Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published October 2019 | public
Journal Article

Estimation of full-field dynamic strains from digital video measurements of output‐only beam structures by video motion processing and modal superposition

Abstract

Strain is an essential quantity to characterize local structural behaviors and directly correlates with structural damage initiation and development that is within local regions. Strain measurement at high spatial resolution (density) locations is thus required to characterize local structural behaviors and detect potential local damage. Traditional contact‐type strain gauges are mostly discrete point‐wise sensors that can only be placed in a limited number of positions. Distributed optical fiber sensing techniques can measure strains at spatially dense measurement points, but their instrumentation is a time‐ and labor‐intensive process associated with the issue of the fragility of fibers. Noncontact optical measurement techniques, such as a family of interferometry techniques using laser beams (e.g., laser Doppler vibrometers), can provide vibration measurement at high density spatial points without the need to install sensors on the structure. However, these measurement devices are active sensing methods that are relatively expensive and vulnerable to ambient motion. Photogrammetry is an alternative noncontact optical measurement method using (passive) white‐light imaging of digital video cameras that are relatively low‐cost, agile, and provides simultaneous measurements at high spatial density locations where every pixel becomes a measurement point. Among others, digital image correlation can achieve full‐field deformation measurements and subsequently estimate the full‐field strains. However, it is computationally extensive. This study develops a new efficient approach to estimate the full‐field (as many measurement points as the pixel number of the video frame on the structure) dynamic strains at high‐spatial (pixel)‐resolution/density location points from the digital video measurement of output‐only vibrating structures. The developed approach is based on phase‐based video motion estimation and modal superposition of structural dynamic response. Furthermore, the method is augmented by a high‐fidelity finite element model, which is updated with the full‐field experimental modal parameters "blindly" identified from the video measurement of the output‐only structure. Laboratory experiments are conducted to validate the method on a bench‐scale cantilever beam structure. Results demonstrate that the full‐field dynamic strain estimated by the developed approach from the video measurement of the output‐only vibrating beam match very well those directly measured by the strain gauges (at discrete measurement points). Some factors associated with the effectiveness of the method are experimentally studied and discussed.

Additional Information

© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Issue Online: 13 September 2019; Version of Record online: 16 July 2019; Manuscript accepted: 02 June 2019; Manuscript revised: 03 January 2019; Manuscript received: 01 July 2018. This work was supported by the Los Alamos National Laboratory Lab Directed Research and Development (LDRD) program in the form of a Director's Funded Postdoctoral Fellowship (grant 20150708PRD2) for Yongchao Yang. Hwee‐Kwon Jung and Gyuhae Park would like to acknowledge the partial support of National Research Foundation funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology 2011‐0030065 and 2015R1D1A1A01059092. The work was completed when Yongchao Yang was with Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023