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Damage detection with the fundamental mode of edge waves.

Authors :
Hughes, James M
Mohabuth, Munawwar
Khanna, Aditya
Vidler, James
Kotousov, Andrei
Ng, Ching-Tai
Source :
Structural Health Monitoring; Jan2021, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p74-83, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Detection of mechanical damage using Lamb or Rayleigh waves is limited to relatively simple geometries, yet real structures often incorporate features such as free or clamped edges, welds, rivets, ribs and holes. All these features are potential sources of wave reflections and scattering, which make the application of these types of guided waves for damage detection difficult. However, these features can themselves generate so-called 'feature-guided' waves. This article details the first application of the fundamental mode of transient edge waves for detection of mechanical damage. The fundamental edge wave mode (ES<subscript>0</subscript>) – a natural analogue to Rayleigh waves – is weakly dispersive and may decay with propagation distance. The phase and group velocities of the ES<subscript>0</subscript> wave mode are close to the fundamental shear horizontal (SH<subscript>0</subscript>) and symmetric Lamb (S<subscript>0</subscript>) wave modes, at low and high frequencies, respectively. It is therefore quite challenging to excite a single ES<subscript>0</subscript> mode and avoid wave coupling. However, it was found experimentally that at medium range frequencies the ES<subscript>0</subscript> mode can be decoupled from SH<subscript>0</subscript> and S<subscript>0</subscript> modes, and its decay is small, allowing for distant detection of defects and damage along free edges of slender structural components. This article provides a brief theory of edge waves, excitation methodology and successful examples of distant detection of crack-like and corrosion damage in I-beam sections, which are widely applied in engineering and construction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14759217
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Structural Health Monitoring
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148137101
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1475921720920314