Engineering Surveying, Ground-Based InSAR
ABSTRACT:
In this paper the application of a novel non-contact GBInSAR sensor to the measurement of daily deformations of an arch-gravity
dam is described. The sensor, named IBIS, is a Ku-band interferometric radar sensor apt to simultaneously monitor the displacement
response of several points belonging to a large structure. Moreover, the possibility of scanning the monitored object with the radar
sensor moving along a stable track enables to implement the interferometric SAR technique to improve the cross-range resolution in
the direction parallel to the baseline. The presented application addresses the monitoring of the displacement of the dam due to an
increasing load of the water basin during two days and to temperature change. The displacement results have been compared with
the measurements obtained by a coordinatometer installed on the central section of the dam for validation purpose; a good
agreement between innovative radar methods and well assessed monitoring sensors has been achieved.
1. INTRODUCTION
In the recent years the need of information about deformations
of large concrete dams has been highly demanded by
researchers and operators involved in maintenance and safety of
these structures. Indeed, nowadays the development of
innovative techniques for the static and dynamic structural
modelling would allow to sharply improve the capability of
predicting collapses, reducing so that the risk of disasters. A
fundamental prerequisite that all mathematical models should
have to adhere to reality is the availability of precise and dense
observations, either from a geometric point of view and about
boundary conditions. Several monitoring techniques could give
their contribute to this aim, accounting for geodetic
measurements and for sensors capable of measuring local
deformations, rotations, and displacements.
Broadly speaking, current techniques allow one to monitor a set
of specific control points on a dam, without covering every
portion of the structure itself. This lack of information is an
important drawback for structural modelling, especially when
comparing previsions of theoretical analysis with true
deformations under external conditions is needed.
In order to provide deformation measurement on large portions
of a structure’s surface, experimentation of two different kinds
of sensors have been carried out in the latest years: Terrestrial
Laser Scanning (TLS) and Ground-Based Interferometric SAR
(GBInSAR).
1.1 Terrestrial laser scanning
Different authors reported about applications of Terrestrial
Laser Scanning, which allows to capture dense point clouds
made up of 3-D unspecific points with a high degree of
automation, but with a poor accuracy for deformation
measurement. This result could be improved by exploiting the
data redundancy when the surveyed object features a regular
geometry (see e.g. the application to tunnel deformation
measurements - Van Gosliga et al., 2006 - or to a television
tower - Schneider, 2006), or when it can be decomposed in
many small planar patches (Lindembergh & Pfeifer, 2005). In
both cases, equations of regular surfaces can be estimated based
on a redundant dataset of observed points, and accuracy higher
than that of the original 3-D observations can be achieved (see
Monserrat & Crosetto, 2008). Unfortunately, errors due to
sensor georeferencing at different epochs usually worsen the
quality of results (Alba et al., 2006). By considering results
achieved so far, TLS can be used to evaluate seasonal
deformations of structures with points featuring a few cm
displacements, but not for the continous monitoring.
1.2 Ground-Based interferometric SAR
In the last decade some terrestrial sensors have been developed
to perform Ground-Based Interferometric SAR (GBInSAR)
measurement of deformations (Rudolf et al., 1999; Harries et
al., 2006; Bemardini et al., 2007c). Even though the density of
tracked points is lower w.r.t. TLS, the intrinsic achievable
accuracy enables its use for continuous monitoring of large
structures as well. Nevertheless, in case of constructions like
dams, featuring large regular surfaces, a huge point density is