Abstract
In this paper, a phase unwrapping-based local wavenumber imaging method is proposed for delamination detection in the composite plate. Local wavenumber imaging has shown significant advantages in damage localization and quantification. However, a dense of spatial measurements and a high requirement of sampling intervals are crucial for conventional spatial Fourier transform methods. To address these challenges, a phase unwrapping method adopting low-sampled wavefields for local wavenumber estimation is proposed for damage imaging. Specifically, the wavefield sampling process can divide the detection area into various grids while making each grid consist of four neighbor measurements. Under the far-field assumption, the wave path distances of grid measurements can be approximately obtained by projecting their real distances along the wave vector direction. Meanwhile, by revealing the phase differences of grid measurement pairs with the low-sampled wavefield data, the frequency-related wavenumbers are estimated subsequently. Hence, the local wavenumber can be recovered robustly by averaging the estimated wavenumbers from all measurement pairs in the grid. On this basis, the structural damage can be geometrically imaged and quantitatively evaluated. Both the simulation study and the experimental investigation have shown the efficiency of the phase unwrapping-based method for local wavenumber imaging, which demonstrates the strong capability of damage localization and quantification in composite structures with low-sampled wavefield.
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