Detection of Incipient Thermal Damage in Polymer Matrix Composites (Preprint)
Abstract
Polymer matrix composite mechanical properties have been shown to decrease significantly with the presence of thermal damage. For aerospace applications, this type of damage typically occurs as a result of exposure to elevated temperatures from localized heating, such as lightning strikes, exhaust wash, or improper maintenance/repair procedures. Mechanical testing has shown that this type of damage, known as incipient damage, is present even when no visible damage is observable and can cause significant reduction in mechanical properties. Incipient damage is not currently readily detected with conventional nondestructive evaluation (NDE) tools. This presentation describes a NDE method that combines mechanical excitation with thermal imaging to detect the presence of surface and through-the-thickness incipient thermal damage without direct contact to the part being tested. It compares the results from samples with and without known damage using the thermo-elastic technique with similar inspection results from conventional NDE techniques, such as ultrasonic C-scan and thermography. These results indicate the thermo-elastic method identifies incipient damage that the other techniques fail to detect. In addition, an approach to analyze the thermo-elastic data to potentially determine the severity of the thermal damage is reviewed.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Dec 01, 2006
- Accession Number
- ADA476878
Entities
People
- Eric Lindgren
- Erik Ripberger
- John Welter
- Shamachary Sathish
Organizations
- Air Force Research Laboratory