Structural damage detection using energy flow models

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Abstract

The presence of a crack in a structure modifies the energy dissipation pattern. As a consequence, damaged structures can present high localized damping. Experimental tests have revealed that crack nucleation and growth increase structural damping which makes this phenomenon useful as a damage locator. This paper examines the energy flow patterns caused by localized damping in rods, beams and plates using the Energy Finite Element Method (EFEM), the Spectral Element Method (SEM) and the Energy Spectral Element Method (ESEM) in order to detect and locate damage. The analyses are performed at high frequencies, where any localized structural change has a strong influence in the structural response. Simulated results for damage detection in rods, beams, and their couplings calculated by each method and using the element loss factor variation to model the damage, are presented and compared. Results for a simple thin plate calculated with EFEM are also discussed.

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Santos, E. R. O., Pereira, V. S., Arruda, J. R. F., & Dos Santos, J. M. C. (2008). Structural damage detection using energy flow models. In Shock and Vibration (Vol. 15, pp. 217–230). IOS Press. https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/176954

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