Comparative analysis of gradient-boosting ensembles for estimation of compressive strength of quaternary blend concrete

Mustapha, Ismail B. and Abdulkareem, Muyideen and Jassam, Taha M. and AlAteah, Ali H. and Al-Sodani, Khaled A. Alawi and Al-Tholaia, Mohammed M. H. and Nabus, Hatem and Alih, Sophia C. and Abdulkareem, Zainab and Ganiyu, Abideen (2024) Comparative analysis of gradient-boosting ensembles for estimation of compressive strength of quaternary blend concrete. International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials, 18. 20. ISSN 2234-1315 (https://doi.org/10.1186/s40069-023-00653-w)

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Abstract

Concrete compressive strength is usually determined 28 days after casting via crushing of samples. However, the design strength may not be achieved after this time-consuming and tedious process. While the use of machine learning (ML) and other computational intelligence methods have become increasingly common in recent years, findings from pertinent literatures show that the gradient-boosting ensemble models mostly outperform comparative methods while also allowing interpretable model. Contrary to comparison with other model types that has dominated existing studies, this study centres on a comprehensive comparative analysis of the performance of four widely used gradient-boosting ensemble implementations [namely, gradient-boosting regressor, light gradient-boosting model (LightGBM), extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost), and CatBoost] for estimation of the compressive strength of quaternary blend concrete. Given components of cement, Blast Furnace Slag (GGBS), Fly Ash, water, superplasticizer, coarse aggregate, and fine aggregate in addition to the age of each concrete mixture as input features, the performance of each model based on R2, RMSE, MAPE and MAE across varying training–test ratios generally show a decreasing trend in model performance as test partition increases. Overall, the test results showed that CatBoost outperformed the other models with R2, RMSE, MAE and MAPE values of 0.9838, 2.0709, 1.5966 and 0.0629, respectively, with further statistical analysis showing the significance of these results. Although the age of each concrete mixture was found to be the most important input feature for all four boosting models, sensitivity analysis of each model shows that the compressive strength of the mixtures does increase significantly after 100 days. Finally, a comparison of the performance with results from different ML-based methods in pertinent literature further shows the superiority of CatBoost over reported the methods.