Abstract

Radar is a non-contact, high-precision vibration measurement device and an important tool for bridge vibration monitoring. Vibration information needs to be extracted from the radar phase, but the radar phase information is sensitive to noise. Under low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) data acquisition conditions, such as low radar transmission power or a long observation distance, differential phase jump errors occur and clutter estimation becomes difficult, which leads to inaccurate inversion of vibration deformation. Traditional low-pass filtering methods can filter out noise to improve SNR, but they require oversampling. The sampling rate needs to be several times higher than the Doppler bandwidth, which is several times higher than the vibration frequency. This puts high data acquisition requirements on radar systems and causes large data volumes. Therefore, this paper proposes a novel vibration signal filtering method called the periodic filtering method. The method uses the periodicity feature of vibration signals for filtering without oversampling. This paper derives the time-domain and frequency-domain expressions for the periodic filter and presents a deformation inversion process based on them. The process involves extracting the vibration frequency in the Doppler domain, suppressing noise through periodic filtering, estimating clutter using circle fitting on the data complex plane, and inverting final deformation with differential phase. The method is verified through simulation experiments, calibration experiments, and bridge vibration experiments. The results show that the new periodic filtering method can improve the SNR by five times, resolve differential phase jumps, and accurately estimate clutter, thus getting submillimeter-level vibration deformation at low SNR.

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