Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
560500 Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Development of a fatigue crack detection technique using nonlinear ultrasonic modulation.•Damage diagnosis without any baseline data obtained from the intact condition.•Experimental validation using metallic specimens with real fatigue crack.•The robustness is demonstrated under various temperature and loading conditions.

This study presents a reference-free fatigue crack detection technique using nonlinear ultrasonic modulation. When low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) inputs generated by two surface-mounted lead zirconate titanate (PZT) transducers are applied to a structure, the presence of a fatigue crack can provide a mechanism for nonlinear ultrasonic modulation and create spectral sidebands around the frequency of the HF signal. The crack-induced spectral sidebands are isolated using a combination of linear response subtraction (LRS), synchronous demodulation (SD) and continuous wavelet transform (CWT) filtering. Then, a sequential outlier analysis is performed on the extracted sidebands to identify the crack presence without referring any baseline data obtained from the intact condition of the structure. Finally, the robustness of the proposed technique is demonstrated using actual test data obtained from simple aluminum plate and complex aircraft fitting-lug specimens under varying temperature and loading variations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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