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Dive into the research topics where Kirk A. Rackow is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirk A. Rackow.


SPIE's 7th International Symposium on Smart Structures and Materials and 5th International Symposium on Nondestructive Evaluation and Health Monitoring of Aging Infrastructure, Newport Beach, CA (US), 03/05/2000--03/09/2000 | 2000

Active sensors for health monitoring of aging aerospace structures

Victor Giurgiutiu; James M. Redmond; Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow

A project to develop non-intrusive active sensors that can be applied on existing aging aerospace structures for monitoring the onset and progress of structural damage (fatigue cracks and corrosion) is presented. The state of the art in active sensors structural health monitoring and damage detection is reviewed. Methods based on (a) elastic wave propagation and (b) electro-mechanical (E/M) impedance technique are cited and briefly discussed. The instrumentation of these specimens with piezoelectric active sensors is illustrated. The main detection strategies (E/M impedance for local area detection and wave propagation for wide area interrogation) are discussed. The signal processing and damage interpretation algorithms are tuned to the specific structural interrogation method used. In the high frequency E/M impedance approach, pattern recognition methods are used to compare impedance signatures taken at various time intervals and to identify damage presence and progression from the change in these signatures. In the wave propagation approach, the acousto- ultrasonic methods identifying additional reflection generated from the damage site and changes in transmission velocity and phase are used. Both approaches benefit from the use of artificial intelligence neural networks algorithms that can extract damage features based on a learning process. Design and fabrication of a set of structural specimens representative of aging aerospace structures is presented. Three built-up specimens, (pristine, with cracks, and with corrosion damage) are used. The specimen instrumentation with active sensors fabricated at the University of South Carolina is illustrated. Preliminary results obtained with the E/M impedance method on pristine and cracked specimens are presented.


Archive | 2007

Development and validation of bonded composite doubler repairs for commercial aircraft.

Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow

Abstract A typical aircraft can experience over 2000 fatigue cycles (cabin pressurisations) and even greater flight hours in a single year. An unavoidable by-product of aircraft use is that crack, impact and corrosion flaws develop throughout the aircrafts skin and substructure elements. Economic barriers to the purchase of new aircraft have placed even greater demands on efficient and safe repair methods. The use of bonded composite doublers offers the airframe manufacturers and aircraft maintenance facilities a cost-effective method to safely extend the lives of their aircraft. Instead of riveting multiple steel or aluminium plates to facilitate an aircraft repair, it is now possible to bond a single Boron-Epoxy composite doubler to the damaged structure. The FAAs Airworthiness Assurance Center at Sandia National Labs (AANC), Boeing, and Federal Express completed a pilot programme to validate and introduce composite doubler repair technology to the U.S. commercial aircraft industry. This project focused on repair of DC-10 fuselage structure and its primary goal was to demonstrate routine use of this repair technology using niche applications that streamline the design-to-installation process. As composite doubler repairs gradually appear in the commercial aircraft arena, successful flight operation data is being accumulated. These commercial aircraft repairs are not only demonstrating the engineering and economic advantages of composite doubler technology, but they are also establishing the ability of commercial maintenance depots to safely adopt this repair technique. This report presents the array of engineering activities that were completed in order to make this technology available for widespread commercial aircraft use. Focused laboratory testing was conducted to compliment the field data and to address specific issues regarding damage tolerance and flaw growth in composite doubler repairs. Fatigue and strength tests were performed on a simulated wing repair using a substandard design and a flawed installation. In addition, the new sol–gel surface preparation technique was evaluated. Fatigue coupon tests produced sol–gel results that could be compared with a large performance database from conventional, riveted repairs. It was demonstrated that not only can composite doublers perform well in severe off-design conditions (low doubler stiffness and presence of defects in doubler installation) but that the sol–gel surface preparation technique is easier and quicker to carry out while still producing optimum bonding properties. Nondestructive inspection (NDI) methods were developed so that the potential for disbond and delamination growth could be monitored and crack growth mitigation could be quantified. The NDI methods were validated using full-scale test articles and the FedEx aircraft installations. It was demonstrated that specialised NDI techniques can detect flaws in composite doubler installations before they reach critical size. Probability of Detection studies were integrated into the FedEx training in order to quantify the ability of aircraft maintenance depots to properly monitor these repairs. In addition, Boeing Structural Repair and Nondestructive Testing Manuals were modified to include composite doubler repair and inspection procedures. This report presents the results from the FedEx Pilot Program that involved installation and surveillance of numerous repairs on operating aircraft. Results from critical NDI evaluations are reported in light of damage tolerance assessments for bonded composite doublers. This work has produced significant interest from airlines and aircraft manufacturers. The successful Pilot Program produced flight performance history to establish the durability of bonded composite patches as a permanent repair on commercial aircraft structures. This report discusses both the laboratory data and Pilot Program results from repair installations on operating aircraft to introduce composite doubler repairs into mainstream commercial aircraft use.


Archive | 2004

Development and utilization of composite honeycomb and solid laminate reference standards for aircraft inspections.

Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow

The FAAs Airworthiness Assurance NDI Validation Center, in conjunction with the Commercial Aircraft Composite Repair Committee, developed a set of composite reference standards to be used in NDT equipment calibration for accomplishment of damage assessment and post-repair inspection of all commercial aircraft composites. In this program, a series of NDI tests on a matrix of composite aircraft structures and prototype reference standards were completed in order to minimize the number of standards needed to carry out composite inspections on aircraft. Two tasks, related to composite laminates and non-metallic composite honeycomb configurations, were addressed. A suite of 64 honeycomb panels, representing the bounding conditions of honeycomb construction on aircraft, was inspected using a wide array of NDI techniques. An analysis of the resulting data determined the variables that play a key role in setting up NDT equipment. This has resulted in a set of minimum honeycomb NDI reference standards that include these key variables. A sequence of subsequent tests determined that this minimum honeycomb reference standard set is able to fully support inspections over the full range of honeycomb construction scenarios found on commercial aircraft. In the solid composite laminate arena, G11 Phenolic was identified as a good generic solid laminate reference standard material. Testing determined matches in key velocity and acoustic impedance properties, as well as, low attenuation relative to carbon laminates. Furthermore, comparisons of resonance testing response curves from the G11 Phenolic NDI reference standard was very similar to the resonance response curves measured on the existing carbon and fiberglass laminates. NDI data shows that this material should work for both pulse-echo (velocity-based) and resonance (acoustic impedance-based) inspections.


6th Annual International Symposium on NDE for Health Monitoring and Diagnostics | 2001

Assessing inspection sensitivity as it relates to damage tolerance in composite rotor hubs

Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow

Increasing niche applications, growing international markets, and the emergence of advanced rotorcraft technology are expected to greatly increase the population of helicopters over the next decade. In terms of fuselage fatigue, helicopters show similar trends as fixed-wing aircraft. The highly unsteady loads experienced by rotating wings not only directly affect components in the dynamic systems but are also transferred to the fixed airframe structure. Expanded use of rotorcraft has focused attention on the use of new materials and the optimization of maintenance practices. The FAAs Airworthiness Assurance Center (AANC) at Sandia National Labs has joined with Bell Helicopter andother agencies in the rotorcraft industry to evaluate nondestructive inspection (NDI) capabilities in light of the damage tolerance of assorted rotorcraft structure components. Currently, the programs emphasis is on composite rotor hubs. The rotorcraft industry is constantly evaluating new types of lightweight composite materials that not only enhance the safety and reliability of rotor components but also improve performance and extended operating life as well. Composite rotor hubs have led to the use of bearingless rotor systems that are less complex and require less maintenance than their predecessors. The test facility described in this paper allows the structural stability and damage tolerance of composite hubs to be evaluated using realistic flight load spectrums of centrifugal force and bending loads. NDI was integrated into the life-cycle fatigue tests in order to evaluate flaw detection sensitivity simultaneously wiht residual strength and general rotor hub peformance. This paper will describe the evolving use of damage tolerance analysis (DTA) to direct and improve rotorcraft maintenance along with the related use of nondestructive inspections to manage helicopter safety. OVeralll, the data from this project will provide information to improve the producibility, inspectability, serviceability, and cost effectively of rotorcraft components.


Archive | 2009

Ultrasonic probe deployment device for increased wave transmission and rapid area scan inspections

Joseph DiMambro; Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow; Ciji L. Nelson; Cameron J. Dasch; David Glenn Moore


Archive | 2008

Mountable eddy current sensor for in-situ remote detection of surface and sub-surface fatigue cracks

Esteban Yepez; Dennis P. Roach; Kirk A. Rackow; Waylon Anthony Delong


Archive | 2010

Innovative use of adhesive interface characteristics to nondestructively quantify the strength of bonded joints.

Dennis P. Roach; Randy L Duvall; Kirk A. Rackow


Archive | 2006

Rotating concave eddy current probe

Dennis P. Roach; Phil Walkington; Kirk A. Rackow; Ed Hohman


Ndt & E International | 2010

Development of SDT sensor based eddy current probe for detection of deep fatigue cracks in multi-layer structure

Buzz Wincheski; Feng Yu; John Simpon; Phillip A. Williams; Kirk A. Rackow


Archive | 2007

Use of composite materials, health monitoring and self-healing concepts to refurbish our civil and military infrastructure.

Dennis P. Roach; Waylon Anthony Delong; Scott R. White; Esteban Yepez; Kirk A. Rackow; Earl David Reedy

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Dennis P. Roach

Sandia National Laboratories

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Randy L Duvall

Sandia National Laboratories

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Ed Hohman

Sandia National Laboratories

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Esteban Yepez

Sandia National Laboratories

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Joseph DiMambro

Sandia National Laboratories

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Cameron J. Dasch

Sandia National Laboratories

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