ABSTRACT
This work presents the development of a model-based online damage identification system for a 13th century rammed earth (RE) tower in the Alhambra, the Muhammad Tower. The system is fed with continuous data from an ambient vibration-based monitoring system and a meteorological station. Ambient vibrations are continuously processed through Operational Modal Analysis (OMA), and environmental effects are minimised via statistical pattern recognition. The normalized modal signatures are used to update the stiffness properties of certain parts of the tower through inverse model calibration. To do so, a high-fidelity three-dimensional finite element model (FEM) of the tower is developed. Since its computational burden precludes conducting online calibration, the FEM is bypassed by a light Kriging surrogate model (SM). In this light, the developed SM-assisted system identification constitutes a long-term Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) system outputting quasi-real-time series of modal properties and local stiffness parameters, so providing full damage assessment (detection, localization and quantification). The presented results refer to a time period of three months since January until March 2022. Numerical results and discussion are reported concerning the characterization and removal of environmental effects, and synthetic damage scenarios through non-linear simulations are used to validate the developed damage identification system.
Acknowledgments
This work has been supported by the Secretaría General de Universidades, Investigación y Tecnología and by the Secretaría General de Vivienda de la Junta de Andalucía (Spain) through the research projects “Revalorización Estructural del Patrimonio Arquitectónico de Tapial en Andalucía” [Ref: A-TEP-182-UGR18] and “Metodología para el Análisis de la Integridad Estructural del Patrimonio Arquitectónico construido en tapial” [Ref: UGR.20-12], respectively. The collaboration of Prof. Nicolás Velilla from the Department of Mineralogy and Petrology from the University of Granada to access the environmental data of the Granada-Albayzín meteorological station is gratefully acknowledged. Finally, the support and information provided by Patronato de la Alhambra y el Generalife are also warmly acknowledged.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.