Novel Integrated Imaging Approaches for Damage Characterisation of Composite Materials and Structures

Find Similar History 32 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add Favourite

Title
Novel Integrated Imaging Approaches for Damage Characterisation of Composite Materials and Structures

CoPED ID
b8003ab0-473a-4f3e-8ebc-c67f8dac4528

Status
Closed

Funders

Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
May 31, 2017

End Date
Nov. 30, 2020

Description

More Like This


Fibre reinforced polymer (FRP) composite materials are widely used for aero, marine, transportation and energy structure applications. They exhibit high stiffness and strength relative to their weight, and excellent performance when subjected to fatigue loads. A significant drawback is understanding how damage evolves in the materials and the ability to assess if a component should be repaired or continue in service. The outcome is conservative design and unnecessary scrap at the manufacturing stage. Efforts have been made to better assess composite structures using a variety of non-destructive evaluation (NDE) techniques. However the industrially desired 'one stop shop' for inspection has remained elusive. The current industrially preferred technique in the aerospace and wind turbine sectors is ultrasound, and in the shipping sector simple tap tests are often used. The limitation of current techniques (such as ultrasound (UT)) is they cannot provide details on how damage or defects evolve and affect the service life of a component.
The PhD project aims at developing an idea known as 'Strain-based NDE'. Here full field imaging techniques are used to capture data that is directly related to the strain caused by the damage to provide prognostic information on the effect of damage. The system will enable decisions to be made on scrap/repair/continue in service. A focus is reducing the cost of such a system by replacing expensive IR detectors with low cost bolometers. A major challenge is the integration of the images collected by white light and infrared imaging.
It is well known that composite materials behave differently when they are constructed into a large structure of complex shape and subjected to multi-axial loading. The strain based NDE technique has been demonstrated on simple components so the purpose of this project is to examine actual structural components of complex geometry and characterise the material damage state in-situ.

Subjects by relevance
  1. Composites
  2. Materials testing
  3. Load
  4. Materials (matter)
  5. Reinforcements (material)
  6. Ships
  7. Ultrasound
  8. Endurance

Extracted key phrases
  1. Novel Integrated Imaging Approaches
  2. Damage Characterisation
  3. Material damage state
  4. Composite Materials
  5. Composite structure
  6. NDE technique
  7. Field imaging technique
  8. Current technique
  9. Energy structure application
  10. Shipping sector simple tap test
  11. Actual structural component
  12. Simple component
  13. Large structure
  14. Structures
  15. Wind turbine sector

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations