Study of acoustic emission during mechanical tests of large flight weight tank structureA PPO-insulated, flight-weight, subscale, aluminum tank was monitored for acoustic emissions during a proof test and during 100 cycles of environmental test simulating space flights. The use of a combination of frequency filtering and appropriate spatial filtering to reduce background noise was found to be sufficient to detect acoustic emission signals of relatively small intensity expected from subcritical crack growth in the structure. Several emission source locations were identified, including the one where a flaw was detected by post-test x-ray inspections. For most source locations, however, post-test inspections did not detect flaws; this was partially attributed to the higher sensitivity of the acoustic emission technique than any other currently available NDT method for detecting flaws. For these non-verifiable emission sources, a problem still remains in correctly interpreting observed emission signals.
Document ID
19740051541
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Mccauley, B. O.
Nakamura, Y.
Veach, C. L. (General Dynamics Applied Research Laboratory Fort Worth, Tex., United States)