Abstract

Laser nonlinear wave modulation spectroscopy (LNWMS) has been used to detect nonlinear ultrasonic signatures caused by fatigue cracks in materials. The nonlinear feature extraction from the spectral plot plays a significant role in LNWMS. This paper uses the bispectrum to distinguish harmonically related signals which result from nonlinear interactions and to remove those which do not. A feature called bispectrum damage factor (BDF), which is defined as the ratio of the bispectrum peak difference value of the damage and intact signals to the bispectrum peak value of intact signals at frequencies F 1, F 2, is extracted from the bispectral plot to characterize the crack features. The basic premise of the proposed laser nonlinear wave modulation bispectrum (LNWMBS) is that this BDF value will vary regularly as the level of crack-induced nonlinearity increases. A finite element model and a noncontact laser ultrasonic system have been built for LNWMBS measurement. The simulation results show that the BDF value is sensitive to crack depth and angle, and is insensitive to crack length and detecting position. BDF values of reflected Rayleigh waves are positive and approximately linearly increase with an increase of the crack depths in the range of 0.1 λ ∼ 0.6 λ (λ is the corresponding wavelength of adopted frequency); meanwhile, the values of the transmitted waves are negative and decreasing. The BDF values are larger than the crack angle at 90° when they are less than 90°, which is beneficial for crack detection. The proposed LNWMBS technique has been successfully tested for detecting artificial sub-millimeter surface-breaking cracks in aluminum alloy plates and closed fatigue cracks of torque load simulator connection blocks.

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