Nonlinearity and randomness are two intrinsic characteristics of the mechanical behavior of concrete material. The structural response under large excitation can barely be predicted without considering these two characteristics. Brilliant works have been done for decades in the material science and computational stochastic mechanics. However, the existed numerical methods are usually parameter dependent and the key mechanical properties of concrete material are determined by empirical recognition. Therefore, in this paper, a data-driven multi-scale constitutive model is proposed for representing the mechanical behavior of concrete material based on the polynomial chaos expansion and stochastic damage model. Several groups of compressive stress–strain data of concrete material are applied to train the proposed model. By cross validation of the prediction and the concrete stress–strain experimental data, the proposed model is firstly verified to have a robust performance to gain accurate prediction results. Afterwards, the proposed method is compared with a neural network method, the results shows that the proposed method is more robust and accurate than the neural network method.
Data-Driven Modeling
Surrogate model methods are widely used in structural reliability assessment, but conventional sampling methods require a large number of experimental points to construct a surrogate model. Inspired by the learning process of the AlphaGo, which is essentially optimization of sampling, we proposed a deep reinforcement learning (DRL)-based sampling method for structural reliability assessment. First, the sampling space and the existing samples are transformed into an array that is treated as the state in DRL. Second, a deep neural network is designed as the agent to observe the sampling space and select new experimental points, which are treated as actions. Finally, a reward function is proposed to guide the deep neural network to select experimental points along the limit state surface. Two numerical examples including a benchmark problem are employed to illustrate the sampling ability of the proposed …