Abstract

Integration of the complementary fields of structural health monitoring in self-healing materials (SHM2) has the potential to transform the traditional engineering concepts of fail safe and damaged tolerant design. Structural health monitoring seeks to embed and automate sensing capabilities within structures to determine their state and to detect degradation or damage. Once degradation or damage is detected, additional decisions and potential action are required. Reducing operational envelopes can prevent further damage accumulation or catastrophic failure or repairs can be performed to correct the degradation. Typical repair requires active involvement of personnel and potentially down time. Self-healing materials seek to avoid maintenance needs and down time through the creation of structures and materials with an imbued capability to repair damage. Together SHM^ 2 has the potential to create a closed loop where damage is detected using embedded sensors and automated analysis that can then initiate self-healing. The highly structured and controlled nature of self-healing materials presents an opportunity to design structures that additionally support health monitoring capabilities. This paper presents recent research and results informing the design of shape memory alloy (SMA) fiber reinforced metal matrix composites (MMCs) to optimize self-healing capabilities and structural health monitoring (SHM^2). Fiber pull tests were performed to analyze the strength of the interface between the SMA fibers and matrix allowing for sizing to complement both composite design and healing capabilities. Analysis was performed to understand complex failure mechanisms occurring at the interface between detwinning shape memory alloys and the metal matrix. And novel composite design was performed to support both the self-healing and damage detection capabilities of the material structure.

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