Title: Fundamentals of Ultrasonics
1Fundamentals of Ultrasonics
2Ultrasonics
- Definition the science and exploitation of
elastic waves in solids, liquids, and gases,
which have a frequency above 20KHz. - Frequency range 20KHz-10MHz
- Applications
- Non-destructive detection (NDE)
- Medical diagnosis
- Material characterization
- Range finding
-
3Elastic wave
- Definition An elastic wave carries changes in
stress and velocity. Elastic wave is created by a
balance between the forces of inertia and of
elastic deformation. - Particle motion elastic wave induced material
motion - Wavespeed the propagation speed of the elastic
wave - Particle velocity is much smaller than wavespeed
4Wave Function
- Equation of progressive wave
-
- Amplitude A
- Wavelength l
- Frequency/Time period f1/T
- Velocity U Ufll/T
- Energy
- Intensity
5Waveform Wave front
Waveform the sequence in time of the motions in
a wave
6Propagation and Polarization Vector
Propagation vector the direction of wave
propagation Polarization vector the direction of
particle motion
7Wave Propagation
- Body wave wave propagating inside an object
- Longitudinal (pressure) wave deformation is
parallel to propagation direction - Transverse (shear) wave deformation is
perpendicular to propagation direction, vT0.5vL,
generated in solid only - Surface wave wave propagating near to and
influenced by the surface of an object - Rayleigh wave The amplitude of the waves decays
rapidly with the depth of propagation of the wave
in the medium. The particle motion is elliptical.
vR0.5vT - Plate Lamb wave for thin plate with thickness
less than three times the wavelength
8Parameters of Ultrasonic Waves
- Velocity the velocity of the ultrasonic wave of
any kind can be determined from elastic moduli,
density, and poissons ratio of the material - Longitudial wave
- is density and m is the Poissons Ratio
- Transverse wave
- Surface wave
9Attenuation
- Definition the rate of decrease of energy when
an ultrasonic wave is propagating in a medium.
Material attenuation depends on heat treatments,
grain size, viscous friction, crystal structure,
porosity, elastic hysterisis, hardness, Youngs
modulus, etc. - Attenuation coefficient AA0e-ax
-
10Types of Attenuation
- Scattering scattering in an inhomogeneous medium
is due to the change in acoustic impedance by the
presence of grain boundaries inclusions or pores,
grain size, etc. - Absorption heating of materials, dislocation
damping, magnetic hysterisis. - Dispersion frequency dependence of propagation
speed - Transmission loss surface roughness coupling
medium.
11Diffraction
- Definition spreading of energy into high and low
energy bands due to the superposition of plane
wave front. - Near Field
- Far Field
- Beam spreading angle
12Acoustic Impedance
- Definition the resistance offered to the
propagation of the ultrasonic wave in a material,
ZrU. Depend on material properties only.
13Reflection-Normal Incident
- Reflection coefficient
-
- Transmission coefficient
14Reflection-Oblique Incident
- Snells Law
- Reflection coefficient
-
- Transmission coefficient
15Total Refraction Angle
16Mode Conversion
- When a longitudinal wave is incident at the
boundary of A B, two reflected beams are
obtained. - Selective excite different type of ultrasonic
wave
17Surface Skimmed Bulk Wave
- The refracted wave travels along the surface of
both media and at the sub-surface of media B
18Resonance
Quality factor
19Typical Ultrasound Inspection System
- Transducer convert electric signal to ultrasound
signal - Sensor convert ultrasound signal to electric
signal
20Types of Transducers
- Piezoelectric
- Laser
- Mechanical (Galton Whistle Method)
- Electrostatic
- Electrodynamic
- Magnetostrictive
- Electromagnetic
21What is Piezoelectricity?
- Piezoelectricity means pressure electricity,
which is used to describe the coupling between a
materials mechanical and electrical behaviors. - Piezoelectric Effect
- when a piezoelectric material is squeezed or
stretched, electric charge is generated on its
surface. - Inverse Piezoelectric Effect
- Conversely, when subjected to a electric voltage
input, a piezoelectric material mechanically
deforms.
22Quartz Crystals
- Highly anisotropic
- X-cut vibration in the direction perpendicular
to the cutting direction - Y-cut vibration in the transverse direction
23Piezoelectric Materials
- Piezoelectric Ceramics (man-made materials)
- Barium Titanate (BaTiO3)
- Lead Titanate Zirconate (PbZrTiO3) PZT, most
widely used - The composition, shape, and dimensions of a
piezoelectric ceramic element can be tailored to
meet the requirements of a specific purpose.
Photo courtesy of MSI, MA
24Piezoelectric Materials
- Piezoelectric Polymers
- PVDF (Polyvinylidene flouride) film
- Piezoelectric Composites
- A combination of piezoelectric ceramics and
polymers to attain properties which can be not be
achieved in a single phase
Image courtesy of MSI, MA
25Piezoelectric Properties
- Anisotropic
- Notation direction X, Y, or Z is represented by
the subscript 1, 2, or 3, respectively, and shear
about one of these axes is represented by the
subscript 4, 5, or 6, respectively.
26Piezoelectric Properties
- The electromechanical coupling coefficient, k, is
an indicator of the effectiveness with which a
piezoelectric material converts electrical energy
into mechanical energy, or vice versa. - kxy, The first subscript (x) to k denotes the
direction along which the electrodes are applied
the second subscript (y) denotes the direction
along which the mechanical energy is developed.
This holds true for other piezoelectric constants
discussed later. - Typical k values varies from 0.3 to 0.75 for
piezoelectric ceramics.
or
27Piezoelectric Properties
- The piezoelectric charge constant, d, relates the
mechanical strain produced by an applied electric
field, - Because the strain induced in a piezoelectric
material by an applied electric field is the
product of the value for the electric field and
the value for d, d is an important indicator of a
material's suitability for strain-dependent
(actuator) applications. - The unit is Meters/Volt, or Coulombs/Newton
28Piezoelectric Properties
- The piezoelectric constants relating the electric
field produced by a mechanical stress are termed
the piezoelectric voltage constant, g, - Because the strength of the induced electric
field in response to an applied stress is the
product of the applied stress and g, g is
important for assessing a material's suitability
for sensor applications. - The unit of g is volt meters per Newton
29SMART Layer for Structural Health Monitoring
- Smart layer is a think dielectric film with
built-in piezoelectric sensor networks for
monitoring of the integrity of composite and
metal structures developed by Prof. F.K. Chang
and commercialized by the Acellent Technology,
Inc. The embedded sensor network are comprised of
distributed piezoelectric actuators and sensors.
Image courtesy of FK Chang, Stanford Univ.
30Piezoelectric Wafer-active Sensor
- Read paper
- Embedded Non-destructive Evaluation for
Structural Health Monitoring, Damage Detection,
and Failure Prevention by V. Giurgiutiu, The
Shock and Vibration Digest 2005 37 83 - Embedded piezoelectric wafer-active sensors
(PWAS) is capable of performing in-situ
nondestructive evaluation (NDE) of structural
components such as crack detection.
Image courtesy of V. Giurgiutiu, USC
31Comparison of different PZ materials for
Actuation and Sensing
32Thickness Selection of a PZ transducer
- Transducer is designed to vibrate around a
fundamental frequency - Thickness of a transducer element is equal to one
half of a wavelength
33Different Types of PZ Transducer
Normal beam transducer
Dual element transducer
Angle beam transducer
Focus beam transducer
34Characterization of Ultrasonic Beam
- Beam profile or beam path
- Near field planar wave front
- Far field spherical wave front, intensity varies
as the square of the distance - Determination of beam spread angle
- Transducer beam profiling
Near field planar wave front
35Beam Profile vs. Distance
Beam profile vs. distance
Intensity vs. distance
36Laser Generated Ultrasound (cont)
- Thermal elastic region ultrasound is generated
by rapid expansion of the material - Ablation region ultrasound is generated by
plasma formed by surface vaporization
37Comparison of Ultrasound Generation
38Ultrasonic Parameter Selection
- Frequency
- Penetration decreases with frequency
- 1-10MHz NDE work on metals
- lt1MHz inspecting wood, concrete, and large grain
metals - Sensitivity increases with frequency
- Resolution increases with frequency and bandwidth
but decrease with pulse length - Bream spread decrease with frequency
- Transducer size
- active area controls the power and beam
divergence - Large units provide more penetration
- Increasing transducer size results in a loss of
sensitivity - Bandwidth
- A narrow bandwidth provides good penetration and
sensitivity but poor resolution