Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring

The goal of this work is to investigate the piezoelectricity of composite laminates embedded with layers of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires. ZnO nanowire embedded composites have the potential to sense and actuate giving the potential for these smart composites to serve the function of being load bearing...

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Main Author: Offenberger, Sean Alan
Other Authors: Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/82502
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-825022020-11-26T05:30:53Z Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring Offenberger, Sean Alan Aerospace and Ocean Engineering Philen, Michael K. Patil, Mayuresh J. Seidel, Gary D. Smart Materials Piezoelectrics Zinc Oxide Nanowires Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring The goal of this work is to investigate the piezoelectricity of composite laminates embedded with layers of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires. ZnO nanowire embedded composites have the potential to sense and actuate giving the potential for these smart composites to serve the function of being load bearing structures and monitoring the integrity of the structure. This work examines the piezoelectric characteristics of composite beams by investigating their electromechanical coupling in the form of vibration under the presence of electrical excitation. With the help of a mathematical model, piezoelectric constants are estimated for these samples. A layer of ZnO nanowires were grown on plane woven fiberglass fabric that was incorporated into a carbon fiber epoxy composite. The beam deflection velocity was measured as a varying voltage was applied to the composite. Using Hamilton's Principle and Galerkin's method of weighted residuals, a mathematical model was derived to estimate piezoelectric constants for the composites from the experimental data. Piezoelectric properties were determined using vibrational testing and a mathematical model. Piezoelectric constants h31, g31, and d31 were estimated to be 9.138 E7 V/m, 6.092 E-4 Vm/N, and 2.46 E-14 respectively. To demonstrate the electromechanical coupling, ZnO nanowire composites were bonded to Al beams that were progressively damaged to determine if a change in electrical impedance could be observed to correspond to the change in structural impedance of the host beam. Changes in impedance were detected by a change in root mean squared deviation damage metric M. A significant correlation was shown between increasing damage in the host beam and an increase in damage metric M. Master of Science 2018-03-15T08:00:16Z 2018-03-15T08:00:16Z 2018-03-14 Thesis vt_gsexam:14613 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/82502 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Smart Materials
Piezoelectrics
Zinc Oxide Nanowires
Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring
spellingShingle Smart Materials
Piezoelectrics
Zinc Oxide Nanowires
Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring
Offenberger, Sean Alan
Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
description The goal of this work is to investigate the piezoelectricity of composite laminates embedded with layers of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanowires. ZnO nanowire embedded composites have the potential to sense and actuate giving the potential for these smart composites to serve the function of being load bearing structures and monitoring the integrity of the structure. This work examines the piezoelectric characteristics of composite beams by investigating their electromechanical coupling in the form of vibration under the presence of electrical excitation. With the help of a mathematical model, piezoelectric constants are estimated for these samples. A layer of ZnO nanowires were grown on plane woven fiberglass fabric that was incorporated into a carbon fiber epoxy composite. The beam deflection velocity was measured as a varying voltage was applied to the composite. Using Hamilton's Principle and Galerkin's method of weighted residuals, a mathematical model was derived to estimate piezoelectric constants for the composites from the experimental data. Piezoelectric properties were determined using vibrational testing and a mathematical model. Piezoelectric constants h31, g31, and d31 were estimated to be 9.138 E7 V/m, 6.092 E-4 Vm/N, and 2.46 E-14 respectively. To demonstrate the electromechanical coupling, ZnO nanowire composites were bonded to Al beams that were progressively damaged to determine if a change in electrical impedance could be observed to correspond to the change in structural impedance of the host beam. Changes in impedance were detected by a change in root mean squared deviation damage metric M. A significant correlation was shown between increasing damage in the host beam and an increase in damage metric M. === Master of Science
author2 Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
author_facet Aerospace and Ocean Engineering
Offenberger, Sean Alan
author Offenberger, Sean Alan
author_sort Offenberger, Sean Alan
title Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
title_short Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
title_full Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
title_fullStr Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Zinc Oxide Nanowires for Impedance Based Structural Health Monitoring
title_sort investigation of zinc oxide nanowires for impedance based structural health monitoring
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/82502
work_keys_str_mv AT offenbergerseanalan investigationofzincoxidenanowiresforimpedancebasedstructuralhealthmonitoring
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