A Novel Approach to Automated 3D Spalling Defects Inspection in Railway Tunnel Linings Using Laser Intensity and Depth Information

The detection of concrete spalling is critical for tunnel inspectors to assess structural risks and guarantee the daily operation of the railway tunnel. However, traditional spalling detection methods mostly rely on visual inspection or camera images taken manually, which are inefficient and unrelia...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mingliang Zhou, Wen Cheng, Hongwei Huang, Jiayao Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/21/17/5725
Description
Summary:The detection of concrete spalling is critical for tunnel inspectors to assess structural risks and guarantee the daily operation of the railway tunnel. However, traditional spalling detection methods mostly rely on visual inspection or camera images taken manually, which are inefficient and unreliable. In this study, an integrated approach based on laser intensity and depth features is proposed for the automated detection and quantification of concrete spalling. The Railway Tunnel Spalling Defects (RTSD) database, containing intensity images and depth images of the tunnel linings, is established via mobile laser scanning (MLS), and the Spalling Intensity Depurator Network (SIDNet) model is proposed for automatic extraction of the concrete spalling features. The proposed model is trained, validated and tested on the established RSTD dataset with impressive results. Comparison with several other spalling detection models shows that the proposed model performs better in terms of various indicators such as MPA (0.985) and MIoU (0.925). The extra depth information obtained from MLS allows for the accurate evaluation of the volume of detected spalling defects, which is beyond the reach of traditional methods. In addition, a triangulation mesh method is implemented to reconstruct the 3D tunnel lining model and visualize the 3D inspection results. As a result, a 3D inspection report can be outputted automatically containing quantified spalling defect information along with relevant spatial coordinates. The proposed approach has been conducted on several railway tunnels in Yunnan province, China and the experimental results have proved its validity and feasibility.
ISSN:1424-8220