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Article
Publication date: 12 June 2017

Hussain Altammar, Sudhir Kaul and Anoop K. Dhingra

Wavelets are being increasingly used for damage diagnostics. The purpose of this paper is to present an algorithm that uses the wavelet transform for detecting mixed-mode, also…

Abstract

Purpose

Wavelets are being increasingly used for damage diagnostics. The purpose of this paper is to present an algorithm that uses the wavelet transform for detecting mixed-mode, also known as combined mode, cracks in large truss structures.

Design/methodology/approach

The mixed-mode crack is modeled by superposing two damage modes, and this model is combined with a finite element model of the truss. The natural modes of the truss are processed through the wavelet transform and then used to determine the damage location. The influence of multiple parameters such as truss geometry, crack geometry, number of truss members, orientation of truss members, etc. is investigated as part of the study.

Findings

The proposed damage detection algorithm is found to be successful in detecting single mode as well as mixed-mode cracks even in the presence of significant end effects, and even when a relatively coarse sampling of natural modes is used. Results from multiple simulations that involve three commonly used truss structures are presented. A correlation between damage severity and the magnitude of wavelet coefficients is observed.

Originality/value

The proposed algorithm is found to be successful in accurately detecting damage, but direct determination of damage severity is found to be challenging.

Details

International Journal of Structural Integrity, vol. 8 no. 3
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1757-9864

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 3 October 2016

Hassan Samami and S. Olutunde Oyadiji

The purpose of this paper is to employ analytical and numerical techniques to generate modal displacement data of damaged beams containing very small crack-like surface flaws or…

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to employ analytical and numerical techniques to generate modal displacement data of damaged beams containing very small crack-like surface flaws or slots and to use the data in the development of damage detection methodology. The detection method involves the use of double differentiation of the modal data for identification of the flaw location and magnitude.

Design/methodology/approach

The modal displacements of damaged beams are simulated analytically using the Bernoulli-Euler theory and numerically using the finite element method. The principle used in the analytical approach is based on changes in the transverse displacement due to the localized reduction of the flexural rigidity of the beam. Curvature analysis is employed to identify and locate the structural flaws from the modal data. The curvature mode shapes are calculated using a central difference approximation. The effects of random noise on the detectability of the structural flaws are also computed.

Findings

The analytical approach is much more robust in simulating modal displacement data for beams with crack-like surface flaws or slots than the finite element analysis (FEA) approach especially for crack-like surface flaws or slots of very small depths. The structural flaws are detectable in the presence of random noise of up to 5 per cent.

Originality/value

Simulating the effects of small crack-like surface flaws is important because it is essential to develop techniques to detect cracks at an early stage of their development. The FEA approach can only simulate the effects of crack-like surface flaws or slots with depth ratio greater than 10 per cent. On the other hand, the analytical approach using the Bernoulli-Euler theory can simulate the effects of crack-like surface flaws or slots with depth ratio as small as 2 per cent.

Article
Publication date: 27 July 2023

Qaiser Uz Zaman Khan, Muhammad Farhan and Ali Raza

The main purpose of this study is to examine the damage behavior of flexural members under different loading conditions. The finite element model is proposed for the prediction of…

Abstract

Purpose

The main purpose of this study is to examine the damage behavior of flexural members under different loading conditions. The finite element model is proposed for the prediction of modal parameters, damage assessment and damage detection of flexural members. Moreover, the analysis of flexural members has been done for the sensor arrangement to accurately predict the damage parameters without the laborious work of experimentation in the laboratory.

Design/methodology/approach

Beam-like structures are structures that are subjected to flexural loadings that are involved in almost every type of civil engineering construction like buildings, bridges, etc. Experimental Modal Analysis (EMA) is a popular technique to detect damages in structures without requiring tough and complex methods. Experimental work conducted in this study concludes that a structure experiences high changes in modal properties once when cracking occurs and then at the stage where cracks start at the critical neutral axis. Moreover, among the various modal parameters of the flexural members, natural frequency and mode shapes are the viable parameters for the damage detection.

Findings

For torsional mode, drop in natural frequency is high for higher damages as compared to low levels. This is because of the opening and closing of cracks in modal testing. When damage occurs in the structure, there is a reduction in the magnitude of the FRF plot. The measure of this drop can also lead to damage assessment in addition to damage detection. The natural frequency of the system is the most reliable modal parameter in detecting damages. However, for damage localization, the next step after damage assessment, mode shapes can be more helpful as compared to all other parameters.

Originality/value

Effect on Dynamic Properties of Flexural Members during the Progressive Deterioration of Reinforced Concrete Structures is studied.

Details

Multidiscipline Modeling in Materials and Structures, vol. 19 no. 5
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1573-6105

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 12 October 2022

Yongliang Wang, Jiansong Hu, David Kennedy, Jianhui Wang and Jiali Wu

Moderately thick circular cylindrical shells are widely used as supporting structures or storage cavities in structural engineering, rock engineering, and aerospace engineering…

Abstract

Purpose

Moderately thick circular cylindrical shells are widely used as supporting structures or storage cavities in structural engineering, rock engineering, and aerospace engineering. In practical engineering, shells often work with micro-cracks or defects. The existence of micro-crack damage may result in the disturbance of dynamic behaviours and even induce accidental dynamic disasters. The free vibration frequency and mode are important parameters for the dynamic performance and damage identification analysis. In particular, stiffness weakening of the local damage region leads to significant changes in the vibration mode, which makes it difficult for the mesh generated in the conventional finite element method to capture a high-precision solution of the local oscillation.

Design/methodology/approach

In response to the above problems, this study developed an adaptive finite element method and a crack damage characterisation method for moderately thick circular cylindrical shells. By introducing the inverse power iteration method, error estimation, and mesh subdivision refinement technique for the analysis of finite element eigenvalue problems, an adaptive computation scheme was constructed for the free vibration problem of moderately thick circular cylindrical shells with circumferential crack damage.

Findings

Based on typical numerical examples, the established adaptive finite element solution for the free vibration of moderately thick circular cylindrical shells demonstrated its suitability for solving the high-precision free vibration frequency and mode of cylindrical shell structures. The any order frequency and mode shape of cracked cylindrical shells under the conditions of different ring wave numbers, crack locations, crack depths, and multiple cracks were successfully solved. The influences of the location, depth, and number of cracks on the disturbance of dynamic behaviours were analysed.

Originality/value

This study can be used as a reference for the adaptive finite element solution of free vibration of moderately thick circular cylindrical shells with cracks and lays the foundation for further development of a high-performance computation method suitable for the dynamic disturbance and damage identification analysis of general cracked structures.

Article
Publication date: 9 April 2020

Dragan D. Milašinović, Petar Marić, Žarko Živanov and Miroslav Hajduković

The problems of inelastic instability (buckling) and dynamic instability (resonance) have been the subject of extensive investigation and have received wide attention from the…

Abstract

Purpose

The problems of inelastic instability (buckling) and dynamic instability (resonance) have been the subject of extensive investigation and have received wide attention from the structural mechanics community. This paper aims to tackle these problems in thin-walled structures, taking into account geometrical and/or material non-linearity.

Design/methodology/approach

The inelastic buckling mode interactions and resonance instabilities of prismatic thin-walled columns are analysed by implementing the semi-analytical finite strip method (FSM). A scalar damage parameter is implemented in conjunction with a material modelling named rheological-dynamical analogy to address stiffness reduction induced by the fatigue damage.

Findings

Inelastic buckling stresses lag behind the elastic buckling stresses across all modes, which is a consequence of the viscoelastic behaviour of materials. Because of the lag, the same column length does not always correspond to the same mode at the elastic and inelastic critical stress.

Originality/value

This paper presents the influence of mode interactions on the effective stresses and resonance instabilities in thin-walled columns due to the fatigue damage. These mode interactions have a great influence on damage variables because of the fatigue and effective stresses around mode transitions. In its usual semi-analytical form, the FSM cannot be used to solve the mode interaction problem explained in this paper, because this technique ignores the important influence of interaction of the buckling modes when applied only for undamaged state of structure

Article
Publication date: 31 October 2022

Tomás Oliveira, José V. Araújo dos Santos and Hernâni Lopes

Laminated composite materials are a staple of modern material development, with extremely strong fibers being combined with resins to form versatile and efficient engineering…

Abstract

Purpose

Laminated composite materials are a staple of modern material development, with extremely strong fibers being combined with resins to form versatile and efficient engineering structures. However, the advancements in material development must be accompanied by equally advanced methods for damage detection, localization and quantification, as these materials develop inherently unique failure modes. This paper aims to further the study of the use of modal shapes and their spatial derivatives to localize damage in laminated composite rectangular plates. Exploring different damage scenarios and models, as well as different orders of mode shape derivatives of laminated plates.

Design/methodology/approach

ANSYS® Parametric Design Language (APDL) is used to perform finite element analysis of plates with several damage scenarios and damage mechanics models. MATLAB® is used to post-process these simulation results, namely by calculating the derivatives using finite differences, applying three distinct sets of damage indices, including one that is presently proposed. To mimic experimental conditions and test the resilience of the derivative orders, different noise levels are introduced into the results of the finite element analysis. A quality index is employed to quantitatively evaluate the solutions, mainly regarding the response to the introduced noise.

Findings

The results show that the applied damage localization methods have comparable results in terms of quality. These results also show that the quality of the damage localizations is higher when the damaged areas coincide with high displacement/curvature areas of the mode shapes and that higher noise levels have a more noticeable negative impact when employing higher-order derivatives.

Originality/value

Exploring different damage scenarios and models, as well as different orders of mode shape derivatives of laminated plates. The influence of a specific damage layer on the order of derivatives of modal response is evaluated, showing promising results concerning its identification.

Details

International Journal of Structural Integrity, vol. 14 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1757-9864

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 28 February 2023

Natalia García-Fernández, Manuel Aenlle, Adrián Álvarez-Vázquez, Miguel Muniz-Calvente and Pelayo Fernández

The purpose of this study is to review the existing fatigue and vibration-based structural health monitoring techniques and highlight the advantages of combining both approaches.

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to review the existing fatigue and vibration-based structural health monitoring techniques and highlight the advantages of combining both approaches.

Design/methodology/approach

Fatigue monitoring requires a fatigue model of the material, the stresses at specific points of the structure, a cycle counting technique and a fatigue damage criterion. Firstly, this paper reviews existing structural health monitoring (SHM) techniques, addresses their principal classifications and presents the main characteristics of each technique, with a particular emphasis on modal-based methodologies. Automated modal analysis, damage detection and localisation techniques are also reviewed. Fatigue monitoring is an SHM technique which evaluate the structural fatigue damage in real time. Stress estimation techniques and damage accumulation models based on the S-N field and the Miner rule are also reviewed in this paper.

Findings

A vast amount of research has been carried out in the field of SHM. The literature about fatigue calculation, fatigue testing, fatigue modelling and remaining fatigue life is also extensive. However, the number of publications related to monitor the fatigue process is scarce. A methodology to perform real-time structural fatigue monitoring, in both time and frequency domains, is presented.

Originality/value

Fatigue monitoring can be combined (applied simultaneously) with other vibration-based SHM techniques, which might significantly increase the reliability of the monitoring techniques.

Details

International Journal of Structural Integrity, vol. 14 no. 2
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1757-9864

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 16 November 2010

Hua‐Peng Chen and Nenad Bicanic

The paper aims to identify both the location and severity of damage in complex framed buildings using limited noisy vibration measurements. The study aims to directly adopt…

Abstract

Purpose

The paper aims to identify both the location and severity of damage in complex framed buildings using limited noisy vibration measurements. The study aims to directly adopt incomplete measured mode shapes in structural damage identification and effectively reduce the influence of measurement errors on predictions of structural damage.

Design/methodology/approach

Damage indicators are properly chosen to reflect both the location and severity of damage in framed buildings at element level for braces and at critical point level for beams and columns. Basic equations for an iterative solution procedure are provided to be solved for the chosen damage indicators. The Tikhonov regularisation method incorporating the L‐curve criterion for determining the regularisation parameter is employed to produce stable and robust solutions for damage indicators.

Findings

The proposed method can correctly assess the quantification of structural damage at specific locations in complex framed buildings using only limited information on modal data measurements with errors, without requiring mode shape expansion techniques or model reduction processes.

Research limitations/implications

Further work may be needed to improve the accuracy of inverse predictions for very small structural damage from noisy measurements.

Practical implications

The paper includes implications for the development of reliable techniques for rapid and on‐line damage assessment and health monitoring of framed buildings.

Originality/value

The paper offers a practical approach and procedure for correctly detecting structural damage and assessing structural condition from limited noisy vibration measurements.

Details

Engineering Computations, vol. 27 no. 8
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0264-4401

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 February 2000

J.P.M. Gonçalves, M.F.S.F. de Moura, P.M.S.T. de Castro and A.T. Marques

An interface finite element for three‐dimensional problems based on the penalty method is presented. The proposed element can model joints/interfaces between solid finite elements…

1108

Abstract

An interface finite element for three‐dimensional problems based on the penalty method is presented. The proposed element can model joints/interfaces between solid finite elements and also includes the propagation of damage in pure mode I, pure mode II and mixed mode considering a softening relationship between the stresses and relative displacements. Two different contact conditions are considered: point‐to‐point constraint for closed points (not satisfying the failure criterion) and point‐to‐surface constraint for opened points. The performance of the element is tested under mode I, mode II and mixed mode loading conditions.

Details

Engineering Computations, vol. 17 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0264-4401

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 3 May 2013

Davood Asadi, Mahdi Sabzehparvar and Heidar Ali Talebi

Understanding the performance and flight envelope of a damaged aircraft is a preliminary requirement to recover the aircraft after damage. This paper aims to provide a…

1406

Abstract

Purpose

Understanding the performance and flight envelope of a damaged aircraft is a preliminary requirement to recover the aircraft after damage. This paper aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of wing damage effect on airplane performance, local stability, and flying quality of each trim state inside the achievable flight envelope.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper demonstrates the use of attainable equilibrium points which are referred as trim states in order to estimate a damaged airplane manoeuvring flight envelope using a numerical computation method.

Findings

Wing damaged airplane manoeuvring flight envelope is estimated for different portions of the wing tip loss. Local stability at each trim condition inside the estimated flight envelope is analysed, and also motion flight modes and flying quality sensitivity to the wing damage are explored.

Originality/value

Local stability and flying quality analysis at each trim condition inside the flight envelope which demonstrate the effect of damage provides a criterion to prioritize the choice of trimmed flight condition as motion primitives for the airplane post‐damage flight and safe landing.

Details

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, vol. 85 no. 3
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0002-2667

Keywords

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