| Literature DB >> 24836962 |
Sebastian Thiele1, Jin-Yeon Kim1, Jianmin Qu2, Laurence J Jacobs3.
Abstract
This research presents a new technique for nonlinear Rayleigh surface wave measurements that uses a non-contact, air-coupled ultrasonic transducer; this receiver is less dependent on surface conditions than laser-based detection, and is much more accurate and efficient than detection with a contact wedge transducer. A viable experimental setup is presented that enables the robust, non-contact measurement of nonlinear Rayleigh surface waves over a range of propagation distances. The relative nonlinearity parameter is obtained as the slope of the normalized second harmonic amplitudes plotted versus propagation distance. This experimental setup is then used to assess the relative nonlinearity parameters of two aluminum alloy specimens (Al 2024-T351 and Al 7075-T651). These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed technique - the average standard deviation of the normalized second harmonic amplitudes, measured at locations along the propagation path, is below 2%. Experimental validation is provided by a comparison of the ratio of the measured nonlinearity parameters of these specimens with ratios from the absolute nonlinearity parameters for the same materials measured by capacitive detection of nonlinear longitudinal waves.Entities:
Keywords: Air-coupled transducer; Nonlinear ultrasound; Rayleigh surface waves
Year: 2014 PMID: 24836962 DOI: 10.1016/j.ultras.2014.04.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasonics ISSN: 0041-624X Impact factor: 2.890