Title :
A freestanding oscillator for resonant-ultrasound microscopy
Author :
Tian, Jiayong ; Ogi, Hirotsugu ; Tada, Toyokazu ; Hirao, Masahiko
Author_Institution :
China Earthquake Adm., Beijing
fDate :
2/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Resonant-ultrasound microscopy with a free-standing rod oscillator has been developed for mapping a material\´s elastic properties in a localized surface region, for the purpose of evaluating elastic stiffness through the resonance frequency of the oscillator contacting the specimen by its tip. A stronger biasing static magnetic field makes the ferritic steel oscillator plumb without any other mechanical support except tip-sample contact. For a noncontacting acoustical coupling, the longitudinal vibration of the oscillator is excited and detected with a surrounding solenoid coil by the magnetostrictive effect. This freestanding configuration realizes only a mechanical "point" contact between the oscillator and the sample surface, which yields accurate measurement of the local elastic stiffness. As an illustrated example, the new microscopy method is applied to an SCS-6 SiCf/Ti-6Al-4V composite to visualize its elastic-stiffness distribution.
Keywords :
acoustic microscopy; acoustic resonance; aluminium alloys; composite materials; elastic constants; magnetostriction; mechanical contact; mechanical variables measurement; oscillators; permanent magnets; rods (structures); silicon compounds; solenoids; steel; titanium alloys; vanadium alloys; vibrations; FeCJk; SCS-6 SiC fiber-Ti-6Al-4V composite; SiC-TiAlV; biasing static magnetic field; elastic-stiffness distribution; ferritic steel oscillator; freestanding rod oscillator; local elastic stiffness; longitudinal vibration; magnetostrictive effect; mechanical point contact; noncontacting acoustical coupling; permanent magnet; resonance frequency; resonant-ultrasound microscopy; solenoid coil; tip-sample contact; Electronics; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Microscopy, Acoustic; Oscillometry; Phantoms, Imaging; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Transducers;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2008.668