Abstract

Crashworthiness has been and will continue to be the main concern in aircraft design. Crash tests are essential approaches to investigate the crashworthiness of civil aircraft. Videogrammetric methods have been employed in crash tests to overcome the disadvantages of laborious, time-consuming measurement data collection using contact sensors. However, previous methods using a single pair of cameras still face challenges in large-scale applications due to the inherent contradiction between measurement range and accuracy. In this paper, a videogrammetric method using four high-speed cameras is proposed to measure the full-field three-dimensional (3D) dynamic deformation for evaluating the impact response characteristics of the full-scale crash test aircraft. Increasing the number of high-speed cameras not only can enhance the resolution and then measurement accuracy of object, but also expands the measurement range significantly. To ensure the performance of digital image correlation (DIC) used for large-scale measurement range, a speckle pattern optimization design and fabrication method is presented to generate the random speckle with uniform spraying size and density. A global calibration method based on the high-precision total station is proposed to unify the data of different stereovision subsystems. The implementation of the proposed method is illustrated through a 6.0 m/s full-scale crash test using a civil aircraft approximately 24 m in length. The impact velocity, full-field displacement and strain of the fuselage structure are measured. The results show that the test data are complete and reliable. After the vertical crash at 5.71 m/s, the lower structure of the cabin floor is seriously deformed, and the upper structure of the fuselage in the central wing area is obviously deformed due to the inertia effect of the wing. The stiffness difference of the different fuselage segments results in significant differences in dynamic response. The higher the stiffness is, the smaller the deformation. This work may provide some valuable technical insights that could support the crashworthy design, verification, and certification of civil aircraft.

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