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Short Course 101-1111-00L: Fundamentals and Applications of Acoustic Emission

Short Course 101-1111-00L: Fundamentals and Applications of Acoustic Emission. Download : 1. October 4 2. October 11 3. October 18 4. October 25 5. November 1 6. November 15 [] Assignment for a credit: opening quiz (30%) homework (40%) final report (30%).

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Short Course 101-1111-00L: Fundamentals and Applications of Acoustic Emission

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  1. Short Course 101-1111-00L:Fundamentals and Applications of Acoustic Emission Download : 1. October 4 2. October 11 3. October 18 4. October 25 5. November 1 6. November 15 [] Assignment for a credit: opening quiz (30%) homework (40%) final report (30%)

  2. Short Course 101-1111-00L:Fundamentals and Applications of Acoustic EmissionOctober 4, 2007 1-1 Introduction – History and Fundamental 1-2 Measurement – Sensor 1-3 Measurement – Instrument

  3. 1-1 Introduction October 4, 2007 (1/3) • Invitation • Discovery of AE • Founders and Terminology • AE in Concrete • Development of AE • Fundamentals of AE Measurement • Remarks on Mathematical Backgrounds

  4. What is acoustic emission (AE) ? • In a similar manner to earthquakes, elastic waves are generated due to cracking inside a material. • Elastic waves reach to the surface (boundary) of the medium, and then are converted into sonic waves in air. • The sonic waves are audible as acoustic waves. • Thus, due to cracking, “acoustic waves are emitted”. • In the measurement, elastic waves are referred to as AE waves.

  5. Discovery of AE • Audible phenomena associated with generation of elastic waves are known as rock-bursts in mines. • In metallurgy, the first AE phenomenon was considered to be an audible “tin-cry”, which is produced by twinning of pure tin during plastic deformation. • Martensite transformation in steel is also accompanied by large audible noises. • Other AE phenomenon is creaking of timber prior to break.

  6. Typical sources of AE phenomena

  7. The oldest (first) report on a scientifically planned AE experiment, 1934T. F. Drouillard,”Anecdotal History of Acoustic Emission from Wood,” Journal of AE, Vol. 9, No. 3, 155-176, 1990. • Prof. Fuyuhiko Kisinoue

  8. Early research • F. Foerster and E. Scheil,”Acoustic Study of the Formation of Martensile Needels,” Zeitschrift fur Metallkunde, Vol. 28, No. 9, 245-247, 1936. • L. Obert,”Use of Subaudible Noises for Prediction of Rock Burst,” Report of Investigations 3555, U. S. Bureau of Mines, 1941

  9. Founders and Terminology • J. Kaiser,”An Investigation into the Occurrence of Noises in Tensile Tests,” UCRL-Translation of Kaiser’s Dissertation(1950), Lawrence Radiation Labo., Livermore, 1964 • B. H. Schofield,”Acoustic Emission under Applied Stress,” Report ARL-150, Lessels and Associates, 1961

  10. AE in Concrete Engineering • It was reported that H. Ruesch had known J. Kaiser in the institute. So, he studied the noise emitted during application of compressive load in concrete [1959]. This has been known as one of the first studies on “the Kaiser effect” in engineering materials. He found that the Kaiser effect was observed up to around 75% load level of failure load,

  11. AE behavior under compression in concrete • L’Hermite R G (1960) Volume change of concrete. Proc. 4th Int. Symp. Chemistryof Cement, V-3, NBS Monograph 43:659-694

  12. Development of AETechnology • Following Schofield’s study, A. T. Green and H. L. Dunegan were known to develope standard procedures and devices. • Proof tests of Tanks Rocket motor-cases Pressure vessels

  13. AE Committees & Conferences • H. R. Hardy, Jr. organized and held the series of five Conferences on Acoustic Emission/Microseismic Activity in Geologic Structures and Materials [1974, 1978, 1981, 1985 and 1991]. • In the U. S. A., the Acoustic Emission Working Group (AEWG) was conceived in 1967 by J. C.Spanner. The 6th International Conference on Acoustic Emission: 50th AEWG Meeting - 40th Year AEWG Anniversary Lake Tahoe, Nevada, USA, October 29 to November 2, 2007

  14. AE Committees & Symposia • . The Japanese Committee on AE was founded in 1969. Since 1980 the committee has been organized as an ad hoc technical committee in the Japanese Society for Nondestructive Inspection (JSNDI). The International Acoustic Emission Symposia (IAES) were inaugurated in 1972 and has been biennially held in Japan. • In Europe, research activity on AE led to the European Working Group on AE (EWGAE). The first meeting was held in 1972, and in 2006, the 27th meeting was held

  15. Journal of Acoustic Emission Professor Kanji Ono at University of California, Los Angeles has been editing the Journal of AE, based on the exponentially increasing number of papers. The first issue was published in 1982. Since then, the journal has kept providing the state of the art on AE researches.

  16. Fundamentals of AEMeasurement

  17. Basic system • Amplification: dB = 20 log10(Aoutput/Ainput) 40 dB – 100 dB • Band-pass filter: high-pass around 10 kHz low-pass 300 kHz, 1 MHz

  18. Fundamentals - 1 • F. Kishinoue already made comments on the problems with background or environmental noises. Care is needed during the experiment. • This is because detection of AE signals is affected by vibrations from a string wind, passers-by and a truck passing on a nearby street. Many of these problems have been eliminated with development of instrumentation systems.

  19. Fundamentals - 2 • In updated equipments, the frequency range of the measurement is normally set above that of audio or environmental noises, which are substantially minimized by grounding the equipments. • Owing to advances of measuring systems, the use of a band-pass filter effectively eliminates background noises and allow meaningful tests under usual laboratory environments.

  20. Remarks on Mathematical Backgrounds • Tensor notation • Equation of equilibrium • Fourier transforms • Linear system • Eigen-value analysis

  21. 1-2 Measurement – Sensors October 4, 2007 (2/3) Introduction Sensor and System Response Response of PZT Sensors Calibration and Detection

  22. Introduction The elastic (AE) waves propagate inside a material and are detected by an AE sensor. Except for contactless sensors, AE sensors are directly attached on the surface.

  23. Typical AE sensor In the most cases, a piezoelectric element in a protective housing is applied. The sensors are exclusively based on the piezoelectric effect out of lead zirconate titanate (PZT). PZT sensors provide the best combination of low cost, high sensitivity, ease of handling and selective frequency responses. Although PZT sensors are not normally suited for broad-band detection in basic studies of AE waveform analysis, they are practically useful for most AE experiments and applications.

  24. System Response: Linear system g(t) = L[ f(t) ] The convolution integral is defined,  s(t) = ∫f(t-t)w(t)dt = f(t)*w(t).   Then Dirac's delta function d(t) plays an important role. f(t) = f(t)*d(t). In the case of the linear system,   g(t)= L[f(t)*d(t)] = f(t)*L[d(t)]. Setting L[d(t)] as w(t), we have, g(t) = f(t)*w(t).  Introducing the Fourier transform,   G(f) = F(f)W(f)

  25. Linear System a(t) = wf(t)*wa(t)*w(t)*f(t) A(f) = Wf(f)Wa(f)W(f)F(f)

  26. PZT Sensors Electro-mechanical vibrations of PZT bodies can be solved in a manner similar to the corresponding mechanical vibration problem, but with additional variables. The constitutive laws of PZT materials are represented, {e} = [C]{s} + [d]T{E}, {D} = [d]{s} + [p]{E}. Here {e} are the elastic strains, {s} are the stresses, {E} are the electric potentials and {D} are the electric displacements. [C] represents the adiabatic elastic compliance tensor at constant electric filed, [d] is the adiabatic piezoelectric tensor and [p] is the adiabatic electric permittivity.

  27. Results of FEM Analysis One-dimensional motion assumed leads to nominal frequencies as, a thickness resonance, a radial resonance etc.

  28. Comparison of Resonant Frequencies

  29. Sketch of NIST conical transducer

  30. Calibration Absolute calibration by a Capacitive Transducer (NIST) Relative calibration by the reciprocity method (Hatano)

  31. Absolute Calibration Step-function force: Glass-capillary break (Breckenridge) Pencil-lead break (Hsu) Capacitive transducer: === Lamb’ problem ===

  32. Lamb’s solution

  33. Laser-Doppler vibrometer Time (sec) Lamb’s solutions of velocity motions detected and calculated.

  34. Sensor calibration by NIST Fs(f):Spectrum of a detected wave by AE sensor Fa(f):Spectrum of a detected wave by a capacitive transducer [Both due to pencil-lead break] R(f) = Fs(f)/Fa(f) [Displacement calibration]

  35. Commercially available sensors

  36. Coupling with AE sensors For the PZT sensors, coupling between sensors and a member is important due to the low amplitudes of AE signals. Various methods exist for fixing the sensors to the structure. Adhesives or gluey coupling materials and couplant like wax or grease are often used due to their low impedance. If the structure has a metallic surface, magnetic or immersion techniques are widely used. In general, the coupling should reduce the loss of signal energy and should have a low acoustic impedance compared to the material to be tested.

  37. Sensor mounting An essential requirement in mounting a sensor is sufficient acoustic-coupling between the sensor’s surface and the structure surface. Application of a couplant layer should be thin, so it can fill gaps caused by surface roughness and eliminate air gaps to ensure good acoustic transmission. Commonly used couplants are vacuum greases, water-soluble glycols, solvent-soluble resins, and proprietary ultrasonic couplants.

  38. Sensor stationary In addition to coupling, the sensor must always be stationary. One way to achieve this is to use glue, which can also serve as a couplant. To prevent attenuation, air bubbles and thick glue layers should be avoided. Another way to help a sensor stationary is to use a holding devices such as tapes, elastic bands, springs, magnetic hold-downs, and other special fixtures. It is important that any mechanical mount does not make electrical contact between the sensor case and the structure. Accordingly, grounding the case is often necessary.

  39. 1-3 Measurement – InstrumentOctober 4, 2007 (3/3) Detection and Other Type Sensors Instrument Data Acquisition and Parameters Flaw (Source) Location

  40. Waveguides When the sensor can not be attached to directly the structure, waveguides are employed. It is noted that the use of waveguides introduces further complexity to frequency contents of AE waves.

  41. Other-type sensor 1 Laser system has been applied for AE detection. It is a contactless measurement but less sensitive than the PZT sensors. PZT sensors have a limitation in application at elevated temperature, because PZT has Curie point.

  42. Other-type sensor 2 An optical fiber sensor is a new and an attractive AE sensor as alternative to the PZT sensor. It can offer a number of advantages such as the long-term monitoring, the condition free from electro-magnetic noises, and the use of corrosive and elevated environments.

  43. Instrument - Amplifier Because cables from the sensor to the amplifier are subjected to electro-magnetic noise, specially coated cables of short length shall be used. Amplifiers with a flat response in the frequency range are best use. AE signals are normally amplified both by a pre-amplifier and by a main-amplifier. The gain of the amplifier is given in dB(decibels), dB = 20 log10(Vo/Vi). In concrete and rocks, 60 dB to 100 dB in total

  44. Instrument - Filter A filter of variable band-width between a few kHz and 2 MHz is generally employed. The choice of the frequency range depends on noise level and attenuation property of concrete.

  45. Attenuation When the wave with energy level E is attenuated by DE over one-wavelength propagation, parameter Q is defined as, Q = 2pE/DE. In the case of a pure elastic material, DE = 0 and Q = infinite. The larger Q is, the lower the attenuation is. Q is larger than 1000 for typical metals, while Q is reported as lower than 100 in concrete.

  46. Attenuation – dependent on distance and frequency When AE waves propagate for distance D, the amplitude U(f) of frequency components f attenuates from U0 to, U(f) = U0exp (-pfD/vQ) Substituting frequency f = 1 MHz, distance D = 1 m, velocity of P wave v = 4000 m/s, and Q = 100, the attenuation U(f)/U0 becomes –68 dB/m. The higher frequency components are, the more quickly they attenuate.

  47. Data Acquisition Main concern for data acquisition results from the A/D(analog to digital) conversion and the triggering. Fast A/D units have to be used to ensure that a large number of events are recorded A/D converter is equipped for each channel of the recording unit. Anti-aliasing filters are required so that the signals can be properly transformed to the frequency domain.

  48. Parameters A monitoring system can analyze such parameters as count, hit, event, rise time, duration, peak amplitude, energy, RMS (root mean square) voltage, frequency spectrum, and arrival-time difference as discussed later. Normally AE signals are processed after the amplitude becomes larger than the threshold level.

  49. AE waveform parameters Threshold Rise time Duration Maximum amplitude Energy (RMS) voltage Hit Counts (ringdown) Arrival times

  50. Flaw (Source) Location Procedure

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