4.6 Article

Dynamic wavelet neural network model for damage features extraction and patterns recognition

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13349-023-00683-8

Keywords

Wavelet analysis; Damage features; Neural networks; Damage detection; Pattern recognition

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Monitoring structural damage is crucial for maintaining the longevity and safety of civil and mechanical systems. However, capturing subtle damage from structural vibration response remains challenging. This study introduces a technique to extract informative damage-sensitive features and develop a pattern recognition-based statistical model. The proposed algorithm shows high efficiency and accuracy in determining the structural integrity state of complex systems.
Monitoring structural damage is essential for preserving and sustaining civil and mechanical systems' structural service lifecycle. Successful monitoring provides valuable information on structural health, integrity, and safety. Maintaining continuous performance highly depends on monitoring damage's occurrence, formation, and propagation. Damage may accumulate on a structure due to surrounding conditions or human-induced factors. Although structural health monitoring (SHM) technology is becoming more mature and is being adopted across a wide range of civil engineering applications (CEAs), the difficulty of capturing subtle damage from structural vibration response (SVR) is still challenging. The SVR is almost nonstationary and complex. In addition, there is no generic robust, intelligent algorithm for extracting sensitive features from massive collected data that can estimate and predict different structural integrity conditions. Thus, this study introduces a technique to derive informative damage-sensitive features (DSFs) and develop a pattern, recognition-based statistical model. The extracted DSFs differ from the prior one in some significant respect, accurately represent various damage features, and then are integrated with an AI network for pattern recognition. The wavelet energy as a damage feature is used to classify structural damage states. Experimental data of a six-story frame are used to validate the computational model and demonstrate its efficiency and accuracy. The proposed algorithm can determine the structural integrity state of large complex systems with a noisy measurement under arbitrary dynamic excitation.

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