Structural health monitoring (SHM) is crucial in preserving the civil infrastructure asset and ensuring safety of the operations. Amongst the available SHM techniques, the ground-based synthetic aperture radar (GB-SAR) is one of the most reliable. However, a gap in knowledge with the use of this system exists when multiple targets are in the same acquisition range. The present study investigates into this aspect and proposes a two-stage procedure based on i) controlling the signal propagation characteristics during the data collection and ii) implementing advanced signal processing techniques to aid the interpretation of the measured signal. To this effect, three scenarios of interest are implemented in the laboratory environment, i.e., i) absence of targets, ii) presence of one target, and iii) presence of two targets in the centerline of the radar. The data collection is aided by augmented reality (AR), which allows to visualise the radar footprint and precisely control the acquisition according to the set scenarios. The collected data are processed using the empirical mode decomposition (EMD) and the Hilbert-Huang transform (HHT) techniques. The proposed methodology is shown to be effective in both the data control and processing stages. Results have proven that the signal response from multiple targets differs from that observed in the other investigated scenarios, hence showing potential for enhancing multi-target detection in structures with GB-SAR.
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