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Ground-Based Electromagnetic Methods for the Monitoring and Surveillance of Urban and Engineering Infrastructures: State-of-the-Art and Future Directions

Author

Listed:
  • Vincenzo Cuomo

    (National Research Council (CNR), Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis (IMAA), 85050 Tito, Italy)

  • Jean Dumoulin

    (I4S Team, COSYS-SII, INRIA, University Gustave Eiffel, F-44344 Bouguenais, France)

  • Vincenzo Lapenna

    (National Research Council (CNR), Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis (IMAA), 85050 Tito, Italy)

  • Francesco Soldovieri

    (National Research Council (CNR), Institute of Electromagnetic Sensing of Environment (IREA), 80124 Naples, Italy)

Abstract

This review focuses on electromagnetic imaging methods widely used in urban geophysics and civil engineering. The rapid growth of the urban population and the increase in the frequency of extreme events related to climate change make novel approaches to the geophysical monitoring of urban areas and civil infrastructures essential in the context of programs for the sustainability and resilience of cities. In this scenario, there is a growing interest in using ground-based electromagnetic methods to investigate strategic infrastructures such as bridges, tunnels, dam embankments, power plants, energy plants and pipelines in a non-invasive way. The development of cost-effective, user-friendly sensor arrays, robust methodologies for tomographic data inversion, and AI-based and machine learning techniques has rapidly transformed these methods. This review critically analyzes the results relating to the application of ground-based electromagnetic methods in infrastructure monitoring and surveillance over the past 20 years by presenting a selection of best practice examples and studies planned to support programs for the resilience and maintenance of engineering infrastructures. The analysis reveals that these methods are highly effective in addressing a broad spectrum of monitoring issues in view of effective maintenance of civil infrastructures. In fact, these methods are essential for detecting the geometry of buried objects (e.g., bars and voids), enabling the early detection of degradation phenomena, and mapping water infiltration processes inside structures, as well as many other challenging applications. Finally, prospectives for development are identified in terms of using soft robot technologies, miniaturized sensors, and AI-based methods to acquire, process and interpret data as well as to design smart operational guidelines for infrastructure management.

Suggested Citation

  • Vincenzo Cuomo & Jean Dumoulin & Vincenzo Lapenna & Francesco Soldovieri, 2026. "Ground-Based Electromagnetic Methods for the Monitoring and Surveillance of Urban and Engineering Infrastructures: State-of-the-Art and Future Directions," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(8), pages 1-27, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:8:p:3822-:d:1918747
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