Scientific Bulletin of the Politehnica University of Timisoara Transactions on Mechanics Special Issue The 11 th International Conference on Vibration Engineering Timisoara, Romania, September 27-3, 25 EMBEDDED NON-DESTRUCTIVE EVALUATION FOR DAMAGE DETECTION USING PIEZOELECTRIC WAFER ACTIVE SENSORS Adrian Cuc University of South Carolina, USA Tel.:+1-83-777-619, Fax:+1-83-777-16, Email: aicuc@engr.sc.edu Victor Giurgiutiu University of South Carolina, USA Tel.:+1-83-777-718, Fax: +1-83-777-16, Email: victorg@sc.edu ABSTRACT Lamb wave methods have considerable potential for the inspection of metallic structures for two reasons: they do not require direct access to the bond region, and they are much more amenable to rapid scanning than are compression wave techniques. The paper will present a new approach to the nondestructive evaluation of metallic structures using small, unobtrusive piezoelectric active sensors permanently affixed on the surface of the structure. KEYWORDS: Disbond, Lamb waves, NDE,, Ultrasonic. 1 INTRODUCTION Structural health monitoring (SHM) is an emerging field with multiple applications. Many aerospace and civil infrastructure systems are at or beyond their design life; however, it is envisioned that they will remain in service for an extended period. SHM is one of the enabling technologies that will make this possible. Another potential SHM application is in new systems. By embedding SHM sensors and sensory systems into a new structure, the design paradigm can be changed and considerable savings in weight, size, and cost can be achieved. There are many ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation (NDE), non-destructive inspection (NDI), and nondestructive testing (NDT) techniques for identifying local damage and detect flaws in metallic structures. Ultrasonic NDE methods rely on elastic wave propagation and reflection within the material. They try to identify the wave field disturbances due to local damage and flaws. Ultrasonic testing involves one or more of the following measurements: time of flight (TOF; wave transit or delay), path length, frequency, phase angle, amplitude, impedance, and angle of wave deflection (reflection and refraction). Conventional ultrasonic methods include the pulseecho, the pitch-catch (or pulse-transmission), and the pulse-resonance techniques. This paper will investigate the possibility of using embedded ultrasonic non-destructive evaluation and the opportunity for developing embedded structural health monitoring. SHM determines the health of a structure by readings an array of sensors that are embedded (permanently attached) into the structure and monitored over time. SHM can be either passive or active. Passive SHM infers the state of the structure using passive sensors that are monitored over time and fed into a structural model. Active SHM uses active sensors that interrogate the structure to detect the presence of damage, and to estimate its extent and intensity. One active SHM method employs piezoelectric wafer active sensors (), which send and receive ultrasonic Lamb waves and determine the presence of cracks, delaminations, disbonds, and corrosion. Two approaches are being considered: ( traveling waves; and ( standing waves. 2 DETECTION STRATEGIES Piezoelectric wafer active sensors () are small, non-intrusive, and inexpensive piezoelectric wafers that are intimately affixed to the structure and can actively interrogating the structure. Piezoelectric active wafer sensors are non-resonant devices with wide band capabilities. They can be
wired into sensor arrays that are connected to data concentrators and wireless communicators. Piezoelectric wafer active sensors have captured the interest of academia and industry due to their low cost and non-intrusive nature. 2.1 Wave propagation methods with Ultrasonic methods rely on elastic wave propagation and reflection within the material, and identify the field inhomogeneities due to local damage and flaws. Ultrasonic testing involves one or more of the following measurements: time of wave transit (or delay), path length, frequency, phase angle, amplitude, impedance, and angle of wave deflection (reflection and refraction). 2.1.1 Pitch-catch method The pitch-catch method can be used to detect structural changes that take place between a transmitter transducer and a receiver transducer. The detection is performed through the examination of the guided wave amplitude, phase, dispersion, and time of flight in comparison with a pristine situation. Guided wave modes that are strongly influenced by small changes in the material stiffness and thickness (such as the A Lamb wave) are well suited for this method. Typical applications include: ( corrosion detection in metallic structures; ( diffused damage in composites; (c) disbond detection in adhesive joints; (d) delamination detection in layered composites, etc. Pitch-catch method can also be used to detect the presence of cracks from the wave signal diffracted by the crack. Transmitter (Wave Exciter) V1 Lamb waves Damaged region Receiver (Wave Detector) V2 Figure 1 Embedded ultrasonics damage detection: pitch-catch method The pitch-catch method detects damage from the changes that Lamb waves undergo when traveling through a damaged region. The method uses the transducers in pairs, one as transmitter, the other as receiver. In the embedded pitch-catch method (Figure 1), the transducers are either permanently attached to the structure or inserted between the layers of composite layup. 2.1.2 Pulse-echo method In conventional NDE, the pulse echo method has traditionally been used for through-the-thickness testing. For large area inspection, through-thethickness testing requires manual or mechanical moving of the transducer over the area of interest, which is labor intensive and time consuming. It seems apparent that guided-wave pulse echo seems more appropriate, since wide coverage could be achieved from a single location. For crack-detection with the pulse-echo method, an appropriate Lambwave mode must be selected. Giurgiutiu et al (23) used finite element simulation to show that the S Lamb waves can give much better reflections from through-the-thickness cracks than the A Lamb waves. This effect can be attributed to S being: ( better reflected from the crack; and ( much less dispersive. The first fact gives a strong signal, while the second ensures that the wave packet is compact and easy to interpret Transmitter-Receiver Crack Figure 2 Embedded ultrasonics damage detection: pulse-echo method The use of Lamb-wave pulse echo methods with embedded follows the general principles of conventional Lamb-wave NDE. A transducer attached to the structure acts as both transmitter and detector of acoustic guided waves traveling in the structure. The wave sent by the is partially reflected at the crack. The echo is captured at the same acting as receiver (Figure 2). For the method to be successful, it is important that a lowdispersion Lamb wave is used. The selection of such a wave, e.g., the S mode, is achieved through the Lamb-wave tuning methods. 2.2 Standing wave methods with The impedance method is a damage detection technique complementary to the wave propagation techniques. The mechanical impedance method consists of exciting vibrations of bonded plates using a specialized transducer that simultaneously measures the applied normal force and the induced velocity. The electro-mechanical (E/M) impedance method is an emerging technology that offers distinctive advantage over the mechanical impedance method. While the mechanical impedance method uses normal force excitation, the E/M impedance method uses in-plane strain. The mechanical impedance transducer measures mechanical quantities (force and velocity/acceleration) to indirectly calculate the mechanical impedance, while the E/M impedance active sensor measures the E/M impedance directly
as an electrical quantity. The principles of the E/M impedance technique are illustrated in Figure 3: F(t) k e (ω) vt () = Vsin( ωt) transducer it () = Isin( ωt+ φ ) ut ( ) m e (ω) c e (ω) Figure 3 Embedded ultrasonics damage detection: electro-mechanical impedance method The effect of a piezoelectric wafer active sensor affixed to the structure is to apply a local strain parallel to the surface that creates stationary elastic waves in the structure. Through the mechanical coupling between the and the host structure, on one hand, and through the electro-mechanical transduction inside the, on the other hand, the drive-point structural impedance is directly reflected into the effective electrical impedance as seen at the active sensor terminals. The apparent electro-mechanical impedance of the piezoelectric active sensor as coupled to the host structure is: specimen was instrumented with an array of sensors as presented in Figure 4. C B A array 1. 11 Aluminum Bond line Aluminum Figure 4 Location of the on the lap-joint specimen To prove successful transmission and reception of Lamb waves, the pitch-catch method was used. The instrumentation set-up is shown in Figure 5. An HP 3321 signal generator was used to produce a 3- count sinusoidal tone burst with a frequency of 39 khz. HP 3312 Tektronix TDS21 Digital Oscilloscope Lap-joint specimnen Z ( ω) = iωc 1 κ 2 31 Zstr ( ω) Z ( ω) +Zstr ( ω) 1 where Z( ω) is the equivalent electromechanical admittance as seen at the terminals, C is the zero-load capacitance of the, κ 31 is the electromechanical cross coupling coefficient of the ( κ31 = d13 / s11ε33 ), Z str is the impedance of the structure, and Z is the impedance of the. HP 3312 Tektronix TDS21 Digital Oscilloscope GPIB Computer 3 EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS The paper will address three cases: first an aluminum lap-joint specimen was fabricated, instrumented and tested second, a helicopter blade was instrumented and tested and third spacecraft panels were instrumented and analyzed for different types of flaws. In the first two cases the purpose was to successfully send and receive guided waves (Lamb waves) through adhesively bonded materials. 3.1 Lap-joint specimen An aluminum lap-joint specimen was fabricated using two aluminum 224T3 stripes as shown in Figure 4. The overlap of the two aluminum stripes is 2mm. The disbonds were artificially created using Mylar polyester film that was introduced between the two aluminum stripes and produced a discontinuity of the adhesive layer. Next, the Figure 5 Schematic of the instrumentation set-up The results shown in Figure 6 clearly demonstrate the capability of our to send and receive Lamb waves in the aluminum material itself and along the bond line. Figure 7 presents the attenuation of the Lamb waves traveling in the aluminum layer only and along the bond line.
4a-5a 4a-6a 4a-7a s_13khz 4a_5a 4a_6a 4a_7a and the third row are mounted along the bond line (Figure 8) while the sensors on the second row are mounted on the skin of the blade. The instrumentation setup consists of an HP 3312 signal generator to generate the excitation signal, a Tektronix TDS21 digital oscilloscope to collect the signal from the, and a computer to store and analyze the signal. Computer Tektronix TDS21 Digital ocilloscope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 4b-5b s_13khz 4b_5b 4b_6a 4b 4b-6b 4b-7b 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Figure 6 Traveling S mode Lamb waves: ( single layer; ( along the bond line The energy of the signal traveling along the bond line is less than the energy of the signal traveling outside the bond line, thus the signal is weaker, the adhesive layer absorbing part of the energy of the transmitted wave. Amplitude (mv) S Lamb mode.2 Aluminum Bond.18 Expon. (Aluminum.16 Outside bond line Expon. (Bond).14.12.1 y =.3413e -.66x R 2 =.9841.8.6 Bond line.4 y =.1643e -.56x.2 R 2 =.986 1 2 3 4 Distance (mm) Figure 7 Attenuation of the S Lamb wave mode 3.2 Helicopter blade A helicopter main rotor blade was instrumented with an array of sensors as shown in Figure 8. The array consists of 15 sensors disposed in five columns and three rows. The sensors on the first HP 3312 2 3 HP 3312 Tektronix TDS21 Digital oscilloscope A B C D E 1 Emitter Receiver Blade Leading edge Blade Trailing edge AH-64 Main rotor blade GPIB Computer Figure 8 ( Location of the on the helicopter blade; ( schematic of the instrumentation setup The capability of successfully sending Lamb waves from one sensor and receiving the signal one the other sensors was investigated. A schematic of the instrumentation setup is presented in Figure 8 along with the location of the sensors on the main rotor blade. Using the signal generator, a 3-count sinusoidal burst signal at a frequency of 33 khz was sent from sensor A1 and received at sensors B1 and C1 along the bond line, as shown in Figure 9a. Also the same signal was sent from sensor A1 to sensor B1, B2 and B3 across the bond line as shown in Figure 9b. The results clearly show the possibility of sending and receiving surface Lamb waves along and across the bond line of a helicopter blade.
Received signal (mv) Sensor B2 Sensor C2 2 4 6 8 1 3.3 Spacecraft panel specimens Two aluminum test panels were fabricated by NextGen Aeronautics, Inc (Figure 11). 3. A1-B1 A1-B2 A1-B3.19 Fastener, Csk (FS) A A 3. dia Received signal (mv) -5 5 1 15 Figure 9 Guided Lamb waves received at sensors located ( along; ( across the bond line The attenuation of the signals when traveling along the bond line is presented in Figure 1. From the two graphs presented it can be seen that the attenuation of the A mode is much less than the attenuation of the S mode (mv) Signal amplitude (mv) Signal amplitude 5 45 4 35 3 25 2 15 1 5 45 4 35 3 25 2 15 1 5 Bond line y = 19.849x -.9595 A Lamb wave mode Outside bond line y = 39.37x -.9245 1 2 3 4 Distance (x1mm) S Lamb wave mode Bond line y = 7.8539x -1.5562 Outside bond line y = 4.3x -.9863 1 2 3 4 Distance (x1mm) Figure 1 Attenuation of the ( A mode Lamb waves traveling along the bond line; ( S mode Lamb waves traveling along the bond line.125 Sect A-A 5:1.6 24. 23.5 Note: All dimensions in inches Figure 11 Structural panel design The stiffeners were bonded to the aluminum skin using a structural adhesive, Hysol EA 9394. Damages were artificially introduced in the two specimens including cracks (CK), corrosions (CR), disbonds (DB), and cracks under bolts (CB). The instrumentation set-up for Panel 1 is presented in Figure 12. Panel 1 Tektronix TDS 21 oscilloscope HP 3312 Figure 12 Instrumentation set-up: ( wave propagation; ( electromechanical impedance Panel 1 contains disbonds, cracks and corrosions. The disbonds are located between the stiffeners and the skin. They are of two types: partial disbonds DB1 and DB3, and through disbonds DB2 and DB4. The corrosions are simulated as machined areas. The four cracks presented are in the shape of a slit and are through cracks located on the skin of the panel. The results for the pulse-echo method used for damage detection of the disbonds located on the Panel 1 are presented in Figure 13.
Amplitude (mv) Amplitude (mv).4.3.2.1 -.1 -.2 -.3.4.3.2.1 -.1 -.2 -.3 s_11khz a8, a2, & a21 16 21 26 31 36 41 46 a7 Additional reflections s_11khz a21 a8 a2 16 21 26 31 36 41 46 a8 & a2 a7 a8 a2 Figure 13 Pulse-echo method: ( pristine data showing a good consistent response; ( received signal from the damaged area. Additional reflections due to the presence of damage The comparison of the signal received from the damage with the signals where there is no damage is presented in Figure 13 shows clear changes in the received signal (additional reflections) close to the damage. The presence of additional reflections is associated with echoes from the disbonded area. ReZ 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 a2 a1 a2 a3 a3 a1 15 2 25 3 35 4 45 5 55 6 65 7 Frequency (khz) Figure 14 EM Impedance method: resonant frequencies spectrum showing increased amplitude for the signal received at the sensor located on the top of disbond DB1 ( a2) The electromechanical impedance method was used to detect disbonds, cracks and corrosions. It can be seen in Figure 14 that the resonant spectrums of the signals from a1 and a3 located on an area with good bond are almost identical. The resonant spectrum from a2 located on the disbond DB1 is very different showing new strong resonant peaks associated with the presence of the disbond. 4 CONCLUSIONS The paper presented the general concept of embedded nondestructive evaluation for damage detection using piezoelectric wafer active sensors. Next we addressed the problem of sending and receiving Lamb waves in adhesively-bonded structures using embedded piezoelectric wafer active sensors (). Two cases have been considered: first, an aluminum lap-joint that was fabricated, instrumented and tested, and second a helicopter blade with bonded titanium C-sections that was instrumented and tested. Last, the results using wave propagation methods (pitch-catch and pulse-echo) and standing wave methods (electromechanical impedance) on realistic specimens were presented. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The financial support of NASA STTR program through Phase I topic T7-2 is gratefully acknowledged REFERENCES [1] Giurgiutiu, V.; Zagrai, A. (2) Characterization of piezoelectric wafer active sensors, Journal of Intelligent Material Systems and Structures, Vol. 11, pp. 959-976 [2] Giurgiutiu, V.; Zagrai, A. N.; Bao, J. (22) Piezoelectric Wafer Embedded Active Sensors for Aging Aircraft Structural Health Monitoring, Structural Health Monitoring An International Journal, Sage Pub., Vol. 1, No. 1, July 22, pp. 41-61 [3] Giurgiutiu, V.; Bao, J.; Zhao, W. (23) Piezoelectric-Wafer Active-Sensor Embedded Ultrasonics in Beams and Plates, Experimental Mechanics, Sage Pub., Vol. 43, No. 4, pp. 428-449 [4] Giurgiutiu, V.; Cuc, A. (25) Embedded NDE for Structural Health Monitoring, Damage Detection, and Failure Prevention, The Shock and Vibration Digest, Vol. 37, No. 2, pp. 83 15