Guided wave structural health monitoring with large data sets

Author(s):  
Spencer Shiveley ◽  
Alexander Douglass ◽  
Benjamin Posch ◽  
Joel B. Harley
2020 ◽  
pp. 147592172096019
Author(s):  
Sungwon Kim ◽  
Spencer Shiveley ◽  
Alexander CS Douglass ◽  
Yisong Zhang ◽  
Rajeev Sahay ◽  
...  

Over the last several decades, structural health monitoring systems have grown into increasingly diverse applications. Structural health monitoring excels with large data sets that can capture the typical variability, novel events, and undesired degradation over time. As a result, the efficient storage and processing of these large, guided wave data sets have become a key feature for successful application of structural health monitoring. This article describes a series of investigations into the use of random projection theory to significantly reduce storage burdens and improve computational complexity while not significantly affecting common damage detection strategies. Random projections are used as a lossy compression scheme that approximately retains metrics of distance or similarity between data records. Random projection compression is evaluated using a large 1,440,000 measurement data set, which was collected over 5 months in an unprotected outdoor environment. Accurate damage detection, after the compression process, is achieved through correlation analysis and singular value decomposition. The results indicate consistent detection performance with over 95% of storage compression and more than a 477 times speed improvement in computational cost for singular value decomposition–based damage detection.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Wang Ziping ◽  
Xiong Xiqiang ◽  
Qian Lei ◽  
Wang Jiatao ◽  
Fei Yue ◽  
...  

In the application of Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) methods and related technologies, the transducer used for electroacoustic conversion has gradually become a key component of SHM systems because of its unique function of transmitting structural safety information. By comparing and analyzing the health and safety of large-scale structures, the related theories and methods of Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) based on ultrasonic guided waves are studied. The key technologies and research status of the interdigital guided wave transducer arrays which used for structural damage detection are introduced. The application fields of interdigital transducers are summarized. The key technical and scientific problems solved by IDT for Structural Damage Monitoring (SHM) are presented. Finally, the development of IDT technology and this research project are summarised.


2020 ◽  
pp. 733-748
Author(s):  
Ahmed Abdelgawad ◽  
Md Anam Mahmud ◽  
Kumar Yelamarthi

Most of the existing Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) systems are vulnerable to environmental and operational damages. The majority of these systems cannot detect the size and location of the damage. Guided wave techniques are widely used to detect damage in structures due to its sensitivity to different changes in the structure. Finding a mathematical model for such system will help to implement a reliable and efficient low-cost SHM system. In this paper, a mathematical model is proposed to detect the size and location of damages in physical structures using the piezoelectric sensor. The proposed model combines both pitch-catch and pulse-echo techniques and has been verified throughout simulations using ABAQUS/ Explicit finite element software. For empirical verification, data was collected from an experimental set-up using an Aluminum sheets. Since the experimental data contains a lot of noises, a Butterworth filter was used to clean up the signal. The proposed mathematical model along with the Butterworth filter have been validated throughout real test bed.


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