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Guided-wave structural health monitoring
Raghavan, Ajay
2007
Abstract: Guided-wave (GW) approaches have shown potential in various initial
laboratory demonstrations as a solution to structural health
monitoring (SHM) for damage prognosis. This thesis starts with an
introduction to and a detailed survey of this field. Some critical
areas where further research was required and those that were chosen
to be addressed herein are highlighted. Those were modeling, design
guidelines, signal processing and effects of elevated temperature.
Three-dimensional elasticity-based models for GW excitation and
sensing by finite dimensional surface-bonded piezoelectric wafer
transducers and anisotropic piezocomposites are developed for various
configurations in isotropic structures. The validity of these models
is extensively examined in numerical simulations and experiments.
These models and other ideas are then exploited to furnish a set of
design guidelines for the excitation signal and transducers in GW SHM
systems. A novel signal processing algorithm based on chirplet
matching pursuits and mode identification for pulse-echo GW SHM is
proposed. The potential of the algorithm to automatically resolve and
identify overlapping, multimodal reflections is discussed and explored
with numerical simulations and experiments. Next, the effects of
elevated temperature as expected in internal spacecraft structures on
GW transduction and propagation are explored based on data from the
literature incorporated into the developed models. Results from the
model are compared with experiments. The feasibility of damage
characterization at elevated temperatures is also investigated. An
extension of the modeling effort for GW excitation by
finite-dimensional piezoelectric wafer transducers to composite plates
is also proposed and verified by numerical simulations. At the end,
future directions for research to make this technology more easily
deployable in field applications are suggested.