AI Article Synopsis

  • Smart deformable structures, which incorporate design, sensing, and control technologies, are increasingly utilized in aerospace, robotics, and biomedical engineering due to their diverse functionalities.
  • The study focuses on enhancing the deformation reconstruction accuracy for a wind tunnel's fixed-flexible nozzle plate using flexible strain sensors, analyzing the strain-moment relationship of the modelled cantilever beam.
  • The new strain-moment based reconstruction method (SMRM) shows a significant reduction in reconstruction error compared to traditional methods, achieving a maximum relative error of only 3.97%, making it suitable for real-world applications in smart deformable structures.

Article Abstract

Smart deformable structures that integrate designing, sensing, and controlling technology have been widely applied in the fields of aerospace, robotics, and biomedical engineering due to their multi-functional requirements. The deformation reconstruction method essential for security monitoring and shape controlling, especially for the large deflection deformation, remains a challenge on accuracy and efficiency. This paper takes a wind tunnel's fixed-flexible nozzle (FFN) plate as the research object to develop a highly accurate deformation reconstruction method based on sensing information from flexible strain sensors. The mechanical behaviors of the FFN plate with large deflection deformation, which is modeled as a cantilever beam, are studied to analyze the relationship of the strain and moment. Furthermore, the large deflection factor and shell bending theory are creatively utilized to derive and modify the strain-moment based reconstruction method (SMRM), where the contour of the FFN plate is solved by particular elliptic integrals. As a result, structural simulation based on ABAQUS further demonstrates that the reconstruction error of SMRM is 21.13% less than that of the classic Ko-based reconstruction method (KORM). An FFN prototype accompanied by customized flexible sensors is developed to evaluate the accuracy and efficiency of the SMRM, resulting in a maximum relative error of 3.97% that is acceptable for practical applications in smart deformable structures, not limited to the FFN plate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9229646PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi13060910DOI Listing

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