4.5 Article

Joint Damage Identification in Frame Structures by Integrating a New Damage Index with Equilibrium Optimizer Algorithm

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0219455422500560

Keywords

Joint damage identification; vibration method; damage indicator; modal residual moment; optimization algorithm; frame structures

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Beam-column joints are crucial for maintaining the integrity and stability of frame structures. This study proposes a new two-stage method for joint damage identification, which integrates the damage indicator RMBJDI with the EO algorithm to accurately localize and quantify joint damage in frame structures.
Beam-column joints are responsible for maintaining the integrity and stability of frame structures, and any damage to these critical components can endanger the overall safety and reliability of the structure. Hence, early detection of structural joint damage is of paramount importance. However, most of the available structural damage identification methods focus on identifying damage in structural members, and relatively fewer methods have been developed so far for assessing damage in structural joints. In view of this, the present study proposes a new two-stage method for joint damage identification of frame structures. In the first stage, an efficient damage indicator, called residual moment-based joint damage index (RMBJDI), is developed and applied to detect the location of potentially damaged joints. This damage indicator can help to reduce the number of involved damage variables by excluding healthy joints from the problem. In the second stage, the reduced dimension damage identification problem is formulated as an optimization problem and is further tackled by employing a robust meta-heuristic algorithm, namely equilibrium optimizer (EO), to determine the damage severity of suspected damaged joints. In order to assess the capability and effectiveness of the presented joint damage identification method, two numerical examples of frame structures are conducted under both noise-free and noisy conditions. The results demonstrate that the proposed two-stage method, which integrates RMBJDI with EO, is a highly accurate and powerful tool for localizing and quantifying the joint damage in frame structures.

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