Paper
3 December 1993 Three-dimensional ultrasonic imaging: an aging aircraft nondestructive inspection tool
Graham H. Thomas, Steve Benson, Susan Crawford
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation is a valuable technique for finding defects in aircraft structures. It can detect unbonds, corrosion damage, and cracks in various aircraft components. Ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation techniques interrogate materials with high frequency acoustic energy. A piezoelectric transducer generates acoustic energy and converts returned acoustic energy into electrical signals which can be processed to identify the reflector. The acoustic energy propagates through the component and is reflected by abrupt changes in modulus and/or density that can be caused by a defect. Ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation typically provides a two dimensional image of internal defects. These images are either a planar view (C-scan) or a cross-sectional view (B-scan) of the component. The planar view is generated by raster scanning an ultrasonic transducer over the area of interest and capturing the peak amplitude of internal reflections. Depth information is generally ignored.
© (1993) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Graham H. Thomas, Steve Benson, and Susan Crawford "Three-dimensional ultrasonic imaging: an aging aircraft nondestructive inspection tool", Proc. SPIE 2001, Nondestructive Inspection of Aging Aircraft, (3 December 1993); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.163855
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KEYWORDS
Ultrasonics

3D image processing

Acoustics

Inspection

Reflectors

Nondestructive evaluation

Transducers

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