Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6479365 Composite Structures 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present work investigates the features of an active Infrared-NDT Thermography technique derived from a Flying Laser Spot set-up for the analysis of interlaminar disbonds in layered structures in general and Fibre Metal Laminates in particular. The presented technique uses a laser-spot heat source, which moves at a constant speed, raster scanning the object surface. Interlaminar defects parallel to the surfaces act as barriers towards through-the-thickness heat diffusion. This produces some modifications over the surface thermal field which are well identified in the Standard Deviation calculated over a Reference Area following the heat source. The mechanisms leading to such defect signature are investigated in this work by means of Finite Element Analyses which model the dynamic thermal problem on a GLARE sample with triangular disbond defects at inner interfaces. An extended number of parameters is changed to study their influence on the defect signature, and the FEA analysis is also compared to an analytical and an experimental case studies for further validation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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