As an important part of urban rail transit, subway tunnels play an important role in alleviating traffic pressure in mega-cities. Identifying and locating damage to the tunnel structure as early as possible has important practical significance for maintaining the long-term safe operation of subway tunnels. Summarizing the current status and shortcomings of the structural health monitoring of subway tunnels, a very economical and effective monitoring program is proposed, which is to use the train vibration response to identify and locate the damage of the tunnel structure. Firstly, the control equation of vehicle–tunnel coupling vibration is established and its analytical solution is given as the theoretical basis of this paper. Then, a damage index based on the cumulative sum of wavelet packet energy change rate (TDISC) is proposed, and its process algorithm is given. Through the joint simulation of VI-Rail and ANSYS, a refined 3D train-tunnel coupled vibration model is established. In this model, different combined conditions of single damage and double damage verify the validity of the damage index. The effectiveness of this damage index was further verified through model tests, and the influence of vehicle speed and load on the algorithm was discussed. Numerical simulation and experimental results show that the TDISC can effectively locate the damage of the tunnel structure and has good robustness.
Finding a low-cost and highly efficient method for identifying subway tunnel damage can greatly reduce catastrophic accidents. At present, tunnel health monitoring is mainly based on the observation of apparent diseases and vibration monitoring, which is combined with a manual inspection to perceive the tunnel health status. However, these methods have disadvantages such as high cost, short working time, and low identification efficiency. Thus, in this study, a tunnel damage identification algorithm based on the vibration response of in-service train and WPE-CVAE is proposed, which can automatically identify tunnel damage and give the damage location. The method is an unsupervised novelty detection that requires only sufficient normal data on healthy structure for training. This study introduces the theory and implementation process of this method in detail. Through laboratory model tests, the damage of the void behind the tunnel wall is designed to verify the performance of the algorithm. In the test case, the proposed method achieves the damage identification performance with a 96.25% recall rate, 86.75% hit rate, and 91.5% accuracy. Furthermore, compared with the other unsupervised methods, the method performance and noise immunity are better than others, so it has a certain practical value.
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