Title :
Non-contact measurement of the mechanical properties of materials using an all-optical technique
Author :
Culshaw, Brian ; Pierce, Gareth ; Jun, Pan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK
Abstract :
Describes an optically-based measurement mechanism which realizes a totally noncontact assessment of the most important mechanical properties of structural materials - namely effective stiffness and Poisson ratio. These parameters are sensitive indicators of material integrity. The technique uses laser generated broadband ultrasound as a probe and interferometric optical detection as the detector again exploiting the broadband capability of optics in both space and time. Both detection and excitation systems are most conveniently realized in practical systems through optical fiber linkages. Observing the coupled waveforms between source and detector as a function of source: detector separation after a space : time Fourier transform yields a set of dispersion curves for the ultrasonic (typically Lamb wave) transfer function of the sample. This, in turn, can be inverted using curve fitting routines to obtain effective values of modulus and stiffness. An initial assessment of this inversion process is presented and demonstrates that the effective modulus can be extracted with a confidence level of better than a few percent with slightly larger errors in the Poisson ratio.
Keywords :
Michelson interferometers; Poisson ratio; elastic constants; fibre optic sensors; surface acoustic waves; ultrasonic materials testing; Lamb wave; Poisson ratio; all-optical technique; broadband capability; coupled waveforms; curve fitting routines; dispersion curves; effective stiffness; interferometric optical detection; laser generated broadband ultrasound; laser generated ultrasound; material integrity; mechanical properties; noncontact measurement; optical fiber linkages; optically-based measurement mechanism; source : detector separation; space : time Fourier transform; Detectors; Fiber lasers; Mechanical factors; Mechanical variables measurement; Optical interferometry; Optical materials; Optical sensors; Probes; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement;
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2003.810110