Sensors (Mar 2020)

Large-Area Resistive Strain Sensing Sheet for Structural Health Monitoring

  • Levent E. Aygun,
  • Vivek Kumar,
  • Campbell Weaver,
  • Matthew Gerber,
  • Sigurd Wagner,
  • Naveen Verma,
  • Branko Glisic,
  • James C. Sturm

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s20051386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 5
p. 1386

Abstract

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Damage significantly influences response of a strain sensor only if it occurs in the proximity of the sensor. Thus, two-dimensional (2D) sensing sheets covering large areas offer reliable early-stage damage detection for structural health monitoring (SHM) applications. This paper presents a scalable sensing sheet design consisting of a dense array of thin-film resistive strain sensors. The sensing sheet is fabricated using flexible printed circuit board (Flex-PCB) manufacturing process which enables low-cost and high-volume sensors that can cover large areas. The lab tests on an aluminum beam showed the sheet has a gauge factor of 2.1 and has a low drift of 1.5 μ ϵ / d a y . The field test on a pedestrian bridge showed the sheet is sensitive enough to track strain induced by the bridge’s temperature variations. The strain measured by the sheet had a root-mean-square (RMS) error of 7 μ ϵ r m s compared to a reference strain on the surface, extrapolated from fiber-optic sensors embedded within the bridge structure. The field tests on an existing crack showed that the sensing sheet can track the early-stage damage growth, where it sensed 600 μ ϵ peak strain, whereas the nearby sensors on a damage-free surface did not observe significant strain change.

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