1. Introduction
Fiber-reinforced polymers (FRPs) are widely used in applications including aerospace engineering, bridge fabrication, construction engineering and marine engineering because of their numerous advantages, such as their light weight and high strength, and FRPs have great potential for use in structural manufacturing and reinforcement [
1,
2,
3,
4]. Jiang et al. [
5] studied an impact detection system based on a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor array and multiple signal classification (MUSIC) algorithm to determine the location and the number of low velocity impacts on a carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer plate. In long-term service, cracks will inevitably appear on steel structures that have been strengthened using FRPs under the influence of external loading and the usage environment [
6,
7]. Colombi et al. [
8] investigated fatigue crack growth in steel beams that were strengthened using carbon-fiber-reinforced polymers. Yu et al. [
9] presented a numerical study of the effects of the degree of initial damage, the bond configuration and the crack type on the fatigue behavior of retrofitted specimens using the boundary element method. The accumulated damage in these structures would affect structural safety and could have disastrous consequences. Therefore, effective monitoring of cracks under FRP reinforcement is significant in order to understand the failure mechanisms of FRP-strengthened steel structures and ultimately maintain their safety.
However, the bonding of FRP materials means that it is difficult to detect concealed crack growth due to fatigue loading using common inspection methods. The main difficulty in monitoring cracks in FRP-strengthened steel structures is that the cracks are covered by the anisotropic FRP layer. There are few literature references on crack propagation monitoring of FRP-strengthened steel structures based on eddy current testing (ECT). Li et al. [
10] showed that eddy current pulsed thermography (ECPT) could be used to detect impact damage on FRP-strengthened steel structures. Yikuan et al. [
11] used Lamb waves to monitor fatigue crack propagation and detect fatigue crack initiation in FRP-strengthened steel plates. Ma et al. [
12] found that acoustic emission (AE) techniques were effective in revealing crack processes in FRP-strengthened reinforced concrete (RC) columns. However, these methods have limitations when applied to the quantitative research on crack detection. In addition, the methods are expensive to implement on a large scale because of the associated labor and wiring costs, and they are generally range-limited because of their power requirements. Based on previous investigations of antenna sensors, this paper proposes a new type of dual-substrate antenna sensor to realize passive and wireless monitoring of cracks on FRP-strengthened steel structures.
Referring to studies of crack detection using antenna sensors, Deshmukh et al. [
13] first proposed a surface crack detection method for use on metallic surfaces that used a rectangular microstrip patch antenna. Their results indicated that the resonant frequency of the antenna decreased with increasing crack length. The crack detection sensitivity was 29.6 MHz/mm, and the antenna was able to detect crack propagation with sub-millimeter resolution. Mohammad and Huang [
14] investigated fatigue crack length measurements using a patch antenna sensor and analyzed the influence of the crack closure effect. Mohammad and Gowda [
15] studied the crack orientation detection capabilities of antenna sensors by measuring the resonant frequencies
f10 and
f01 in two directions. In their paper, a rough crack direction identification method was proposed that extended the application range of patch antenna sensors in crack detection. Cook et al. [
16] investigated the effects of nonlinear crack shapes on the parallel and perpendicular resonant modes of a patch antenna, and these effects were quantified through simulations and measurements. Yi et al. [
17] designed a slotted patch antenna sensor and applied it to fatigue crack detection; the results showed that the resonant frequency decreased with increasing strain. Liu et al. [
18] studied the mechanism of crack detection when using a patch antenna sensor based on meander technology, analyzed the effects of cracks on the current distribution, and discussed a method of oblique crack identification based on the relative resonant frequency variation.
In the method of making cracks on specimens, Liu et al. [
18] made straight cracks of 0.5 mm width parallel to the length direction of the patch on the central line of the floor. Deshmukh et al. [
13] designed and machined a compact tension (CT) specimen according to American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) standards (E647-00). A small groove is fabricated at the edge of the floor, and a nearly straight-line crack is produced by fatigue test. Cook et al. [
12] made nonlinear wedge cracks at the edge of the floor.
In antenna sensor substrate research, Yi and Wang [
19] investigated the strain testing performances of patch sensors with different substrate thicknesses; the strain transmission efficiencies of antenna sensors with substrate thicknesses of 0.79 mm and 1.58 mm were obtained, while the effects of substrate thickness on strain testing linearity and wireless access distance were also analyzed. Yi and Vyas [
20] studied the influence of temperature on the relative dielectric constant of a substrate, and the effects of temperature changes in Rogers 6202 and Rogers 5880 materials on the strain test results from their sensors were compared. Wang et al. [
21] found that as the edge effect became more obvious with increasing substrate thickness, the resonant frequency could be affected; however, the edge effect of the microstrip antenna sensor could only be neglected if the substrate thickness was much smaller than the width of the patch antenna sensor structure.
In conclusion, fatigue crack monitoring using antenna sensors offers the advantages of passive and wireless measurements. The existing research is mainly aimed at metal materials. The crack detection sensitivity, identification of the crack direction and the effects of the thickness of a single (relatively thin) substrate on test performance have been studied. However, for the crack monitoring of steel plates that have been covered by FRP, there has been little research on the crack monitoring performance of antenna sensors with multilayer substrates and there have also been few studies on the effects of the substrate properties, e.g., weak conductivity and thickness, on crack monitoring performance.
In this paper, a crack monitoring method using a dual-substrate antenna sensor is proposed for crack damage measurement on FRP-strengthened steel structures. The anisotropic FRP layer is regarded as the second external substrate layer of the antenna sensor. In
Section 2, we propose a fundamental resonant frequency analytical model for the proposed dual-substrate antenna sensor based on conformal mapping, transmission lines and cavity model methods. The establishment of a suitable model and related settings for numerical studies are described in
Section 3. The crack monitoring sensitivity for FRP-strengthened steel structures when using the proposed antenna sensor is presented in
Section 4.
Section 5 provides an analysis of the effects of the properties of the FRP on crack monitoring performance, and the work includes: (i) use of comparison experiments to analyze the crack detection performance when a carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) with weak conductivity is regarded as a substrate; (ii) study of the influence of FRP thickness on the crack detection performance of the antenna sensor. In
Section 6, strain and crack coupling experiments are used to analyze the effects of structural strain on crack detection performance.
2. Crack Monitoring Mechanism of Dual-Substrate Antenna Sensor
To monitor cracking in an FRP-strengthened steel structure, an antenna sensor without a ground plane is arranged on the top surface of the FRP layer, and a dual-substrate antenna sensor model composed of four “steel plate-FRP-substrate-patch” layers is fabricated.
Figure 1 shows the cross-section of the dual-substrate antenna sensor, where
L and
W are the length and width of the patch, respectively;
and
are the relative dielectric constants of the FRP and the substrate, respectively;
h1 and
h2 denote the thicknesses of the FRP layer and the substrate, respectively; and
h12 is the distance from the ground plane surface to the substrate surface.
Based on a transmission line model, the formula used to calculate the resonant frequency of the dual-substrate antenna sensor is given as
where
c is the speed of light in free space, and the expressions for the effective dielectric constant
and the additional electrical length due to the fringing effect represented by
are respectively presented as
Here,
and
are the effective filling factors. Based on the conformal mapping theory of a microstrip antenna, the effective filling factors are calculated as follows [
22]:
The expression used by Wheeler [
23] to evaluate the effective line width
is given as:
Where, the effective filling factor and is introduced to determine the fundamental resonant frequency of the crack in an FRP-strengthened steel structure that is detected using the dual-substrate antenna sensor. The effective line width can be obtained based on a combination of the total thickness of the dual-substrate antenna and the patch width. The effective filling factor can then be calculated using the thicknesses of the dielectric layers, including the FRP and the substrate, along with the effective line width. The effective dielectric constant is characterized using the relative dielectric constant and the effective filling factor for each dielectric layer, and thus the additional electrical length is affected. This paper presents a method based on antenna sensors for crack monitoring in FRP-strengthened steel structures. By inputting the relative dielectric constants and thicknesses of the dielectric layers, such as the FRP and the substrate, the fundamental resonant frequency of the dual-substrate antenna sensor can then be obtained.
When a crack appears or propagates on the ground plane, the current on the ground plane surface will be forced to flow around the crack tip, which will increase the antenna current path and thus reduce the resonant frequency. A crack that is perpendicular to the length of the patch only disturbs the current path of the TM10 mode and reduces the resonant frequency f10, and has no influence on the TM01 mode and f01. Therefore, the crack length can be identified quantitatively based on the resonant frequency offset.
3. Numerical Investigation
The antenna design was simulated using the commercial electromagnetic simulation software HFSS
TM, and the crack monitoring model of the dual-substrate antenna is shown in
Figure 2. An antenna sensor without a ground plane is arranged on the top surface of the FRP to form a dual-substrate antenna sensor with four “steel plate-FRP-substrate-patch” layers.
A Q235 steel plate was selected as the ground plane material. The patch was made from copper and the substrate was made from FR-4, while a glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) with excellent mechanical properties was also chosen. The geometrical dimensions and the material properties of each layer are shown in
Table 1.
In the numerical model, the distance between the radiation air cavity and the antenna sensor is more than one fourth of the wavelength of the unsolved resonant frequency. A second-order cardinal number is chosen as the basis function for the finite element algorithm, and the mesh iteration time and the convergence accuracy are set.
The echo loss curve S
11 is extracted, and the resonant frequency of the dual-substrate antenna sensor is obtained. The effects of the crack length on the S
11 parameters of the patch antenna are shown in
Figure 3.
6. Effects of Strain on Crack Monitoring
Under actual working conditions, FRP-strengthened steel structures may be affected by strain and cracking simultaneously. The results of Yi et al. [
25] and Wang et al. [
21] show that the strain can lead to a change in the size of the patch so that the resonance frequency of the antenna sensor is then shifted. Therefore, a study of the influence of strain on antenna sensors is highly valuable for accurate crack identification.
To discuss this issue, a strain measurement experiment was designed for the antenna sensor. The antenna sensors M
1 to M
7 were placed on the WDW-50E microcomputer controlled electronic universal testing machine to apply tension, as shown in
Figure 16.
The universal testing machine was programmed to apply loads ranging from 0 με to 1000 με with increments of 200 με based on the cross-sectional areas of the specimens. When the tensile load is 18.480 kN, the corresponding microstrain and stress are 1000 and 210 MPa, respectively. This load is appropriate for the majority of Q235 steel working conditions. At each load increment step, there was a 60 s pause to measure the S
11 curve of the antenna sensor. The results of these strain experiments are summarized in
Table 7.
Table 7 indicates that the antenna sensor’s resonance frequency decreases with increasing strain. When the microstrain of the steel plate is 1000, the variation among the resonant frequencies of M
1, M
2 and M
3 is only approximately 2 MHz. Based on the resonant frequency–crack length fitting relationship, when the crack length is 9.3 mm (which is approximately 1/3 of the patch width), a resonant frequency variation of 2 MHz corresponds to an increment in the crack length of 0.3 mm. However, when the crack length is 18.7 mm (or approximately 2/3 of the patch width), the resonant frequency variation of 2 MHz corresponds to an increment in the crack length of 0.1 mm. This indicates that the strain has only a tiny influence on the crack monitoring performance of the antenna sensors, and it can therefore be neglected during the crack monitoring process.