Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 20 segundos...
Inicio  /  Acoustics  /  Vol: 6 Par: 1 (2024)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Matched Filter for Acoustic Emission Monitoring in Noisy Environments: Application to Wire Break Detection

Alexander Lange    
Ronghua Xu    
Max Kaeding    
Steffen Marx and Joern Ostermann    

Resumen

Regular inspections of important civil infrastructures are mandatory to ensure structural safety and reliability. Until today, these inspections are primarily conducted manually, which has several deficiencies. In context of prestressed concrete structures, steel tendons can be susceptible to stress corrosion cracking, which may result in breakage of individual wires that is visually not observable. Recent research therefore suggests Acoustic Emission Monitoring for wire break detection in prestressed concrete structures. However, in noisy environments, such as wind turbines, conventional acoustic emission detection based on user-defined amplitude thresholds may not be suitable. Thus, we propose the use of matched filters for acoustic emission detection in noisy environments and apply the proposed method to the task of wire break detection in post-tensioned wind turbine towers. Based on manually conducted wire breaks and rebound hammer tests on a large-scale test frame, we employ a brute-force search for the most suitable query signal of a wire break event and a rebound hammer impact, respectively. Then, we evaluate the signal detection performance on more than 500 other wire break signals and approximately one week of continuous acoustic emission recordings in an operating wind turbine. For a signal-to-noise ratio of 0 dB, the matched filter approach shows an improvement in AUC by up to 0.78 for both, the wire break and the rebound hammer query signal, compared to state-of-the-art amplitude-based detection. Even for the unscaled wire break measurements originally recorded at the 12 m large laboratory test frame, the improvement in AUC still lies between 0.01 and 0.25 depending on the wind turbine noise recordings considered for evaluation. Matched filters may therefore be a promising alternative to amplitude-based detection algorithms and deserve particular consideration with regard to Acoustic Emission Monitoring, especially in noisy environments or when sparse senor networks are required.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Shuai Yao and Yinjia Liu    
For tackling the challenge of in-time searching a sea-crashed plane, it is critical to develop a convenient and reliable detector for the underwater beacon signal. In the application of signal detection, a conventional detector such as linear correlation... ver más

 
Alessandro Paolo Daga and Luigi Garibaldi    
The estimation of the Instantaneous Angular Speed (IAS) has in recent years attracted a growing interest in the diagnostics of rotating machines. Measurement of the IAS can be used as a source of information of the machine condition per se, or for perfor... ver más
Revista: Algorithms

 
Spiridon Mantzoukas and Ioannis Lagogiannis    
Aphids are among the most harmful crop pests, damaging plants by sucking sap or by transmitting pathogenic viruses. Plant infestation by aphids depends on their population growth. Entomopathogenic fungi are essential participants of terrestrial and aquat... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Krisztián Deák     Pág. 113 - 122
This paper considers a comparison of six wavelets for bearing fault diagnosis. Five wavelets Symlet_05, Symlet_08, Daubechies_04, Daubechies_06, Daubechies_08 are typical ones which are used for fault diagnosis due to several researches. The purpose is t... ver más

 
Davide Massaro, Riccardo Ardoino and Marco Grazzini    
The importance of high resolution range profiles (HRRPs) for radar applications like tracking or classification is well known. In the scientific literature several approaches have been investigated to obtain HRRPs from wideband radar signals. Recent work... ver más
Revista: Aerospace