Inspection and monitoring of wind turbine blade-embedded wave defects during fatigue testing
Autor(en): |
Christopher Niezrecki
Peter Avitabile Julie Chen James Sherwood Troy Lundstrom Bruce LeBlanc Scott Hughes Michael Desmond Alan Beattie Mark Rumsey Sandra M. Klute Renee Pedrazzani Rudy Werlink John Newman |
---|---|
Medium: | Fachartikel |
Sprache(n): | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht in: | Structural Health Monitoring, Mai 2014, n. 6, v. 13 |
Seite(n): | 629-643 |
DOI: | 10.1177/1475921714532995 |
Abstrakt: |
The research presented in this article focuses on a 9-m CX-100 wind turbine blade, designed by a team led by Sandia National Laboratories and manufactured by TPI Composites Inc. The key difference between the 9-m blade and baseline CX-100 blades is that this blade contains fabric wave defects of controlled geometry inserted at specified locations along the blade length. The defect blade was tested at the National Wind Technology Center at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory using a schedule of cycles at increasing load level until failure was detected. Researchers used digital image correlation, shearography, acoustic emission, fiber-optic strain sensing, thermal imaging, and piezoelectric sensing as structural health monitoring techniques. This article provides a comparison of the sensing results of these different structural health monitoring approaches to detect the defects and track the resultant damage from the initial fatigue cycle to final failure. |
- Über diese
Datenseite - Reference-ID
10561873 - Veröffentlicht am:
11.02.2021 - Geändert am:
19.02.2021