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AuthorAbdelbarr, Mohamed
AuthorChen, Yulu Luke
AuthorJahanshahi, Mohammad R.
AuthorMasri, Sami F.
AuthorShen, Wei-Men
AuthorQidwai, Uvais A
Available date2020-09-17T11:12:40Z
Publication Date2017
Publication NameSmart Materials and Structures
ResourceScopus
ISSN9641726
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-665X/aa9450
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/16131
AbstractThe advent of inexpensive digital cameras with depth sensing capabilities (RGB-D cameras) has opened the door to numerous useful applications that need quantitative measures of dynamic fields whose simultaneous time history quantification (at many points as dictated by the resolution of the camera) provides capabilities that were previously accessible only through expensive sensors (e.g., laser scanners). This paper presents a comprehensive experimental and computational study to evaluate the performance envelope of a representative RGB-D sensor (the first generation of Kinect sensor) with the aim of assessing its suitability for the class of problems encountered in the structural dynamics field, where reasonably accurate information of evolving displacement fields (as opposed to few discrete locations) that have simultaneous dynamic planar translational motion with significant rotational (torsional) components. This study investigated the influence of key system parameters of concern in selecting an appropriate sensor for such structural dynamic applications, such as amplitude range, spectral content of the dynamic displacements, location and orientation of sensors relative to target structure, fusing of measurements from multiple sensors, sensor noise effects, rolling-shutter effects, etc. The calibration results show that if the observed displacement field generates discrete (pixel) sensor measurements with sufficient resolution (observed displacements more than 10 mm) beyond the sensor noise floor, then the subject sensors can typically provide reasonable accuracy for transnational motion (about 5%) when the frequency range of the evolving field is within about 10 Hz. However, the expected error for torsional measurements is around 6% for static motion and 10% for dynamic rotation for measurements greater than 5°.
SponsorThis research was supported in part by a grant from Qatar University and Qatar Foundation.
Languageen
PublisherInstitute of Physics Publishing
Subject3D displacement field
data fusion
non-contact measurements
RGB-D sensor
vibration
Title3D dynamic displacement-field measurement for structural health monitoring using inexpensive RGB-D based sensor
TypeArticle
Issue Number12
Volume Number26


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