Abstract

This study investigates and evaluates the technology of using plate waves to detect the locations and sizes of circular holes and cracks in plates. Piezoelectric ceramic discs surface-mounted on both sides of an aluminum alloy plate were used as narrow-frequency plate wave actuators and sensors, and the antisymmetric plate wave signal was analyzed by wavelet transform in the time-frequency domain. The damage location and frequency spectrum characteristics were identified by the wave through time-of-flight difference and signal analysis of the damage scattered wave group. The plate wave signal of the damaged plate included the scattered wave signal and the plate wave signal transmitted directly between the piezoelectric discs. Under ideal conditions, the plate wave signal indicating damage can be obtained by subtracting the plate wave signal in a plate without damage from the plate wave signal scattered from actuators to sensors. This study established an optimization program based on the simplex algorithm to inversely calculate the location of the plate damage. The developed damage location objective function has a unique global minimum value that can ensure the accuracy of the damage location calculation, and good results were obtained in experiments. The spectral characteristics of the scattered plate wave were related to the type, size, wave propagation path, and incident angle of the damage. Numerical analyses of scattered spectra for various damages are needed as references to compare with experimental results in the future.

Highlights

  • Piezoelectric materials have the advantages of light weight and small size, and they are easy to adhere to the surface of a structure or embed in the structure

  • An ultrasonic detection transducer is usually composed of piezoelectric materials that can greatly reduce the time and labor required for traditional testing of network communication technology

  • The present study explores the use of piezoelectric ceramic components attached to aluminum alloy plates as plate wave actuators and sensors to actively monitor aluminum alloy plates for circular hole damage and fatigue crack scattering wave identification analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Piezoelectric materials have the advantages of light weight and small size, and they are easy to adhere to the surface of a structure or embed in the structure. Roh [6] attached a PZT piezoelectric ceramic element to an aluminum alloy plate in 1998 to form a set of arrays as the transmitter and receiver of the flexural wave and used short-time Fourier transform to calculate the spectral characteristics of the scattered wave of the circular hole and estimate the location and size of the circular hole by the least square difference method. The present study explores the use of piezoelectric ceramic components attached to aluminum alloy plates as plate wave actuators and sensors to actively monitor aluminum alloy plates for circular hole damage and fatigue crack scattering wave identification analysis. The location of the circular hole was searched by the simplex algorithm [37]

Basic Theory
Phase Velocity of the Plate Wave
Experimental Architecture Setup
Measurement of Group Velocity
Spectra Characteristic of the Dispersion Plate Wave
Experimental Results and Discussion
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