A Novel Concrete-Based Sensor for Detection of Ice and Water on Roads and Bridges
Abstract
Hundreds of people are killed or injured annually in the United States in accidents related to ice formation on roadways and bridge decks. In this paper, a novel embedded sensor system is proposed for the detection of black ice as well as wet, dry and frozen pavement conditions on roads, runways, and bridges. The proposed sensor works by detecting changes in electrical resistance between two sets of stainless steel poles embedded in the concrete sensor to assess surface and near-surface conditions. A preliminary decision algorithm is developed that utilizes sensor outputs indicating resistance changes and surface temperature. The sensor consists of a 102-mm diameter, 38 mm high, concrete cylinder. Laboratory results indicate that the proposed sensor can effectively detect surface ice and wet conditions even in the presence of deicing chlorides and rubber residue. This sensor can further distinguish black ice from ice that may exist within concrete pores.
Subject
Concrete
black ice
safety
ice detection
bridge decks
pavements
electrical resistance
resistivity
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90035Type
article
Citation
Tabatabai, H., and Aljuboori, M., "A Novel Concrete-Based Sensor for Detection of Ice and Water on Roads and Bridges," Sensors, 17, 2912, 2017, doi:10.3390/s17122912