Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites

Composites are known to have highly tunable properties to meet the requirements for a wide variety of applications. Most notably, they have been heavily utilised in aircrafts. Non-invasive and non-destructive testing (NDT) is required to monitor the structural health of such vehicles. Currently, wat...

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Main Author: Low, Jun Feng
Other Authors: Alex Yan Qingyu
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153047
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1530472023-03-04T15:46:14Z Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites Low, Jun Feng Alex Yan Qingyu School of Materials Science and Engineering Advanced Remanufacturing and Technology Centre AlexYan@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Materials Composites are known to have highly tunable properties to meet the requirements for a wide variety of applications. Most notably, they have been heavily utilised in aircrafts. Non-invasive and non-destructive testing (NDT) is required to monitor the structural health of such vehicles. Currently, water-jet coupled ultrasound testing is used for the non-destructive testing of aircraft. However, the use of water-jet NDT to inspect ¬honeycomb structures in aircrafts gives rise to a danger of water ingression that may induce degradation within the composites. Therefore, the implementation of a non-contact NDT technique for the purpose of aircraft inspection is desirable. One proposed solution is to replace the use of water with a less intrusive couplant that is still able to conform well to surfaces. The potential solution is Air-Coupled Ultrasound Testing (ACUT) which uses atmospheric air as the couplant for ultrasound investigation. The main problem in using air as a couplant is the high energy loss between interface of energy transfer. Ultrasound inspection uses the interaction of acoustic waves with defects to determine and locate defects. High energy loss with the use of air as a couplant, hinders the transfer of useful information in the acoustic waves required for defect detection. Recently, progress has been made in the development of air-coupled ultrasound transducers to allow acoustic waves, that contain useful information, to be received. There is good potential for the use of Air-Coupled Ultrasound Testing in inspection of aerospace composites. This report aims to evaluate the use of air-coupled guided wave for inspection of aerospace laminates and honeycomb-sandwich structures. A 2D simulation is used to predict the influence of delamination and disbond on air-coupled guided wave signals. Linear scans using air-coupled ultrasound transducers are performed respectively on a 2-ply laminate that contains a delamination defect and a honeycomb-sandwich structure that contains a subsurface disbond. Experimental data is compared to the simulation and some agreement was observed. The results show that the presence of defects changes the amplitude of the leaky guided waves detected by the receiver. While defects can be detected and located using air-coupled transducers, further investigation is required for curved and complex composites that are also used commonly in aerospace applications. Bachelor of Engineering (Materials Engineering) 2021-11-01T05:03:34Z 2021-11-01T05:03:34Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Low, J. F. (2021). Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153047 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153047 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Low, Jun Feng
Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
description Composites are known to have highly tunable properties to meet the requirements for a wide variety of applications. Most notably, they have been heavily utilised in aircrafts. Non-invasive and non-destructive testing (NDT) is required to monitor the structural health of such vehicles. Currently, water-jet coupled ultrasound testing is used for the non-destructive testing of aircraft. However, the use of water-jet NDT to inspect ¬honeycomb structures in aircrafts gives rise to a danger of water ingression that may induce degradation within the composites. Therefore, the implementation of a non-contact NDT technique for the purpose of aircraft inspection is desirable. One proposed solution is to replace the use of water with a less intrusive couplant that is still able to conform well to surfaces. The potential solution is Air-Coupled Ultrasound Testing (ACUT) which uses atmospheric air as the couplant for ultrasound investigation. The main problem in using air as a couplant is the high energy loss between interface of energy transfer. Ultrasound inspection uses the interaction of acoustic waves with defects to determine and locate defects. High energy loss with the use of air as a couplant, hinders the transfer of useful information in the acoustic waves required for defect detection. Recently, progress has been made in the development of air-coupled ultrasound transducers to allow acoustic waves, that contain useful information, to be received. There is good potential for the use of Air-Coupled Ultrasound Testing in inspection of aerospace composites. This report aims to evaluate the use of air-coupled guided wave for inspection of aerospace laminates and honeycomb-sandwich structures. A 2D simulation is used to predict the influence of delamination and disbond on air-coupled guided wave signals. Linear scans using air-coupled ultrasound transducers are performed respectively on a 2-ply laminate that contains a delamination defect and a honeycomb-sandwich structure that contains a subsurface disbond. Experimental data is compared to the simulation and some agreement was observed. The results show that the presence of defects changes the amplitude of the leaky guided waves detected by the receiver. While defects can be detected and located using air-coupled transducers, further investigation is required for curved and complex composites that are also used commonly in aerospace applications.
author2 Alex Yan Qingyu
author_facet Alex Yan Qingyu
Low, Jun Feng
format Final Year Project
author Low, Jun Feng
author_sort Low, Jun Feng
title Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
title_short Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
title_full Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
title_fullStr Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
title_full_unstemmed Air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
title_sort air-coupled guided wave inspection of aerospace composites
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153047
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