Abstract

In guided-wave-based damage-imaging algorithms, damage reconstruction typically involves comparing the signals with and without a defect. However, in many cases, defect-free data may not be available. Therefore, in this study, baseline and baseline-free approaches were used for damage imaging, exploiting not only the amplitude of the signal as the feature but also five additional features, namely, the amplitude of the sparse signal after deconvolution, the amplitude of the coefficients at the excitation frequency from the re-assigned short-time Fourier transform, the time of flight determined from cross-correlation, kurtosis in the time domain, and kurtosis in the frequency domain. For this study, three different plates with different types of defects were considered: a metallic plate with a notch-type artificial defect, a pultruded type of composite plate with an impact defect, and a laminate composite plate with plexiglass serving as an added mass damper artificial defect. The Reconstruction Algorithm for Probabilistic Inspection of Damage (the RAPID algorithm) was used to characterize the defects on the three plates, and the defect parameters were then quantified by creating an ellipse after thresholding.

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