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| United States Patent | 4137778 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4137778.html |
| Inventor(s) | Primbsch; Erik (Cologne, DE) |
| Abstract | In order to stabilize the acoustic wave amplitude in a workpiece, where
such acoustic wave is generated by a laser beam pulse transmitted upon the
workpiece surface, laser pulses preceding the laser pulse used for
acoustic evaluation are utilized to clean the workpiece surface from
contamination. Cleaning of the workpiece surface to the bare metal
provides a normalized surface condition in respect to absorbed pulsed
laser beam energy and, hence, produces acoustic waves of substantially
constant amplitude. Either the same laser producing the acoustic wave or a
separate laser is used for vaporizing contamination at the workpiece
surface where an acoustic wave is subsequently to be produced. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4137778 |
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Method and apparatus for producing ultrasonic waves in light absorbing
surfaces of workpieces |
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| Publication Date |
February 6, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
October 4, 1977 |
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| Priority Data |
Mar 05, 1977[DE]2709725 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Method for testing a workpiece by the acoustic wave test method using
pulsed laser beam energy for producing an acoustic wave in the workpiece
comprising:
transmitting to the workpiece surface portion at which an acoustic wave is
to be produced a plurality of laser beam pulses for removing contamination
present at said workpiece surface portion;
transmitting thereafter at least one further laser beam pulse to the same
portion, the resulting acoustic wave propagated in the workpiece being
used for nondestructively testing such workpiece;
sensing the acoustic wave responsive to said further laser beam pulse after
it has traversed a certain region of the workpiece, and
evaluating said sensed acoustic wave.
2. Method for testing a workpiece by the acoustic wave test method as set
forth in claim 1, said plurality of laser beam pulses for removing surface
contamination being a constant quantity for a particular workpiece and a
given surface contamination.
3. Method for producing by the thermal effect responsive to transmitting
pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece for
nondestructively testing such workpiece comprising the steps:
transmitting to the workpiece surface portion at which an acoustic wave is
to be produced laser beam pulses adapted for removing contamination
present at said workpiece surface portion;
sensing the condition when a normalized substantially contaminant-free
surface condition has been achieved, and
utilizing, responsive to sensing said normalized condition, the acoustic
wave produced by the subsequent laser beam pulse for nondestructively
testing the workpiece.
4. Method for producing by the thermal effect responsive to transmitting
pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece for
nondestructively testing such workpiece comprising the steps:
transmitting to the workpiece surface portion at which an acoustic wave is
to be produced laser beam pulses from a first laser source, such pulses
being adapted for causing the removal of contamination present at said
workpiece surface portion;
subsequently transmitting to said surface portion at least one laser beam
pulse from a second laser source, said latter pulse producing an acoustic
wave in the workpiece propagating from said surface portion, and
utilizing said acoustic wave responsive to the pulse from said second laser
source for nondestructively testing the workpiece.
5. An apparatus for producing by the thermal effect responsive to
transmitting pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece for
nondestructively testing such workpiece comprising:
laser means disposed for transmitting laser beam pulses to a surface
portion of a workpiece, said pulses being adapted to cause removal of
surface contamination and each pulse producing also a respective acoustic
wave which is propagated in the workpiece from such portion;
receiving means disposed for sensing the wave propagated in the workpiece
from said portion after said wave has traversed a certain region of the
workpiece, and
control means coupled for causing said receiving means to be nonresponsive
to acoustic waves produced by initial laser beam pulses which are used for
removal of surface contamination.
6. An apparatus for producing by the thermal effect responsive to
transmitting pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece as
set forth in claim 5, said laser means comprising a first laser source for
providing beam pulses for contamination removal and a second source for
providing beam pulses the resulting acoustic waves of which propagated in
the workpiece are used for sensing and evaluation by said receiving means.
7. An apparatus for producing by the thermal effect responsive to
transmitting pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece as
set forth in claim 5, said control means including timing means for
causing said receiving means to be nonresponsive for an initial period
during which laser beam pulses are transmitted from said laser means.
8. An apparatus for producing by the thermal effect responsive to
transmitting pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece as
set forth in claim 5, said control means including sensing means for
determining when said surface portion has been normalized in a
substantially contaminant-free surface condition and in response to such
condition rendering said receiving means responsive for sensing said wave.
9. An apparatus for producing by the thermal effect responsive to
transmitting pulsed laser beam energy an acoustic wave in a workpiece as
set forth in claim 8, said sensing means including photoelectric means
disposed to be responsive to the laser beam energy reflected from said
workpiece portion. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention concerns a method and apparatus for producing ultrasonic
waves resulting from thermal excitation in the light absorbing surface of
a workpiece. More particularly, the invention concerns the production of
an ultrasonic wave in the surface of a workpiece caused by the absorption
of a laser beam pulse, and such ultrasonic wave being adapted for
nondestructively testing such workpiece for internal defects.
The generation of acoustic waves responsive to sudden heating of a surface
portion of a workpiece is well known, see "Werkstoffprufung mit
Ultraschall" (book) J. & H. Krautkramer, 3rd edition, pages 148 to 149,
Springer Verlag, Berlin/Heidelberg/New York (1975) and U.S. Pat. No.
3,978,713, dated Sept. 7, 1976 to C. M. Penney entitled "Laser Generation
of Ultrasonic Waves for Nondestructive Testing".
The amplitude of the ultrasonic wave produced by thermal excitation is
dependent upon the absorbed energy from the pulsed laser beam. The
frequency spectrum of the acoustic wave is determined by the shape of the
laser beam pulse. When performing nondestructive testing of workpieces
with ultrasound, the thermal method of producing an acoustic wave is used
when the acoustic energy cannot be imparted to the workpiece by a
conventional coupling medium. For locating defects in the workpiece, the
workpiece must be scanned by a finite acoustic beam propagated from the
workpiece surface, the beam having generally a cross sectional area not
exceeding a few square centimeters. When utilizing the contact-free
generation of ultrasonic waves resulting from the thermal effect produced
by a pulsed laser beam, different absorption characteristics prevailing
along the surface of the workpiece lead to local variations of the sonic
wave amplitude.
In practice, workpieces are contaminated unevenly along their surface.
Cleaning of the surface, particularly when workpieces to be tested by the
contact-free method are involved, is difficult if not impossible on
account of the shortcomings inherent in such workpieces. Varying
amplitudes of the acoustic wave due to different absorption of the laser
energy complicate the quantitative evaluation of the test result since
constant acoustic pressure generation from location to location is a
prerequisite for such evaluation.
An object of this invention is the provision to assure the condition of
constant laser pulse energy absorption from location to location when
producing ultrasonic waves with laser beam energy and, thereby, providing
constant acoustic wave amplitude along the entire workpiece surface.
In accordance with the invention disclosed hereafter, the problem pointed
out heretofore is solved by providing for each laser energy responsive
acoustic wave generation process, two or more coherent light pulses upon
the workpiece surface portion at which the acoustic wave is to be
generated. Only the acoustic wave caused by the last transmitted laser
pulse is used for the ultrasonic test whereas the preceding transmitted
laser beam pulses serve for eliminating surface contamination. In
accordance with the invention, the known phenomenon that laser beam
radiation can be utilized to vaporize a contaminant is employed.
It is apparent that clean metallic surfaces reflect more energy and, hence,
absorb less energy than contaminated surfaces. The light energy absorbed
by an oxidized or contaminated surface causes a localized heating and
ultimately produces vaporization of the contaminant. It is advantageous
that the contaminant layer generally has a lower thermal conductivity and
a lower specific heat capacity than that of the base material. However, if
in contrast clean metallic material is irradiated with pulsed laser beams
of the same energy, no or only insignificant vaporization occurs since, on
account of the higher reflectivity, a smaller amount of energy is
absorbed. Moreover, by virtue of the higher thermal conductivity and
higher specific heat capacity of the base material, a significantly lower
degree of heating is obtained. It is not detrimental if the laser pulse
energy is selected for removal of the most severe contamination, or layer
of foreign substance, since the material erosion becomes self-limiting as
soon as the clean surface presents itself.
The present method and several embodiments thereof will be more clearly
apparent from the following description when taken in conjunction with the
accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic block diagram of a typical electrical control circuit
of the invention, and
FIG. 2 is a schematic block diagram showing an alternative embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The method forming the present invention can be understood most clearly
from the following example. A workpiece having a partially oxidized
surface is to be tested by ultrasonic energy without establishing physical
contact. The generation of a sonic energy pulse is accomplished by means
of a laser beam pulse and reception of sonic energy is to be made, for
instance, with a known transit time interferometer arrangement not forming
a part of the present invention. The sonic waves are to be produced by
means of a laser beam pulse of about 30 nanoseconds duration. The
variations in sound pressure amplitude arising from the thermal sound
generation in the oxidized region and in the clean metallic region of the
workpiece surface have an adverse effect on the test result. As an
example, the sound pressure amplitude in the oxidized region is 20 db
greater than that in the clean workpiece surface region.
Using the region of heaviest oxide layer, tests are made to reveal the
quantity of laser beam pulses which must precede the laser beam pulse
producing the same sound wave amplitude as had been obtained at the clean
surface region of the workpiece. The adjustment so derived empirically,
that is the determination of the quantity of laser pulses needed for
cleaning the workpiece, can be maintained constant for a particular
workpiece. Of course, for each laser beam pulse, including those used for
cleaning, there is produced a respective acoustic wave. Only the sonic
wave produced responsive to the last-transmitted laser beam pulse is used
for test purposes. Such condition can be met in several ways. The pulse
repetition rate of the laser source is known and, hence, the time delay
from the initial laser pulse to the first laser beam pulse useable for
acoustic exploration of the workpiece is programmable. By providing a time
delay gate in the electrical output of the interferometer as seen in FIG.
1, the initial outputs arising from the laser pulses and used for cleaning
are suppressed. Only after the passage of a delay, the time interval
between the start signal and the end of a preset adjustable time delay,
are the output signals permitted to pass to an evaluation unit.
In another embodiment, instead of setting the delay for a predetermined
constant quantity of laser beam pulses used for cleaning the surface of
the workpiece, photoelectric means are used for determining the surface
condition of the workpiece. The cleaning process performed by means of
laser beam pulses is terminated when the output signal from the
photoelectric means corresponds to a value corresponding to that obtained
from a clean metal surface, see FIG. 2. In another embodiment, a circuit
can be provided for sensing at the photoelectric means the condition when
the reflected light responsive to two consecutive transmitted laser beam
pulses remains constant, and thereafter a release signal is sent to the
receiver for providing the acoustic wave responsive signal to the
evaluation circuit.
It will be apparent that the invention is not limited to the use of a
single laser source. For example, several laser sources can be used in
such a manner that one laser source serves for cleaning the surface of the
workpiece and another source for producing the acoustic wave. In the
latter case, a sequencing circuit first operates the cleaning laser and
subsequently activates the second laser used for producing the acoustic
wave. Concurrently with rendering the second laser source operative the
sequencing circuit also opens a gate circuit associated with the receiver
means for permitting the acoustic wave responsive output signal derived
from the deflection of the workpiece surface to pass to an evaluation
circuit.
Moreover as used heretofore, the term "laser source" or equivalent
expression shall be interpreted as including also a combination of laser
beam sources.
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Description  |
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