4.7 Article

Application of the ultrasonic pulse-echo technique for quality control of the multi-layered plastic materials

Journal

NDT & E INTERNATIONAL
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 300-311

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ndteint.2007.10.008

Keywords

multi-layered plastics; absorption; phase velocity dispersion; Kramers-Kronig relations; deconvolution; waveform prediction

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The main aim of the ultrasonic pulse-echo technique application for quality control is to characterize the internal structure of the object under investigation. The advantage of such technique is a possibility to perform non-contact and one-side access measurements, and to investigate the internal structure of multi-layered materials as well. The presented novel application of the ultrasonic pulse-echo technique for characterization of the multi-layered plastic materials covers the complete attenuation measurement in the frequency domain and is based on ill-posed Tikhonov regularization task for each layer separately. The law of the frequency-dependent attenuation has been estimated from the inverse transfer function approximation in the frequency domain. Phase velocity dispersion curves have been estimated in two ways: from the experimental signal phase spectra and from the causal Kramers-Kronig relations. The developed method enables to predict waveforms of the reflected signals from the interfaces of the individual layers in on-line mode. According to this approach, the step-by-step iterative analysis has been performed for each layer using the information about the previous layers. During each step, the acoustic properties of an individual layer, such as density, absorption, ultrasound velocity and phase velocity dispersion, have been recovered using numerical optimization. Optimization has been performed comparing the real ultrasonic signal, reflected by multi-layered object, with the simulated response of the model. The comparison of the predicted waveforms with the experimental ones has shown a good correspondence. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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