Materials Map

Discover the materials research landscape. Find experts, partners, networks.

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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The Materials Map is still under development. In its current state, it is only based on one single data source and, thus, incomplete and contains duplicates. We are working on incorporating new open data sources like ORCID to improve the quality and the timeliness of our data. We will update Materials Map as soon as possible and kindly ask for your patience.

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in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

Topics

Publications (1/1 displayed)

  • 2013Compressive sensing with frequency warped compensation for damage detection in composite plate2citations

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Perelli, Alessandro
1 / 2 shared
Freear, Steven
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Harput, Sevan
1 / 2 shared
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2013

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  • Perelli, Alessandro
  • Freear, Steven
  • Harput, Sevan
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document

Compressive sensing with frequency warped compensation for damage detection in composite plate

  • Perelli, Alessandro
  • Freear, Steven
  • Harput, Sevan
  • Marchi, Luca De
Abstract

This work focuses on an ultrasonic guided wave structural health monitoring (SHM) system development for composite plate inspection. The development of an in situ health monitoring system that can inspect large areas and communicate remotely to the inspector is highly computational demanding due to both the huge number of piezoelectric sensors needed and the high sampling frequency. To address this problem, a general approach for low rate sampling is developed. Compressive Sensing (CS) has emerged as a potentially viable technique for the efficient acquisition that exploits the sparse representation of dispersive ultrasonic guided waves in the frequency warped basis. The framework is applied to lower the sampling frequency and to enhance defect localization performances of Lamb wave inspection systems. As a result, an automatic detection procedure to locate defect-induced reflections was demonstrated and successfully tested on simulated Lamb waves propagating in a carbon fiber plate using PZFlex software. The proposed method is suitable for defect detection and can be easily implemented for real application to structural health monitoring.

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • Carbon
  • composite
  • defect
  • ultrasonic