Abstract

An efficient new thermal-wave inverse-problem approach based on an integral-equation boundary-value method coupled with an imperialist competitive algorithm was developed. The methodology was successfully applied to simultaneously reconstruct density and thermal conductivity depth profiles in a sintered powder metallurgy sample from an industrial automotive manufacturer with a surface layer of higher density than the bulk. The density and thermal conductivity depth profiles were validated independently using the manufacturer's data and in-house temperature and porosity measurements. The present non-destructive inverse problem approach represents a generalized formalism to thermal-wave reconstruction of dual depth profiles using frequency scan data measured from the interrogated surface. From a fundamental viewpoint, the method adds significant insights into the relationship between thermal conductivity and density distributions in inhomogeneous solids.

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