Towards a comprehensive damage identification of structures through populations of competing models
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Damage identification Digital twins Model selection
Date
2024-04-06Referencia bibliográfica
Hernández-González, I.A., García-Macías, E. Towards a comprehensive damage identification of structures through populations of competing models. Engineering with Computers (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00366-024-01972-6
Sponsorship
Secretaría General de Universidades, Investigación y Tecnología de la Junta de Andalucía (Spain) through the research project “Revalorización Estructural del Patrimonio Arquitectónico de Tapial en Andalucía” [Ref: A-TEP-182-UGR18]; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the research project “BRIDGEXT - Life-extension of ageing bridges: Towards a long-term sustainable Structural Health Monitoring” (Ref. PID2020-116644RB-I00); Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Granada/CBUA.Abstract
Model-based damage identification for structural health monitoring (SHM) remains an open issue in the literature. Along
with the computational challenges related to the modeling of full-scale structures, classical single-model structural identification
(St-Id) approaches provide no means to guarantee the physical meaningfulness of the inverse calibration results. In this
light, this work introduces a novel methodology for model-driven damage identification based on multi-class digital models
formed by a population of competing structural models, each representing a different failure mechanism. The forward models
are replaced by computationally efficient meta-models, and continuously calibrated using monitoring data. If an anomaly
in the structural performance is detected, a model selection approach based on the Bayesian information criterion (BIC) is
used to identify the most plausibly activated failure mechanism. The potential of the proposed approach is illustrated through
two case studies, including a numerical planar truss and a real-world historical construction: the Muhammad Tower in the
Alhambra fortress.