scholarly journals An Approach to Acoustic Emission Technique Applications to Evaluate Damage Mechanisms in Composite Materials

2015 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 03009
Author(s):  
C.R. Rios-Soberanis
2011 ◽  
Vol 465 ◽  
pp. 535-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milad Hajikhani ◽  
Amir Refahi Oskouei ◽  
Mehdi Ahmadi Najaf Abadi ◽  
Amir Sharifi ◽  
Mohammad Heidari

Glass/polyester and glass/epoxy laminated composites widely used in structures and have very near properties. These composite laminates have poor inter-laminar fracture resistance and suffer extensive damage by delamination cracking when subjected to out of plane loading and hence are vulnerable to delamination. The presence of delamination in the composite material may reduce the overall stiffness. Structural design and nondestructive test techniques have evolved as increased emphasis has been placed on the durability and damage tolerance of these materials. There are several methods used to investigate damages of composite materials. Acoustic emission is one of these. In this work the effect of delamination propagation on acoustic emission (AE) events in glass/polyester and glass/epoxy composites is obtained also Fracture surface examinations were conducted using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) and results in these two common composites compared. Consequently, revealed that the AE technique is a practicable and effective tool for identifying and separating kinds of cracks in these composites.


2015 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 107-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navid Zarif Karimi ◽  
Giangiacomo Minak ◽  
Parnian Kianfar

2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 787-804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustapha Assarar ◽  
Mourad Bentahar ◽  
Abderrahim El Mahi ◽  
Rachid El Guerjouma

Author(s):  
Yan-Lei Liu ◽  
Wei-Zhong Li ◽  
Fu-Yong Xia ◽  
Bing Wang ◽  
Shu-Xin Han ◽  
...  

Tensile process of carbon fiber composite laminate was monitored by acoustic emission technique. And the acoustic emission signals by tensile specimens of different winding angles were analyzed. The results show that carbon fiber released signals of different characteristics in different stages. So, the acoustic emission technique can effectively distinguish the different stages such as delaminating, detaching and fracture. Also, different angles in specimen’s layers of carbon fiber had different mechanical properties and failure mechanisms. Analysis on experimental data showed that acoustic emission testing technique can determine the process of different internal activities in carbon fiber composite laminate. Therefore, it can be used in the integrity evaluation for carbon fiber composite materials.


Abstract. Composite materials are frequently used due to light weight and high stiffness. However, the use of composite materials is limited due to several micro-mechanical damage mechanisms, which are currently not well understood. Therefore, Acoustic Emission (AE) is frequently suggested for in-situ diagnosis of composite materials in Structural Health Monitoring. Elastic stress waves in the ultrasound regime are recorded using highly sensitive measurement equipment. Based on suitable analysis and interpretation of the waveform data, different micro-mechanical damage mechanisms such as delamination or fiber breakage can be distinguished. Frequently, data-driven approaches are suggested for classification of AE data. In literature, attenuation of AE due to wave propagation is currently the main limiting factor in AE-based diagnosis. In particular, AE is strongly attenuated in composite materials due to dispersion as dominant attenuation mechanism. Furthermore, depending on the source location, which is usually not known a-priori, different propagation paths are obtained in practice. Therefore, the effect of wave propagation on AE is important and can not be neglected to achieve reliable classification. However, the effect of different propagation paths on the classification performance is often not considered explicitly. Due to dependence of wave propagation behavior on waveform characteristics (e.g. frequency), it can be expected that the impact of wave propagation on AE classification performance depends also on the related source mechanism. Therefore, it is worth to study how classification performance of different source mechanisms is effected by wave propagation. In this paper, the dependence of the classification performance on different propagation distances is experimentally investigated in detail. To achieve highly reproducible AE measurements, different artificial AE sources are induced using surface mounted piezo elements. The corresponding waveforms are measured at two different locations. For classification, a convolutional neural network-based classification scheme is established. The pre-trained AlexNet architecture is fine-tuned using measurements obtained using different excitation signals. The classification performance is evaluated with particular focus on the impact of wave propagation. The variations in propagation distance have a strong impact on the classification performance. As main conclusion for AE-based SHM it can be stated that variations in the propagation path should be considered. Furthermore, the underlying source mechanisms should be taken into consideration for reliable performance estimation.


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