Title: AIAA General Meeting
1AIAA General Meeting
- 2006 Aerospace Undergraduate Summer Research
- Wednesday October 25, 2006
2Danny Lau
3Structural Health Monitoring
Professor Carlos E.S. Cesnik Mr. Ajay Raghavan
4Introduction
- Structural health monitoring (SHM) is an area of
active research in engineering. - Guided Wave (GW) testing with hand-held
transducers is most commonly used for offline
inspection.
5- There has been an emerging need for damage
prognosis system in aerospace industry after
several accidents. - For most aerospace structures, permanent
integration of SHM system is required to provide
instant health monitoring.
6Summer Research Overview
- MFC Experiment
- FEM Simulation
- Modeling Wave Propagation in Composite
- Autoclave Experiment Setup
7MFC Experiment
- Conformal anisotropic macro fiber composite (MFC)
transducers were tested on aluminum plate.
Figure 1 MFC experiment with amplifier
Figure 2 MFC on aluminum plate
8- The actuation voltage and the peak to peak sensor
response were collected . - The normalized sensor response for A0 and S0 mode
was plotted versus center frequency.
9Figure 3 Graph of sensor response versus center
frequency, A0 mode
10FEM Simulation
- Earlier GW modeling work done assumed uncoupled
dynamics between the transducer and underlying
substrate. - When the transducer thickness and stiffness were
comparable to the substrates, some deviation has
been found between the two results.
11- Analytical models incorporating the coupled
transducer-substrate dynamics can be complex. - Finite element method (FEM) simulations were run
in Abaqus v.6.5 to examine whether incorporating
transducer mass and stiffness might improve
correlation with experiment.
12Figure 4 Basic setting for FEM
13Figure 5 displacement of the sensor (S mode)
14Modeling Wave Propagation in Composite
- AS4/3501-6 Carbon-Carbon Composite
15- The Phase velocity and group velocity curves were
generated in Disperse 2.0 - The data was inputted in a Matlab code to plot
the Normal surface and Slowness surface at
different frequency.
16Figure 6 Normal surface (150 kHz, A0)
Figure 7 Normal surface (150 kHz, S0)
17Autoclave Experiment Setup
- To examine the effect of temperature on the GW
propagation in plates. - To test different epoxies and examine their
effects on transducer coupling. - An aluminum plate was used as testing media and
three different kinds of epoxies were used to
bond the actuators and sensors.
18Figure 8 Final setup of the experiment
19Conclusion
- Practice computational skills.
- Learn to use laboratory equipments.
- Gain some experiences in doing research project.
- I would like to thank the Aerospace department
for the funding and Professor Cesnik and Mr.
Raghavan for giving me valuable advise.
20Shareil Elia
21Diode Laser-Based Flight Test Instrumentation
for Scramjets
- Propulsion Turbulent Combustion Laboratory
Sponsoring Faculty Professor James F. Driscoll
Research Assistants Jeff Pederson Shareil Elia
Partners Air Force Office of Scientific
Research Southwest Sciences
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
22Outline
- Motivation
- Technological Background
- Description of Work
- Current overall Project Status
- Questions
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
23Motivations
- Combustion Control
- Inexpensive measurement of key species in
combustion exhaust - Diagnosis closed-loop control of combustion
process - Non-Intrusive Sensors
- Near-real-time measurement of the temperature of
reacting flows - Temperature Profile across combustor
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
24Advantages of Diode Laser Sensor System
- Relatively cheap
- Widely Available
- Fast response time
- Good sensitivity
- Rugged Tunable
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
25Molecular Atomic Spectroscopy
- Absorption spectrum is a characteristic of a
particular compound - Laser could be tuned to detect a given species
concentration - The engine operating condition could be
determined based on species concentration (i.e.
CH4, O2, CO2, CO and H2O)
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
26Beers Law of Absorption (Premixed Flat-Flame
Assumptions)
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
27Description of Work
- Calibrating the Sensor System
- Set up a variable-pressure premixed burner
- Simulate premixed burner
- Measure temperature using NO LIF (Laser Induced
Fluorescence) - Measure Species Concentration and Temperature
- Conducting Tests at Michigan Combustion
Wind-Tunnel - Integrate the sensor system to combustion wind
tunnel - Measure non-reacting cavity flows
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
28Hydrocarbon Fuel Combustion
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
29Computational Analysis
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
30Fuel-Board Operation
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
31CEA Simulations
- Will be used as a benchmark to verify the
accuracy of the detector system
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
32Experimental Setup
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
33(No Transcript)
34Project Progress Status
- Calibrating the Sensor System
- Set up a variable-pressure premixed burner
- Simulate premixed burner
- Measure temperature using NO LIF (Laser Induced
Fluorescence) - Measure Species Concentration and Temperature
- Conducting Tests at Michigan Combustion
Wind-Tunnel - Integrate the sensor system to combustion wind
tunnel - Measure non-reacting cavity flows
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
35Questions?
University of Michigan Department of Aerospace
Engineering
36Xing Tai, Loy
37Stalker 2006 Presentation
Finite element Modeling of Truss Core Panels
38Research is For Dummies
- An introduction into the sometime daunting world
of research
- General Approach
- Specific Problems Faced
39Normal Homework Problem
Analysis Synthesis
Problem
Solution
Right
GSI or Professor
Wrong (Feedback Loop)
Textbooks Course Notes
40Research Problem
?
Analysis Synthesis
Problem
Solution
Right ?
Wrong ?
?
41Iterative Process
?
Solution
Right ?
- Solve a simpler problem (one you already know
the answer to) - Change one variable keeping others constant
- Gain Insight into how the system behaves
- Documentation, Documentation Documentation!
Wrong ?
42Problem
43Problem
44Iterative Process
45Iterative Process
Limit Load of Non-Linear Beam Model
46Experimental Analysis
47Yeon Sik, Baik
48Summer Undergraduate Research Presentation
Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) Experiment to
Capture Laminar Separation Bubble (LSB) Yeon
Sik, Baik
49Overview
- Airfoil selection and manufacturing
- PIV instrumentation setup
- PIV pictures
- Wake data
- Boundary layer profile
50Airfoil Selection and Manufacturing
- Airfoil SD7003
- Low Re (50,000 100,000)
- Long separation region (0.2c 0.4c)
- Sufficient boundary layer height
51Airfoil Selection and Manufacturing (cont.)
- Manufactured using the CNC router
- Material used Balsa wood
- Dimensions 5.7 in. x 22 in.
52PIV Instrumentation Setup
53PIV Instrumentation Setup (cont.)
54PIV Pictures
55PIV Pictures
Magnification 8 px/mm
a 2
a 10
Magnification 33 px/mm
0.95c
0.2c
56Wake Data
- Wake velocity profile obtained 1.5c and 1.85c
downstream from the trailing edge - Cd 2?/c
- Cd values were relatively close to the XFOIL Cd
values
57Boundary Layer Profile
- Glare displacement too large
- Remove bad data points by calculating the maximum
glare displacement - Magnification used 33 px/mm
58Boundary Layer Profile (cont.)
5 m/s , a 4 , 33 px/mm
0.2c
0.4c
0.6c
0.95c
59Boundary Layer Profile (cont.)
10 m/s , a 4 , 33 px/mm
0.2c
0.4c
0.6c
0.95c
60Boundary Layer Profile (cont.)
61Conclusion
- Drag coefficient values calculated from PIV
instrumentation agreed with XFOIL data - Due to thick glare displacement, LSB could not be
captured - Boundary layer thickness comparison indicates
that the geometry of manufactured airfoil is
inaccurate (Leading edge Trailing edge) - Early separation and reattachment points
62Erik Komendera
63Magnetic Field MapperAutomated Data Acquisition
System
Erik Komendera 25 October 2006 Plasmadynamics And
Electric Propulsion Laboratory (PEPL)
NASA 173M V.1 Hall Thruster
64Reasoning
- Magnetic Field is important to know for
researching Hall thruster performance - Manual measurements are tedious and
time-consuming - Automated System can perform thousands of
measurements in two hours - Enables visualization of fine details and/or
anomalies - Better data, better research
65Hall Thrusters
- Radial B field
- Axial E field
- Hall Parameter W
- High W
- e- (rotational)
- Low W
- Xe (axial)
- THRUST
66Hall Thrusters
- Magnetic Field Provided By
- Inner Magnet Coil
- Outer Magnet Coil
- Trim Coil (enhances magnetic lens effect)
67Hall Thrusters
- Magnetic Lens helps increase efficiency
Linnell, J., Gallimore, A. Internal Plasma
Structure Measurements of a Hall Thruster Using
Plasma Lens Focusing
68Task
- Automatically create mesh of points based on a
few inputs - Move 3-Axis Probe along cylindrical axes to each
point - Measure B-field
- Save to a Tecplot data file
69Auxiliary Equipment
- LabVIEW VI
- Motion Controller
- Gaussmeter
- Computer
- NASA 173M V.1 Thruster
- Power Supplies
70One Sweep 2.5 hours 1512 data points - 7
planes - 6 x 36 per plane 4536
measurements Unprecedented Level of Visualization
Magnetic Field Magnitude B - Arbitrary View
71Data Acquisition
- NASA 173M V.1 Hall Thruster
- At 0, 15 90 degrees
- 6 radial positions, 36 depth positions
- Total 1512 data points
- Current settings ?
72Data vs. Theory
Magnetic Lens evident in Cases Without Trim Coil
(top), With Trim Coil (bottom)
73System Results
- Data to be analyzed and interpreted by the
researchers at PEPL - 52-page manual for System Operation
- Can be used with any Hall Thruster or magnetic
device - Can be adapted to measure other parameters such
as electric field (E). - Speeds up data acquisition so more time can be
spent analyzing
74Acknowledgements
- Undergraduate Award Committee
- Dr. Alec Gallimore - PEPL
- Bryan Reid PEPL Researcher
- Provided the task
- Structural assistance
- Jesse Linnell PEPL Researcher
- Thruster operational assistance
75AIAA this concludes our meeting
- 2006 Aerospace Undergraduate Summer Research
- Wednesday October 25, 2006
- Thanks for attending!