Abstract
The development of automated systems for real-time material evaluation is becoming increasingly critical for structural engineering applications, infrastructure diagnostics and advanced material research. This work introduces a novel, fully automated nonlinear acoustics monitoring platform that employs Bulk Wave excitation in combination with non-contact Laser Doppler Vibrometry (LDV) detection to continuously assess the microstructural evolution of cement-based composites. Unlike conventional approaches-such as ultrasonic velocity measurements or compressive strength tests-which lack sensitivity to early-stage changes and also require manual operation, the proposed system enables unsupervised, high-precision monitoring of the material by leveraging the second and third harmonic generation (β(2), β(3)) as nonlinear indicators of internal material changes. A specialized LabVIEW-based software manages excitation control, signal acquisition, frequency-domain analysis, and real-time feedback. As an initial step, the system's stability, linearity, and measurement reliability were validated on metallic samples, and verified through long-duration experiments. Subsequently, the system was used to monitor hydration in cement-based specimens with varying water-to-cement and carbon nanotube (CNT) reinforcement ratios, thereby demonstrating its capability to resolve subtle nonlinear responses. The results highlight the system's enhanced sensitivity, repeatability, and scalability, demonstrating that it as a powerful tool for structural health monitoring, smart infrastructure, and predictive maintenance applications.