Paper
9 May 2005 Effect of geometric nonlinearity on acoustic modulation
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Abstract
Non-linear nondestructive testing is different from linear acoustic in that it correlates the presence and characteristics of a defect with acoustical signals whose frequencies differ from the frequencies of the emitted probe signal. The difference in frequencies between the probe signal and the resulting frequencies is due to a nonlinear transformation of the probe signal as it passes through a defect. Under acoustic interrogation due to longitudinal waves, as the compression phase passes the defect the two sides of the interface are in direct contact and the contact area increases. Similarly, the tensile phase passes through the defect, the two sides separate and the contact area decreases, thereby modulating the signal amplitude. The contact area depends on the roughness of the surface and on the magnitude of the cohesive forces that arise from the small crack openings. Such cohesive forces may be attributed to aggregate interlock (in plain concrete), fiber bridging (in fiber reinforced concrete) or both. In this paper, the frequency shifts of the probe elastic wave will be analytically related to the roughness and varying cohesive forces of the crack-like defect.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kraig Warnemuende and Hwai-Chung Wu "Effect of geometric nonlinearity on acoustic modulation", Proc. SPIE 5768, Health Monitoring and Smart Nondestructive Evaluation of Structural and Biological Systems IV, (9 May 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.600696
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KEYWORDS
Modulation

Interfaces

Acoustics

Nondestructive evaluation

Spherical lenses

Ultrasonics

Nonlinear optics

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