Abstract

Guided wave ultrasonic testing has been widely used for nondestructive and long-range evaluation of diverse mechanical structures, such as pipes and plates. In general, a large number of guided wave modes exist even in the simplest geometries, and they exhibit highly dispersive characteristics. Thus, sophisticated excitation methods and elaborate modal analyses need to be implemented to excite, acquire, and process well-defined pure modes as part of such a measurement method. If the interrogated structure has complex geometry, for example, with cross-sectional variations or multiple joints, the utilization of pure modes becomes significantly more difficult. To overcome this difficulty, this paper proposes the use of multi-mode, multi-frequency guided waves for long-range inspection of structures with arbitrarily complex geometries. Using broadband chirp signals and multi-mode time–frequency analysis in a prototypical complex pipe assembly that includes multiple pipe diameters, elbows, and flange connections, we experimentally show sensitive detection of mechanical changes (both material addition and loss). In addition, we demonstrate that the complexity of the structure can be modeled in the digital domain with sufficient detail to allow accurate numerical simulation of the acoustic response using this method.

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