Infrared thermography for a quick construction progress monitoring approach in concrete structures

Date

2021-10-14

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

springer

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Construction progress monitoring ensures the construction project is consistent with the schedule and enables the detection of any deviations in the geometry and/or any variation in the schedule. The traditional progress monitoring requires specialized personnel to walk around on the construction site to manually collect data and verify the progress of activities, which is time consuming, costly and/or error prone. Image-based technology is efective for recording on-site data geospatially and chronologically. It has gained increasing attention in the construction feld for progress monitoring, work space analysis and quality assurance. However, a notable downside of image processing is the light condition, particularly for noisy environments such as construction sites. Poor or undesirable ambient light conditions produce low quality images that signifcantly afect the accuracy of data extracted from related images and lead to a high level of errors. This paper presents an innovative approach based on thermal image analysis to overcome problems related to the image quality. Thirty preliminary tests and three case studies have been implemented to show the feasibility of the method. A range of improvement between 8 to 48% has been attained that confrms the great potential of thermal images to overcome the limitation of image-based approaches.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Infrared camera, Construction progress monitoring, Image-based, BIM, Thermal image

Citation

Pazhoohesh, M., Zhang, C., Hammad, A. et al. (2021) Infrared thermography for a quick construction progress monitoring approach in concrete structures. Architecture, Structures and Construction, 1 , pp. 91-106

Rights

Research Institute