Abstract

Over the last several decades, structural health monitoring systems have grown into increasingly diverse applications. Structural health monitoring excels with large data sets that can capture the typical variability, novel events, and undesired degradation over time. As a result, the efficient storage and processing of these large, guided wave data sets have become a key feature for successful application of structural health monitoring. This article describes a series of investigations into the use of random projection theory to significantly reduce storage burdens and improve computational complexity while not significantly affecting common damage detection strategies. Random projections are used as a lossy compression scheme that approximately retains metrics of distance or similarity between data records. Random projection compression is evaluated using a large 1,440,000 measurement data set, which was collected over 5 months in an unprotected outdoor environment. Accurate damage detection, after the compression process, is achieved through correlation analysis and singular value decomposition. The results indicate consistent detection performance with over 95% of storage compression and more than a 477 times speed improvement in computational cost for singular value decomposition–based damage detection.

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