Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12573/395

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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 10
    Citation - Scopus: 8
    Ensemble Feature Selection for Clustering Damage Modes in Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Polymer Sandwich Composites Using Acoustic Emission
    (Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH, 2024-07-15) Gulsen, Abdulkadir; Kolukisa, Burak; Caliskan, Umut; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Gungor, Vehbi Cagri
    Acoustic emission (AE) serves as a noninvasive technique for real-time structural health monitoring, capturing the stress waves produced by the formation and growth of cracks within a material. This study presents a novel ensemble feature selection methodology to rank features highly relevant with damage modes in AE signals gathered from edgewise compression tests on honeycomb-core carbon fiber-reinforced polymer. Two distinct features, amplitude and peak frequency, are selected for labeling the AE signals. An ensemble-supervised feature selection method ranks feature importance according to these labels. Using the ranking list, unsupervised clustering models are then applied to identify damage modes. The comparative results reveal a robust correlation between the damage modes and the features of counts and energy when amplitude is selected. Similarly, when peak frequency is chosen, a significant association is observed between the damage modes and the features of partial powers 1 and 2. These findings demonstrate that, in addition to the commonly used features, other features, such as partial powers, exhibit a correlation with damage modes. This article presents a novel ensemble feature selection methodology to rank features relevant to damage modes on acoustic emission signals in carbon fiber-reinforced polymer sandwich composites. Subsequently, ranked features are utilized in unsupervised clustering models to identify damage modes. The comparative results demonstrate that, along with common features, other features, like partial powers, have a robust correlation with damage modes.image (c) 2024 WILEY-VCH GmbH
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 8
    Citation - Scopus: 6
    Defect Classification of Composite Materials Using Transfer Learning Methods
    (Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2024-11-07) Gulsen, Abdulkadir; Kolukisa, Burak; Ozdemir, Ahmet Turan; Bakir-Gungor, Burcu; Gungor, Vehbi Cagri
    Nowadays, composite materials have become prevalent across various sectors, particularly finding usage in large-scale applications such as spaceships, automobiles, and aircrafts. The accurate detection of the defects in these materials is crucial, yet traditional methods often rely on human inspection, which is susceptible to errors. Recent advancements in machine learning have enabled defect detection using ultrasonic non-destructive testing methods. This paper introduces a new dataset named UNDT, which is obtained from the scans of 60 different composite materials, generating a total of 1150 images depicting both defective and non-defective areas. Several transfer learning methods are applied on the newly introduced UNDT dataset as well as the publicly available USimgAIST ultrasonic dataset. Comparative performance assessments illustrate the significance of utilising the transfer learning approach for defect classification on ultrasonic inspection images. Furthermore, the research emphasises the substantial benefits of employing these transfer learning methods. Notably, the DenseNet121 and VGG19 models achieve the highest accuracy rates, with 98.8% and 98.6% on the UNDT and USimgAIST datasets, respectively.