Speckle noise reduction for structural vibration measurement with laser Doppler vibrometer on moving platform

Journal Article (2022)
Authors

Y. Zeng (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

A.A. Nunez Vicencio (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

Z Li (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

Research Group
Railway Engineering
Copyright
© 2022 Y. Zeng, Alfredo Nunez, Z. Li
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymssp.2022.109196
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Y. Zeng, Alfredo Nunez, Z. Li
Research Group
Railway Engineering
Volume number
178
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymssp.2022.109196
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Abstract

Speckle noise is a major problem for structural vibration measurements with Laser Doppler vibrometer on moving platform (LDVom) due to its highly random, frequent, and broadband nature, especially at high speeds. This paper develops a new post-processing framework to reduce speckle noise based on a case study of LDVom measurements on railway tracks. First, the characteristics of the speckle noise are studied. As the speed increases, the speckle noise occurs more frequently, with shorter intervals, shorter durations, greater amplitudes, and broader frequency bands. Then, a three-step despeckle framework is proposed, consisting of spike detection, imputation, and smoothing. This framework works by detecting and replacing spikes, recovering false positives, and smoothing false negatives and residual noise. To showcase this framework, we use a wavelet-based method for Step 1, an ARIMA-based method for Step 2, and a Butterworth filter for Step 3. Besides, the parameter selection strategies and the alternative methods are discussed. Next, the methods are validated through qualitative comparison and quantitative evaluation using a Monte Carlo-based strategy. We demonstrate that the proposed methods effectively reduce the speckle noise at speeds of at least 20 km/h while avoiding the pseudo vibrations. Finally, we show that the LDVom successfully captures the track vibrations at dominant frequencies of 500 ∼ 700 Hz with good repeatability between different laps and good agreement with trackside measurements.