ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Identifying the Geometry of an Object Using Lock-In Thermography

283   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Kok Hin Henry Goh
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Lock-in Thermography (LIT) is a type of Infrared Thermography (IRT) that can be used as a useful non-destructive testing (NDT) technique for the detection of subsurface anomalies in objects. Currently, LIT fails to estimate the thickness at a point on the tested object. This makes LIT unable to figure out the 3-dimensional geometry of an object. In this project, two techniques of identifying the geometry of an object using LIT are discussed. The main idea of both techniques is to find a relationship between the parameters obtained from LIT and the thickness at each data point. Technique I builds a numerical function that models the relationship between thickness, Lock-In phase, and other parameters. The function is then inverted for thickness estimation. Technique II is a quantitative method, in which a database is created with six dimensions - thickness, Lock-In phase, Lock-In amplitude and three other parameters, based on data obtained from LIT experiments or simulations. Estimated thickness is obtained by retrieving data from the database. The database can be improved based on Principal Component Analysis. Evaluation of the techniques is done by measuring root-mean-square deviation, and calculating successful rate with different tolerances. Moreover, during the application of the techniques, Stochastic Gradient Descent can be used to determine the time when sufficient data have been collected from LIT measurement to generate the estimated geometry accurately.


قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Lock-In thermography is a useful Non Destructive Technique (NDT) for enhanced detection of defects in components, as it amplifies the phase contrast where defects exist. This amplification was found to be around 2-3 times compared to constant heating . The current used a Fuse Deposition Modelling (FDM) 3D printer to print samples with known defects, in order to characterise the relative effects of different variables on the Lock-In phase data. Samples were printed using ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene) and PLA (Polylactic Acid) for comparisons, and variables such as print direction, cameras, heating power, Lock-In frequency, as well as thickness, width and depth of defects were explored. It was found that different materials resulted in different baselines, but had similar phase contrast. A novel asynchronous technique was derived to enable Lock-In measurements with 5 different infrared cameras, and similar results were found. Even cheap cameras like the Seek Thermal CompactXR were proven capable of detecting the same defects as other cameras such as the FLIR SC7500. Heating power did not affect phase contrast, except for shallower defects up to 1.0 mm deep, where higher power resulted in better contrast. As expected, deeper defects could only be detected using lower Lock-In frequencies, and there was better phase contrast with wider, thicker and shallower defects. It was shown that defects 4 mm in width could be detected automatically up to a depth of around 1.5 mm, based on the phase signal trends. Sub-sampling of frame data showed that at least 10 frames were required per Lock-In period for minimal deviations in Lock-In phase contrast. Also, it was shown that phase contrast was similar for shallower defects up to 1.5 mm deep, with data from 1 Lock-In period, as long as the first frame was synchronised with the heating cycle.
While metal-halide perovskites have recently revolutionized research in optoelectronics through a unique combination of performance and synthetic simplicity, their low-dimensional counterparts can further expand the field with hitherto unknown and pr actically useful optical functionalities. In this context, we present the strong temperature dependence of the photoluminescence (PL) lifetime of low-dimensional, perovskite-like tin-halides, and apply this property to thermal imaging with a high precision of 0.05 {deg}C. The PL lifetimes are governed by the heat-assisted de-trapping of self-trapped excitons, and their values can be varied over several orders of magnitude by adjusting the temperature (up to 20 ns {deg}C-1). Typically, this sensitive range spans up to one hundred centigrade, and it is both compound-specific and shown to be compositionally and structurally tunable from -100 to 110 {deg} C going from [C(NH2)3]2SnBr4 to Cs4SnBr6 and (C4N2H14I)4SnI6. Finally, through the innovative implementation of cost-effective hardware for fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLI), based on time-of-flight (ToF) technology, these novel thermoluminophores have been used to record thermographic videos with high spatial and thermal resolution.
The possibility of using Infrared Lock-In Thermography (LIT) to estimate the thickness of a sample was assessed and shown to be accurate up to 1.8mm. LIT is a technique involving heating samples with halogen lamps with varying intensity over time. Th e intensity is defined by sinusoidal functions. LIT was conducted on samples of varying thickness, gradient, and shape. The Lock-In phase signals were calculated, and a database was then created with the data obtained and was used to estimate the thickness based on the original phase signal. A relationship between gradient and phase signal was also shown based on our data, contrary to current findings in existing literature.
123 - Shuai Lin , Shukai Yu , 2018
We present a method to measure quadratic Terahertz optical nonlinearities in Terahertz time-domain spectroscopy. We use a rotating linear polarizer (a polarizing chopper) to modulate the amplitude of the incident THz pulse train. We use a phase-sensi tive lock-in detection at the fundamental and the second harmonic of the modulation frequency to separate the materials responses that are linear and quadratic in Terahertz electric field. We demonstrate this method by measuring the quadratic Terahertz Kerr effect in the presence of the much stronger linear electro-optic effect in the (110) GaP crystal. We propose that the method can be used to detect Terahertz second harmonic generation in noncentrosymmetric media in time-domain spectroscopy, with broad potential applications in nonlinear Terahertz photonics and related technology.
56 - K. H. H. Goh 2019
The fundamentals of Fourier Transform are presented, with analytical solutions derived for Continuous Fourier Transform (CFT) of truncated signals, to benchmark against Fast Fourier Transform (FFT). Certain artifacts from FFT were identified for deca y curves. An existing method for Infrared Thermography, Pulse Phase Thermography (PPT), was benchmarked against a proposed method using polynomial fitting with CFT, to analyse cooling curves for defect identification in Non-Destructive Testing (NDT). Existing FFT methods used in PPT were shown to be dependent on sampling rates, with inherent artifacts and inconsistencies in both amplitude and phase. It was shown that the proposed method produced consistent amplitude and phase, with no artifacts, as long as the start of the cooling curves are sufficiently represented. It is hoped that a collaborative approach will be adopted to unify data in Thermography for machine learning models to thrive, in order to facilitate automated geometry and defect recognition and move the field forward.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا