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Technical Paper

Dual Use IVHM for UAS Health Management

2013-09-17
2013-01-2202
UAS (Unmanned aircraft system), widely known to the general public as drones, are comprised of two major system elements: an Unmanned Aircraft (UA) and a Ground Control Station (GCS). UAS have a high mishap rate when compared to manned aircraft. This high mishap rate is one of several barriers to the acceptance of UAS for more widespread usage. Better awareness of the UA real time as well as long term health situation may allow timely condition based maintenance. Vehicle health and usage are two parts of the same solution to improve vehicle safety and lifecycle costs. These can be worked on through the use of two related aircraft management methods, these are: IVHM (Integrated Vehicle Health Management) which combines diagnosis and prognosis methods to help manage aircraft health and maintenance, and FOQA (Flight Operations Quality Assurance) systems which are mainly used to assist in pilot skill quality assurance.
Technical Paper

Discrimination Between Damaging and Non-Damaging Impact Events on Composite Structure using SHM Sensor Signal Analysis

2011-10-18
2011-01-2607
Impact events on composite structures that may cause damage can be readily detected and located using sensors that respond to the resulting impact stress waves as they propagate. This capability can be used as an alert to maintainers or operators who use the structures that an incident has occurred. However, for this capability to be truly useful it must include the capacity to determine automatically if the impact has caused damage. This will avoid the situation where a follow up inspection of the impact site reveals that no damage has been caused (no-fault found). This paper reports results from impact tests on glass and carbon composite, structural test specimens in which impact sensor data has been processed to reveal clear features that allow discrimination between damaging and non-damaging impacts.
Technical Paper

Demonstration of a Structural Damage Detection System in Fast Jet Flight Trials

2009-11-10
2009-01-3204
A structural damage detection system has been used to sense the propagation of cracks in a metallic flight test specimen on board a Hawk jet trainer. The work has demonstrated that the growth of structural cracks can be successfully and automatically detected on board a fast jet while flying unrestricted flight profiles. The experiment was part of a European collaborative defense program designed to demonstrate a number of diverse structural health monitoring technologies during flight in a military jet environment. This paper focuses on the performance of an acoustic emission detection system that was able to detect the growth of cracks in an alloy cantilever specimen bolted to a structural bulkhead in a pod suspended beneath the aircraft's left hand wing.
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