Title of article :
“Thermal Mirror” Method for Measuring Physical Properties of Multilayered Coatings
Author/Authors :
T. Elperin and G. Rudin ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
23
From page :
60
To page :
82
Abstract :
In this study theoretical principles underlying the photothermal displacement (“thermal mirror”) method for measuring physical properties of opaque multilayered and functionally graded coatings with low thermal conductivity are analyzed. In this method, the specimen is locally heated by a power laser beam, and a two-dimensional transient temperature field is formed in a specimen. The physical basis for the photothermal displacement method is the non-stationary buckling and displacement of an irradiated surface due to a non-uniform thermal expansion. The surface is monitored by a low-power probe beam of a second laser, which is reflected from the specimen, i.e., the system operates as a convex “thermal mirror.” The photoinduced displacement varies with time, and the probe beam is reflected at a different angle depending on the slope of the displacement. The deflection angle is measured as a function of time by a position sensor, and the results of these measurements are compared with the theoretical dependence of the deflection angle on time and physical properties of a coating. This dependence was determined analytically from the solution of the two-dimensional thermal elasticity problem. It is shown that for the specimen composed of a substrate and a coating it is feasible to determine the properties of the coating, e.g., the thermal diffusivity and coefficient of linear thermal expansion provided that the analogous properties of the substrate are previously measured or otherwise known.
Keywords :
laser heating , Multilayer coating , Surface displacement , thermal elasticity.
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics
Record number :
427430
Link To Document :
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