Application of carbon-powder-polymer composite as a continuous crack-length sensor
Abstract
This paper explores the application of carbon-powder-impregnated polymeric composites for measuring crack extensions. The strain sensitivity of the gage material is shown to be very small. In the first series of tests, the gage material is characterized by measuring the change in electrical resistance due to machined slits for various gage lengths. The measured responses is compared with the response predicted from a very simple electrical model. On the basis of good correlation and repeatability, the usefulness of such gages to measure crack extensions is assessed by a second series of tests. Further work to improve the gage response by optimizing the shape of the gage and making the gage and the adhesive layer thinner is proposed. The presented concept, with improvements, can result in a reliable, inexpensive crack gage requiring inexpensive instrumentation.
- Publication:
-
Experimental Mechanics
- Pub Date:
- December 1990
- Bibcode:
- 1990ExM....30..332P
- Keywords:
-
- Carbon;
- Crack Propagation;
- Particulates;
- Polymer Matrix Composites;
- Surface Cracks;
- Elastic Properties;
- Electrical Resistance;
- Failure Analysis;
- Instrumentation and Photography