Abstract
We have developed a compensation system for any given SQUID sensor which allows sensitive eddy current measurements above 100 Hz in the presence of strong and slowly varying background fields. High Tc SQUIDs have been used successfully in nondestructive evaluation (NDE) systems based on eddy current excitation when searching for defects in conductive samples such as aircraft parts. Due to their high and frequency independent field resolution and their excellent spatial resolution, SQUIDs provide in the case of deep lying defects—compared to other conventional electromagnetic NDE systems—a more reliable crack detection. Fast readout electronics having an unsurpassed dynamic range of up to eight orders of magnitude enabled us to perform measurements in an environment polluted with electromagnetic noise, e.g., an aircraft hangar. Nevertheless, test objects containing ferromagnetic structures with a high remanent magnetization, such as aircraft wheels or steel bolts in an aircraft wing, very often cause instabilities of the flux-locked loop operation of the SQUID. To prevent unlocking, we have developed a new background field compensation scheme. Special compensation electronics take care of slowly varying magnetic fields of up to 1 mT/s and allow us to perform eddy current measurements in the presence of slow (<30 Hz) background field variations of up to 5 mT.
Published Version
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