IVCVMar 30, 2018

Vibration-Based Damage Detection in Wind Turbine Blades using Phase-Based Motion Estimation and Motion Magnification

arXiv:1804.00558v1234 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for non-contact, high-resolution structural health monitoring in large-scale structures like wind turbines, offering a potential improvement over traditional sensor-based methods, but it appears incremental as it applies existing video analysis techniques to a specific domain.

The paper tackled the problem of detecting damage in wind turbine blades by using phase-based motion estimation and motion magnification from video to extract subtle vibrations, achieving high spatial resolution without contact sensors, though no concrete numbers were provided for accuracy or performance.

Vibration-based Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) techniques are among the most common approaches for structural damage identification. The presence of damage in structures may be identified by monitoring the changes in dynamic behavior subject to external loading, and is typically performed by using experimental modal analysis (EMA) or operational modal analysis (OMA). These tools for SHM normally require a limited number of physically attached transducers (e.g. accelerometers) in order to record the response of the structure for further analysis. Signal conditioners, wires, wireless receivers and a data acquisition system (DAQ) are also typical components of traditional sensing systems used in vibration-based SHM. However, instrumentation of lightweight structures with contact sensors such as accelerometers may induce mass-loading effects, and for large-scale structures, the instrumentation is labor intensive and time consuming. Achieving high spatial measurement resolution for a large-scale structure is not always feasible while working with traditional contact sensors, and there is also the potential for a lack of reliability associated with fixed contact sensors in outliving the life-span of the host structure. Among the state-of-the-art non-contact measurements, digital video cameras are able to rapidly collect high-density spatial information from structures remotely. In this paper, the subtle motions from recorded video (i.e. a sequence of images) are extracted by means of Phase-based Motion Estimation (PME) and the extracted information is used to conduct damage identification on a 2.3-meter long Skystream wind turbine blade (WTB). The PME and phased-based motion magnification approach estimates the structural motion from the captured sequence of images for both a baseline and damaged test cases on a wind turbine blade.

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