Damage Identification for a Reduced Scale Spatial Steel Frame


Abstract eng:
This paper reports on an experiment carried out in the laboratory of Civil and Environmental Engineering of the University of Florence, where a reduced scale (approximately 2.5 m width × 2.5 m depth × 4.8 m height), three storey steel spatial frame was instrumented and progressively damaged by cutting one of its pillars just above the foundation; the deepness of the cut could be measured and was taken as the entity of the damage. A series of 12 accelerometers was installed on the frame and 3 more accelerometers were installed on the ground; acceleration measurements induced by ambient vibrations were recorded as the frame was progressively damaged. Acceleration signals were subsequently analyzed in both time and frequency domain (SSI, EFDD, neural networks): a frequency shift and a change in the corresponding modal shapes were observed as the damage increased. The damaged truss was also modelled by means of a FEM code and the frequency shift and the change in the modal shapes were reproduced. A genetic algorithm approach is currently being tested to try and indentify the location and entity of the damage, and is reported on.

Contributors:
Publisher:
National Technical University of Athens, 2011
Conference Title:
Conference Title:
COMPDYN 2011 - 3rd International Thematic Conference
Conference Venue:
Island of Corfu (GR)
Conference Dates:
2011-05-25 / 2011-05-28
Rights:
Text je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.



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 Record created 2016-11-14, last modified 2016-11-14


Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, section: MS 31 Uncertainty and Reliability in Computational Structural Dynamics.:
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