Scalable and passive carbon nanotube thin-film sensor for detecting micro-strains and potential impact damage in fiber-reinforced composite materials

AbstractStructural health monitoring (SHM) of brittle structures will require versatile sensing instrumentation that can transmitting transient loadings into rapid electrical responses. This research investigated the sensing performance of CNT Buckypaper (CNT-BP) thin-films on stressed fiber-reinfor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joshua DeGraff, Pierre-Jean Cottinet, Minh-Quyen Cottinet, Tarik Dickens, Kunal Joshi, Marquese Pollard, Grace Johnson, Anghea Dolisca, Richard Liang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-12-01
Series:Nanocomposites
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/20550324.2023.2291625
Description
Summary:AbstractStructural health monitoring (SHM) of brittle structures will require versatile sensing instrumentation that can transmitting transient loadings into rapid electrical responses. This research investigated the sensing performance of CNT Buckypaper (CNT-BP) thin-films on stressed fiber-reinforced composites, which are integral materials to various industries of the infrastructure. Three-point bending experiments revealed an extraordinary gauge factor (∼40) and impressive response linearity. Electrical responses were instantaneous; moreover, low force impacts were detectable, the sensors provided clear indications of spatial recognition. Most importantly, the manufacturing methods are scalable and cost effective compared to commercialized strain gauges. This study examined micro-strain measurements (<1%) of carbon fiber composites, in which bending strain of 0.002% could be detected. In addition, damage progressions of glass fiber composites were recorded in response to low-impact energies. Less than 20 J of impact energy was detectable by the sensor, and the severity could be assessed from drastic changes in the sensing behavior.
ISSN:2055-0324
2055-0332