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Presented at Forum 82 — the Vertical Flight Society's Annual Forum and Technology Display
Integrated Vehicle Health Management Technical Session
19 pages
Abstract:
Metal-elastomer bonded components can suffer from manufacturing defects such as porosity and bond-line voids. Nondestructive evaluation (NDE) methods can replace or supplement existing destructive tests; however, implementation can be challenging for manufacturers due to the initial equipment cost, time required per test, and imaging quality. These criteria were used to evaluate shearography, high-resolution ultrasound testing (UT), 2D projection X-ray, computed tomography (CT), and acoustic emission (AE) testing, culminating in trade studies for different sample part types. Experimental work was performed on three samples of varying geometries and sizes with seeded defects, applying feasible NDE methods to each. Shearography succeeded in detecting void defects and flow fronts. X-ray and CT failed to detect flaws in 2 out of 3 part types due to energy and time constraints. UT could not reliably detect defects in parts with complex geometries because of scatter. Acoustic emission reliably detected a seeded knit-line defect.
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