Abstract

The increasing use of composite materials has led to a dramatic change in the definition of safety standards. In particular, composite structures may be subjected to internal damages caused by external impacts that may not be detected by classical inspection methods. Additional constraints related to energy requirements may also be considered in order to make the system autonomous and possibly self-powered. The purpose of this paper is to present a low-cost impact detection and quantification scheme for thin plates or shells giving the whole history of the structure solicitation. Based on the analysis of the energy that has flown over a monitored area through the use of the elastic Poynting vector (that relates the mechanical power density of travelling waves), it is shown that this global energy balance may be linked in a simple way to the voltage output of piezoelectric elements in open-circuit condition. From this estimation, it is therefore possible to detect if an impact occurred inside the monitored area (in this case, the global energy balance would be positive) as well as its associated energy. If the impact occurs out of the frame, the global energy (and thus the obtained estimator) would be negative because of energy dissipation caused by internal losses and almost null. Thanks to this energy flow approach, the system is also independent from the boundary conditions of the structure. Experimental measurements aiming at validating the theoretical predictions showed that the technique permits detecting the impact area (inside/outside the frame) as well as an accurate estimation of the impact energy if the latter occurred inside the frame, both on a steel plate (with different boundary conditions) and an anisotropic composite structure.

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