Abstract
Dynamic analysis of a large, full-scale construction requires proper excitation in order to induce vibrations that can be measured and further processed. The amount of delivered energy over the frequency band must be sufficient to excite all the mode shapes in the studied range. The paper concerns the pseudo-impulse pull-and-release method that allows to determine frequency response functions of a large, lightly damped structure and estimate its modal parameters. The main advantage of the developed method is the great independence of the repetitiveness of the experiment’s operational parameters. The output time histories from subsequent partial experiments are accurately synchronised and normalised without measuring the signal of input excitation. The research conducted for the full-scale transmission tower results in modal parameters, estimated by classical and pseudo-impulse methods. The applied pseudo-impulse improves the conditioning of the excitation and results in the better readability of stabilisation diagrams as well as in a better stabilisation of the poles that are not clearly represented in the input data. The proposed method allows for the visualisation of poles which are non-detectable in cases of classical analysis.
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