Peaks Over Threshold–based detector design for structural health monitoring: Application to aerospace structures
dc.contributor.author | REBILLAT, Marc |
dc.contributor.author | HMAD, Ouadie |
dc.contributor.author
hal.structure.identifier | KADRI, Farid
|
dc.contributor.author
hal.structure.identifier | MECHBAL, Nazih
|
dc.date.accessioned | 2017 |
dc.date.available | 2017 |
dc.date.issued | 2018 |
dc.date.submitted | 2017 |
dc.identifier.issn | 1475-9217 |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10985/11775 |
dc.description.abstract | Structural health monitoring offers new approaches to interrogate the integrity of complex structures. The structural health monitoring process classically relies on four sequential steps: damage detection, localization, classification, and quantification. The most critical step of such process is the damage detection step since it is the first one and because performances of the following steps depend on it. A common method to design such a detector consists of relying on a statistical characterization of the damage indexes available in the healthy behavior of the structure. On the basis of this information, a decision threshold can then be computed in order to achieve a desired probability of false alarm. To determine the decision threshold corresponding to such desired probability of false alarm, the approach considered here is based on a model of the tail of the damage indexes distribution built using the Peaks Over Threshold method extracted from the extreme value theory. This approach of tail distribution estimation is interesting since it is not necessary to know the whole distribution of the damage indexes to develop a detector, but only its tail. This methodology is applied here in the context of a composite aircraft nacelle (where desired probability of false alarm is typically between 1024 and 1029) for different configurations of learning sample size and probability of false alarm and is compared to a more classical one which consists of modeling the entire damage indexes distribution by means of Parzen windows. Results show that given a set of data in the healthy state, the effective probability of false alarm obtained using the Peaks Over Threshold method is closer to the desired probability of false alarm than the one obtained using the Parzen-window method, which appears to be more conservative. |
dc.language.iso | en |
dc.publisher | SAGE Publications (UK and US) |
dc.rights | Post-print |
dc.subject | Damage detection, extreme value theory, Peaks Over Threshold, generalized Pareto distribution, Lamb waves, composite structures |
dc.title | Peaks Over Threshold–based detector design for structural health monitoring: Application to aerospace structures |
ensam.embargo.terms | 2017-07-03 |
dc.identifier.doi | 10.1177/1475921716685039 |
dc.typdoc | Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture |
dc.localisation | Centre de Paris |
dc.subject.hal | Mathématique: Probabilités |
dc.subject.hal | Sciences de l'ingénieur: Mécanique: Mécanique des structures |
dc.subject.hal | Sciences de l'ingénieur: Traitement du signal et de l'image |
ensam.audience | Internationale |
ensam.page | 91-107 |
ensam.journal | Structural Health Monitoring |
ensam.volume | 17 |
ensam.issue | 1 |
ensam.peerReviewing | Oui |
hal.identifier | hal-01526168 |
hal.version | 1 |
hal.submission.permitted | updateFiles |
hal.status | accept |
dc.identifier.eissn | 1741-3168 |