4.6 Article

Damage Localization in Composite Plates Using Wavelet Transform and 2-D Convolutional Neural Networks

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21175825

Keywords

ultrasonic guided waves; structural health monitoring; machine learning; convolutional neural networks; wavelet transform; damage imaging

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Nondestructive evaluation of carbon fiber reinforced material structures using Ultrasonic Guided Waves, particularly Lamb waves, has become popular for damage location due to their sensitivity to defects and good propagation in various materials. Extracting meaningful physical features from the response signals is challenging due to factors such as multimodal nature of UGW, boundary conditions, material anisotropies, and environmental dependency. Neural networks, specifically Convolutional Neural Networks, are practical and accurate in analyzing acquired data for predicting distance-to-damage values and locating damage with high precision.
Nondestructive evaluation of carbon fiber reinforced material structures has received special attention in the last decades. Usage of Ultrasonic Guided Waves (UGW), particularly Lamb waves, has become one of the most popular techniques for damage location, due to their sensitivity to defects, large range of inspection, and good propagation in several material types. However, extracting meaningful physical features from the response signals is challenging due to several factors, such as the multimodal nature of UGW, boundary conditions and the geometric shape of the structure, possible material anisotropies, and their environmental dependency. Neural networks (NN) are becoming a practical and accurate approach to analyzing the acquired data using data-driven methods. In this paper, a Convolutional-Neural-Network (CNN) is proposed to predict the distance-to-damage values from the signals corresponding to a transmitter-receiver path of transducers. The NN input is a 2D image (time-frequency) obtained as the Wavelet transform of the acquired experimental signals. The distances obtained with the NN are the input of a novel damage location algorithm which outputs a bidimensional image of the structure's surface showing the estimated damage locations with a deviation of the actual position lower than 15 mm.

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