Abstract

In field applications currently used for health monitoring and nondestructive testing, ultrasonic transducers primarily employ PZT5-H as the piezoelectric element for ultrasound transmission and detection. This material has a Curie–Weiss temperature that limits its use to about 210 °C. Some industrial applications require much higher temperatures, i.e., 1000–1200 °C and possible nuclear radiation up to 1020 n/cm2 when performance is required in a reactor environment. The goal of this paper is the survey and review of piezoelectric elements for use in harsh environments for the ultimate purpose for structural health monitoring (SHM), non-destructive evaluation (NDE) and material characterization (NDMC). The survey comprises the following categories: 1. High-temperature applications with single crystals, thick-film ceramics, and composite ceramics, 2. Radiation-tolerant materials, and 3. Spray-on transducers for harsh-environment applications. In each category the known characteristics are listed, and examples are given of performance in harsh environments. Highlighting some examples, the performance of single-crystal lithium niobate wafers is demonstrated up to 1100 °C. The wafers with the C-direction normal to the wafer plane were mounted on steel cylinders with high-temperature Sauereisen and silver paste wire mountings and tested in air. In another example, the practical use in harsh radiation environments aluminum nitride (AlN) was found to be a good candidate operating well in two different nuclear reactors. The radiation hardness of AlN was evident from the unaltered piezoelectric coefficient after a fast and thermal neutron exposure in a nuclear reactor core (thermal flux = 2.12 × 1013 ncm−2; fast flux 2 (>1.0 MeV) = 4.05 × 1013 ncm−2; gamma dose rate: 1 × 109 r/h; temperature: 400–500 °C). Additionally, some of the high-temperature transducers are shown to be capable of mounting without requiring coupling material. Pulse-echo signal amplitudes (peak-to-peak) for the first two reflections as a function of the temperature for lithium niobate thick-film, spray-on transducers were observed to temperatures of about 900 °C. Guided-wave send-and-receive operation in the 2–4 MHz range was demonstrated on 2–3 mm thick Aluminum (6061) structures for possible field deployable applications where standard ultrasonic coupling media do not survive because of the harsh environment. This approach would benefit steam generators and steam pipes where temperatures are above 210 °C. In summary, there are several promising approaches to ultrasonic transducers for harsh environments and this paper presents a survey based on literature searches and in-house laboratory observations.

Highlights

  • Ultrasonic non-destructive evaluation (NDE) is employed periodically on passive high temperature components, but continuous online monitoring has not been widely implemented.The need for continuous online monitoring is becoming more important with the need for high-temperature infrastructure license extension

  • The survey is conveniently divided into several categories: single crystals, piezoelectric ceramics, composite ceramics, and radiation-resistant materials and the new category of brush-on transducers

  • The Pennsylvania State University (PSU) lead an effort that was selected by the Advanced Test Reactor National Scientific User Facility (ATR-NSUF) for an irradiation of ultrasonic transducers in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Nuclear Research Reactor (MITR) [32,33]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ultrasonic non-destructive evaluation (NDE) is employed periodically on passive high temperature components, but continuous online monitoring has not been widely implemented. The aim of this paper is to give an overview, review, and survey of piezoelectric materials for possible harsh-environment applications. PZT 5H is listed, which is the commonly used piezoelectric in commercial applications

Single-Crystal Wafers
Comparison
Thick-Film Ceramics
Composite Ceramics
Piezoelectric Materials for Radiation Environment
Temperature Tolerance
Radiation
Radiation Tolerance
Spray-On
19. Frequency
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call