Title :
Estimating material properties of solid and hollow fibers in suspension using ultrasonic attenuation
Author :
Aitomaki, Y. ; Lofqvist, Torbjorn ; Delsing, Jerker
Author_Institution :
Div. of Mater. Sci., Lulea Univ. of Technol., Lulea, Sweden
Abstract :
Estimates of the material properties of hollow fibers suspended in a fluid using ultrasound measurements and a simple, computationally efficient analytical model are made. The industrial application is to evaluate the properties of wood fibers in paper pulp. The necessity of using a layered cylindrical model (LCM) as opposed to a solid cylindrical model (SCM) for modeling ultrasound attenuation in a suspension of hollow fibers is evaluated. The two models are described and used to solve the inverse problem of estimating material properties from attenuation in suspensions of solid and hollow polyester fibers. The results show that the measured attenuation of hollow fibers differs from that of solid fibers. Elastic properties estimates using LCM with hollow-fiber suspension measurements are similar to those using SCM with solid-fiber suspension measurements and compare well to block polyester values for elastic moduli. However, using the SCM with the hollow-fiber suspension did not produce realistic estimations. In conclusion, the LCM gives reasonable estimations of hollow fiber properties and the SCM is not sufficiently complex to model hollow fibers. The results also indicate that the use of a distributed radius in the model is important in estimating material properties from fiber suspensions.
Keywords :
elastic moduli; inverse problems; paper pulp; polymer fibres; suspensions; ultrasonic absorption; ultrasonic measurement; wood; LCM; SCM; computationally efficient analytical model; distributed radius; elastic moduli; elastic properties; fluid; hollow polyester fiber; hollow-fiber suspension measurement; industrial application; inverse problem; layered cylindrical model; material properties; paper pulp; solid cylindrical model; solid polyester fiber; solid-fiber suspension measurement; ultrasonic attenuation; ultrasound measurements; wood fibers;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2013.2714