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Damage Precursor Assessment in Aerospace Structural Materials...

by Daniel Cole, Todd Henry, Ke An, Yan Chen, Robert Haynes
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Journal Name
ASME Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems
Publication Date
Page Number
7908
Volume
2018
Issue
2
Conference Name
ASME 2018 Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems
Conference Location
San Antonio, Texas, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
Aerospace Division
Conference Date
-

The focus of this study was to apply a robust inspection technique for monitoring damage nucleation and propagation in 7075 aluminum alloy specimens exposed to cyclic loading. A previously developed specimen, linearly tapered in width along the length, was subjected to a sinusoidal tension-tension load while conductivity and strain were measured in-situ. Ex-situ measurements of modulus, hardness, surface potential, digital image correlation strain field, and neutron diffraction were made as a function of fatigue cycles. It is hypothesized that varying levels of induced stress along the length due to equal-force but varying area along the length will create a record of damage which can be probed to intuit a temporal history for the specimen. Baseline, intermediate, and failure sensor measurements for several specimens were compared and analyzed as a function of applied stress (varied linearly along the length) and fatigue cycles (constant). Mechanisms of damage nucleation and propagation due to fatigue cycling are discussed with an emphasis on which inspection methods are most promising for improving structural durability and state monitoring.