Abstract
The increasing installation of structural health monitoring systems has raised the need for efficient and rapid data interpretation algorithms. Operational modal analysis is currently one of the most used techniques for extracting modal properties, and some attempts have been made to automate this procedure. However, automated techniques often require manual calibration of hyperparameters and show inconsistencies across different case studies. This paper proposes a refined version of the automated frequency domain decomposition (AFDD) using the modal assurance criterion (MAC) to obtain natural frequencies and mode shapes. Sensitivity analyses were conducted on the ambient vibration response of the Yonghe cable-stayed bridge in China, accounting for influential factors including noise levels, acceleration record length, sensor layouts. A novel approach is then introduced to interpret the results of the sensitivity analyses. The approach consists in plotting the result of each analysis in a stabilization diagram and then using a Gaussian mixture model that clusters the poles into core and outliers. This allows to identify regions where the MAC thresholds are optimal. By comparing the results of all the sensitivity analyses it was possible to define a single optimal MAC threshold, avoiding the need for fixing a value based on the user’s experience. Three substantially different case studies were analyzed to extensively test the methodology: the Yonghe cable-stayed bridge, the PolyU footbridge in Hong Kong, and Moletta Tower in the Circus Maximus archeological site in Italy. The analysis compared the proposed AFDD algorithm to the traditional frequency domain decomposition and covariance-driven stochastic subspace identification. Specifically, the efficiency in identifying close frequencies, weakly excited modes, spurious peaks, and complex modes was evaluated for each method, which highlighted the robustness of the proposed optimized AFDD. The analysis showcases peculiar characteristics and drawbacks of each method when trying to identify complex vibrational modes of the specific case studies. It was found that the proposed AFDD procedure performs better than traditional methods despite it may misidentify complex modes due to the constraints of a narrower modal domain and similar geometries.
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