Stay cables are important structural members of cable-stayed bridges, which play a significant role in the health monitoring and assessment of cable-stayed bridges. The in-service cable force, which varies from… Click to show full abstract
Stay cables are important structural members of cable-stayed bridges, which play a significant role in the health monitoring and assessment of cable-stayed bridges. The in-service cable force, which varies from the effects of vehicle load, wind load and other environmental factors, may cause fatigue damage in stay cables. Traditional force identification methods can only calculate the time-average cable force instead of the instantaneous force. A novel method has been proposed in this paper for identifying time-varying cable tension based on the variational mode decomposition (VMD) method. This recent method decomposes signals and adaptively estimates instantaneous frequency combined with the Hilbert–Huang transform method. In the proposed study, the time-varying modal frequencies were identified from stay cable acceleration data, and then the time-varying cable tension was identified by the relationship between cable tension and identified fundamental frequency. Scaled and full-scale models of stay cables were implemented successively to illustrate the validity of the proposed method. The results showed that the variational mode decomposition (VMD) method has a good effect on identifying the time-varying cable forces, even the sudden changes in cable force. According to the cable force identification results, the maximum error was 8.4%, which meets the actual application of time-varying cable force measurements. An on-site test was also implemented to monitor the cable force during a construction period, and the results showed that the proposed method can provide accurate real-time results for evaluation and decision-making.
               
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