Applied Sciences (Feb 2019)

On the Nature of Pressure Wave Propagation through Ducts for Structural Health Monitoring Application

  • Zoé Jardon,
  • Michaël Hinderdael,
  • Tamas Regert,
  • Jeroen Van Beeck,
  • Patrick Guillaume

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app9050837
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
p. 837

Abstract

Read online

An effective structural health monitoring system fully exploits the flexibility offered by the 3D printing process by integrating a smart structural health monitoring technology inside the 3D-printed components. The system relies on the propagation of pressure waves with constant propagation speed through circular capillaries embedded in the structure. The nature of these waves seems to be determinant for the accuracy of the crack localization system. To achieve a better physical understanding of the nature of the propagating waves through the capillaries, computational fluid dynamics simulations are performed and compared to experimental results obtained with a self-built test setup. The presence of propagating shock waves is observed in the simulations and experiments, as well as a complex reflection mechanism around the leak location. Shock waves show the characteristic of not propagating at a constant velocity. This property complicates the actual localization system. To solve this, the constant velocity assumption should be replaced with the effective velocity evolution to increase the localization accuracy. The amplitude of the shock wave is attenuated with propagating distance, which proves that the effect of friction plays an important role and can, in turn, influence the localization system.

Keywords