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DEMAGE DETECTION USING EXPERIMENTALLY MEASURED MASS AND STIFFNESS MATRICES
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0
References
1993
Year
EngineeringMeasurementStructural DynamicsMechanical EngineeringStructural OptimizationComputational MechanicsStructural EngineeringStructural IdentificationModal AnalysisCalibrationDigital Image CorrelationSystems EngineeringStructural DynamicEdge DetectionStructural VibrationPhysical MassMachine VisionStructural Health MonitoringPhysical DamageDeformation ReconstructionCivil EngineeringStructural AnalysisPhysical DisplacementsStructural MechanicsVibration Control
A method is presented for locating physical damage or change in a structure using experimentally measured mass and stiffness matrices. The approach uses a recently developed algorithm for transforming a state-space realization into a second order structural model with physical displacements as the generalized coordinates. This is accomplished by first rotating a state-space model of the identified structural dynamics into modal coordinates and approximating the mass normalized modal vectors for the output measurement set. Next, the physical mass, damping and stiffness matrices are synthesized directly from the measured modal parameters. This yields experimental mass and stiffness matrices for the structure without the use of a finite element model or a numerical search. The computed mass and stiffness are asymptotically equivalent to a static condensation of the global physical coordinate model. Techniques for solving the inverse connectivity problem are then developed whereby it is possible to assess the stiffness in a region of the structure bounded by several sensors. Applications to both simulated data and experimental data are used to discuss the effectiveness of the approach.