DocumentCode :
3861116
Title :
High-resolution Spectral-analysis for Fundamental Frequency Estimation of High-rise Buildings subjected to Earthquakes
Author :
Carlos Andres Perez Ramirez;Juan Pablo Amezquita Sanchez;Martin Valtierra Rodiguez;David Camarena Martinez;Aurelio Dominguez Gonzalez;Jesus Ronney Rivera Guillen;Omar Chavez Alegria
Author_Institution :
Univ. Autonoma de Queretaro, Del Rio, TX, USA
Volume :
13
Issue :
12
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
3735
Lastpage :
3742
Abstract :
Accurate estimation of the fundamental frequency of civil structures is crucial for many applications; in particular, this estimation becomes more important when it helps to avoid or minimize human, economic, and structural damages as the case of the design and analysis of high-rise buildings subjected to earthquakes. Although many techniques have been proposed for this task, several aspects such as accuracy, noise immunity, and suitable time-frequency resolution have not been adequately addressed. In this work, the short-time multiple signal classification (ST-MUSIC), a high-resolution spectral-analysis technique, is proposed to estimate the fundamental frequency of high-rise buildings using vibration signals. The proposal is validated and tested using synthetic signals and real measurements. In the latter, the fundamental frequency of a high-rise building, 1:20 scale model, is estimated before-, during-, and after-seismic excitation through the analysis of the generated vibrations. For comparison purposes, the short-time Fourier transform (STFT), a conventional time-frequency technique, is also used. The obtained results show a high accuracy and noise immunity in the analysis, which makes the proposal a suitable and reliable tool for this task.
Keywords :
"Multiple signal classification","Frequency estimation","Time-frequency analysis","Pattern classification","Vibrations"
Journal_Title :
IEEE Latin America Transactions
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1548-0992
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TLA.2015.7404901
Filename :
7404901
Link To Document :
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