Paper
11 April 2007 Impedance-based structural health monitoring of wind turbine blades
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Wind power is a fast-growing source of non-polluting, renewable energy with vast potential. However, current wind turbine technology must be improved before the potential of wind power can be fully realized. Wind turbine blades are one of the key components in improving this technology. Blade failure is very costly because it can damage other blades, the wind turbine itself, and possibly other wind turbines. A successful damage detection system incorporated into wind turbines could extend blade life and allow for less conservative designs. A damage detection method which has shown promise on a wide variety of structures is impedance-based structural health monitoring. The technique utilizes small piezoceramic (PZT) patches attached to a structure as self-sensing actuators to both excite the structure with high-frequency excitations, and monitor any changes in structural mechanical impedance. By monitoring the electrical impedance of the PZT, assessments can be made about the integrity of the mechanical structure. Recently, advances in hardware systems with onboard computing, including actuation and sensing, computational algorithms, and wireless telemetry, have improved the accessibility of the impedance method for in-field measurements. This paper investigates the feasibility of implementing such an onboard system inside of turbine blades as an in-field method of damage detection. Viability of onboard detection is accomplished by running a series of tests to verify the capability of the method on an actual wind turbine blade section from an experimental carbon/glass/balsa composite blade developed at Sandia National Laboratories.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Corey Pitchford, Benjamin L. Grisso, and Daniel J. Inman "Impedance-based structural health monitoring of wind turbine blades", Proc. SPIE 6532, Health Monitoring of Structural and Biological Systems 2007, 65321I (11 April 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.715800
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CITATIONS
Cited by 44 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Wind turbine technology

Structural health monitoring

Carbon

Skin

Wind energy

Ferroelectric materials

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