Screen Printed Piezoelectric Transducers for Structural Health Monitoring of Curved Thick Composite Panels
Communication sans acte
Date
2025Résumé
This research focuses on the development and experimental validation of a novel printed
piezoelectric transducers network employed on a foreign object damage panel substructure
of an aircraft engine fan blade. The main goal of the work is to leverage the screen printing
technology to fabricate arrays of piezoelectric transducers and ultimately employ these trans-
ducers for operations, enabling the development of structural health monitoring methods for
the panel. The printed transducer is made up of a piezoelectric layer sandwiched between
two silver electrodes, each printed in a controlled manner. Upon printing and drying of the layers, the transducers undergo polarization. The electromechanical behaviour of the printed transducers, characterized using impedance measurements, exhibits high repeatability, thus indicating its potential for large scale industrial deployment. Following this, it is demon-strated that the transducers are capable of accurately sensing impact, which is one the mostcommon yet critical sources of damage to an engine fan blade. It is also shown that the printed transducers are able to detect acoustic emission events. The ability of the printed transducers to actuate and sense guided wave signals over a range of ultrasonic frequencies is also demonstrated. Furthermore, apart from the noticeable advantages of the non-intrusive nature, and negligible weight as compared to their traditional ceramic counterparts, the printed piezoelectric transducers can potentially be integrated into the manufacturing process in the future, and the presence of transducer arrays ensures the availability of other transducers in case of an individual failure during service. This innovative printing technol-ogy for PZT transducer networks thus holds significant promise in bridging the gap between research advancements and the industrial implementation of SHM technology.
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Communication sans acte
RÉBILLAT, Marc;
PAUNIKAR, Shweta; GALANOPOULOS, George; WIRTH, Ingo;
MONTEIRO, Eric; ZAROUCHAS, Dimitri;
MECHBAL, Nazih (2025-04)
This research focuses on the development and experimental validation of a novel printed piezoelectric transducers network employed on a foreign object damage panel substructure of an aircraft engine fan blade. The main ... -
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
PAUNIKAR, Shweta;
GALANOPOULOS, GEORGIOS;
RÉBILLAT, Marc;
WIRTH, Ingo;
MONTEIRO, Eric;
MARGERIT, Pierre;
MECHBAL, Nazih (NDT.net GmbH & Co. KG, 2024-07)
The work presented here focuses on the structural health monitoring (SHM) of a foreign object damage (FOD) composite panel equipped with an innovative printed piezoelectric transducer network. The 3D woven composite FOD ... -
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
RODRIGUEZ, Sebastian;
RÉBILLAT, Marc;
PAUNIKAR, Shweta;
MARGERIT, Pierre;
MONTEIRO, Eric;
CHINESTA SORIA, Francisco;
MECHBAL, Nazih (Elsevier BV, 2025-06)
Lamb Waves (LW) based Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) aims to monitor the health state of thin structures. An Initial Wave Packet (IWP) is sent in the structure and interacts with boundaries, discontinuities, and with ... -
Communication sans acteStructural Health Monitoring (SHM) has been gaining increased attention over the past decades as an important step towards Condition Based Maintenance (CBM). Measurements from the SHM systems provide the necessary information ...
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Communication sans acteYUE, Nan; BROER, Agnes; GALANOPOULOS, Georgios;
BRIAND, William;
RÉBILLAT, Marc;
LOUTAS, Theodoros;
ZAROUCHAS, Dimitrios (CBM Academy, 2022-05)
In the pursue of smart structures for cyber-physical health management of lightweight engineering structures, a number of structural health monitoring methods have been developed. Each SHM technique has different coverage ...
