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The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
Figure 6.Computed cross sections and the reconstructed model of a hand
6. DERIVING THE INTERNATIONAL ROUGHNESS
INDEX (IRI)
The IRI measurement has m/km (sometimes mm/m) or in/mi
units. The determination of IRI can be easily done from the
intersected surface points; only the longitudinal profile has to
be used. The most relevant place of road roughness is exactly
under the tires, therefore the four (2 left and 2 right) markers in
line with the tires have been selected for IRI calculations. The
IRI values are calculated for all four points, samples taken in
every 80 cm (at a speed of 4 m/s [15 km/h]) along the road, then
their average are ordered to the analyzed road segment.
A further software module has been developed, which produces
IRI files (reports) and IRI maps. In Figure 7 the effect of the
recently finished road reconstruction on the bridge and the lack
of it on the east (Pest) side can be clearly seen.
Figure 9 shows the results of a 56 km long surveying campaign
produced by the latest version of the measurement system in
April 2008. Figure 10 is an enlargement to visualize some
details of the survey.
There were registrations in three different days, where the
measurement repeatability and accuracy can be analyzed. The
system classifies the road segments into six categories
depending from their IRI values: Cat. 1 is the best and Cat 5 the
worst. The special sixth category is used for non-measured
segment, where the GPS-positioning was failed (e.g. because of
urban canyon effect, under bridges) or the IRI-measurement had
any other problem. The following table shows the quality
distribution of the surveyed roads for the five longest sections:
The IRI calculation is done at the highest resolution, but of
course the values can be aggregated arbitrary.
An additional experiment was also performed: the potential of
vertical acceleration directly in IRI calculation i.e. how can IRI
be derived from the single vertical acceleration measurements.
To test this hypothesis, regular gridded vertical acceleration
values were interpolated, then they were integrated into vertical
movements, and at the end the IRI-calculations were performed
as (Sayers & Karamihas 1998) refers. The IRI-values are
calculated for 2 m long segments. Since only a single IMU was
applied in the vehicle, no smoothing (e.g. averaging) was
needed (compared to the previously mentioned “optical” IRI
method).
Buda Danube Pest
Figure 7. IRI map derived from laser markers below the tires,
(light is for good, dark for bad status.)
SI
S2
S3
S4
S5
Cat. 1
2606
1340
1475
518
979
Cat. 2
4456
1797
1968
978
842
Cat. 3
2408
1269
707
753
402
Cat. 4
1228
737
362
466
223
Cat. 5
1785
1143
401
773
342
Cat. 6
2266
1615
336
820
946
Length
14752
7904
5251
4312
3737
Mean
IRI
9.32
10.00
7.70
11.54
8.28
IRI SD
7.28
7.51
6.72
8.52
7.19
Table 1. Basic statistics for the five longest sections measured in
the last campaign. The categories and length are given in m, IRI
in m/km
Figure 8. IRI-values calculated directly from vertical
acceleration measurements on different pavement types