Abstract

A method is proposed to measure the in-plane thermal diffusivity of anisotropic solids along an arbitrary direction using laser-line lock-in thermography. In this method, the sample is heated by an intensity-modulated laser beam, which impinges on the sample surface with the shape of a narrow strip. The resulting temperature oscillations are recorded by a thermographic camera and a phase thermogram is obtained by lock-in processing the image sequence. The thermal diffusivity along the direction perpendicular to the laser line can be determined from the linear dependence of phase lag with the distance to the heating line using the slope method. Unlike laser-spot lock-in thermography, in which the slope method only provides the thermal diffusivity along the principal directions, in this configuration, the thermal diffusivity can be measured experimentally along any direction, just selecting the relative orientation of the sample with respect to the laser line. Moreover, this configuration allows averaging several parallel phase profiles leading to more reliable thermal diffusivity values. The experimental results are presented for a highly anisotropic material, namely, a unidirectional carbon fiber-reinforced polymer plate.

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