|
| |
Leutenegger,
T., Dual, J.
Detection of defects in cylindrical structures using a
time reverse method and a finite-difference approach
Ultrasonics, Vol. 40, 721-725 (2002)
Abstract
The detection and characterization of defects in structures is an important
issue in non-destructive testing. To avoid the scanning of large samples, guided
elastic waves, which propagate along the structure, are excited. These waves
interact with a defect, which results in a scattered wave field. In an
experiment, the displacements of these scattered waves are recorded over time
for a fixed axial coordinate at a number of circumferential positions of a
circular cylindrical tube. Since in complex structures it is difficult to
determine the axial and particularly circumferential position of the defect
directly from the time signals, a time reversed numerical simulation (TRNS) is
performed. There the measured displacement histories are reversed in time and
used as displacement excitations in a simulation of the tested structure. A
three-dimensional code in cylindrical coordinates, based on a velocity-stress
finite-difference method, is used to simulate the wave propagation. As long as
the geometric and material parameters are chosen equivalent to the performed
experiment, the scattered waves travel back through the simulated structure and
interfere, even if no defect is present in the numerical model. The result is an
increase of the amplitudes of the stress and displacement components at the
location where the defect was in the tested sample.
01/03/03 | compiled by
Stephan Kaufmann | ZfM
| ETH
|