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Fibre Optic Sensors for Structural Health Monitoring of Aircraft Composite Structures: Recent Advances and Applications

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 18666-18713

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s150818666

Keywords

fibre optic sensors; fibre Bragg gratings; Brillouin scattering; Rayleigh scattering; lamb waves; structural health monitoring; composite materials; smart structures; aerospace; aircraft

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In-service structural health monitoring of composite aircraft structures plays a key role in the assessment of their performance and integrity. In recent years, Fibre Optic Sensors (FOS) have proved to be a potentially excellent technique for real-time in-situ monitoring of these structures due to their numerous advantages, such as immunity to electromagnetic interference, small size, light weight, durability, and high bandwidth, which allows a great number of sensors to operate in the same system, and the possibility to be integrated within the material. However, more effort is still needed to bring the technology to a fully mature readiness level. In this paper, recent research and applications in structural health monitoring of composite aircraft structures using FOS have been critically reviewed, considering both the multi-point and distributed sensing techniques.

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