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Adaptive sampling for accelerating neutron diffraction-based strain mapping *

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IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2632-2153/acc512

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Gaussian process regression; Bayesian optimization; neutron diffraction; strain mapping

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Neutron diffraction is a useful technique for mapping residual strains in dense metal objects. In this paper, the authors propose an object adaptive sampling strategy to measure the significant points first and predict the next most informative positions to measure. They demonstrate the real-time measure-infer-predict workflow on additively manufactured steel parts, leading to faster strain mapping with useful real-time feedback.
Neutron diffraction is a useful technique for mapping residual strains in dense metal objects. The technique works by placing an object in the path of a neutron beam, measuring the diffracted signals and inferring the local lattice strain values from the measurement. In order to map the strains across the entire object, the object is stepped one position at a time in the path of the neutron beam, typically in raster order, and at each position a strain value is estimated. Typical dwell times at neutron diffraction instruments result in an overall measurement that can take several hours to map an object that is several tens of centimeters in each dimension at a resolution of a few millimeters, during which the end users do not have an estimate of the global strain features and are at risk of incomplete information in case of instruments outages. In this paper, we propose an object adaptive sampling strategy to measure the significant points first. We start with a small initial uniform set of measurement points across the object to be mapped, compute the strain in those positions and use a machine learning technique to predict the next position to measure in the object. Specifically, we use a Bayesian optimization based on a Gaussian process regression method to infer the underlying strain field from a sparse set of measurements and predict the next most informative positions to measure based on estimates of the mean and variance in the strain fields estimated from the previously measured points. We demonstrate our real-time measure-infer-predict workflow on additively manufactured steel parts-demonstrating that we can get an accurate strain estimate even with 30%-40% of the typical number of measurements-leading the path to faster strain mapping with useful real-time feedback. We emphasize that the proposed method is general and can be used for fast mapping of other material properties such as phase fractions from time-consuming point-wise neutron measurements.

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