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| United States Patent | 4139302 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4139302.html |
| Inventor(s) | Hung; Yau Y. (Rochester, MI);
Grant; Ralph M. (Rochester, MI) |
| Abstract | To obtain a photographic record of an object surface having superimposed
interference fringes arrayed as a function of the deformation which
results in the object from an applied stress, which may be mechanical,
thermal, or the like, the object is first illuminated with coherent light.
The illuminated surface is then photographed with a camera having an
optical wedge disposed over half of its lens to record two slightly
displaced overlapping images of the object on the camera film. The object
is then stressed by changing the ambient temperature or pressure or other
mechanical loading, and the undeveloped film is exposed to a second set of
overlapping images. The developed photograph contains a set of equal
amplitude fringes representing the interference pattern between the two
fringe sets generated by the two exposures and arrayed as a function of
the strain in the object as a result of the stress. To render the fringe
set visible, an image of the object is projected on a screen through a
Fourier, fringe-frequency sensitive filter which enhances the fringe
contrast on the resulting image of the object. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4139302 |
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Method and apparatus for interferometric deformation analysis |
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| Publication Date |
February 13, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
February 17, 1977 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or
privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. The method of analyzing the strain on an object resulting from the
application of a stress, comprising: illuminating the object with a
coherent light source; exposing a photographic media to a first pair of
focused images of the object displaced with respect to one another derived
by passing light reflected from the object through a converging lens
having a wedge-shaped prism covering a portion of its surface; stressing
the object; exposing the photographic media to a second pair of focused
images of the object, displaced with respect to one another as the first
pair, after stressing, derived from said lens and prism; developing the
photographic media; and analyzing the resultant image of the object with a
fringe-frequency filter to create an image of the object with fringe
families superimposed and arrayed as a function of the strain on the
object.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of viewing the image through a
fringe-frequency filter involves the generation of a Fourier plane
projection of the image, the reimaging of the image from the Fourier plane
image, and stopping certain sections of the Fourier plane image.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the high frequency sections of the image
are stopped.
4. The method of claim 1 in which the two images of the object focused on
the optical media are displaced relative to one another by a small
distance relative to the overall dimension of the images by the action of
the prism so that the major portion of the images overlap, whereby
interference patterns are formed on the optical media within the
overlapped area.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the source of coherent illumination for
the object is a laser.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the photographic media consists of a
planar surface coated with photosensitive chemicals.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the photographic media is developed to
form a transparency and the Fourier plane projection of the object is
created by back illuminating the transparency with a converging light
beam.
8. The method of forming a photographic image of an object containing
interference fringes arrayed as a function of strains resulting from
applying a stress to the object, comprising: illuminating the object with
coherent light; focusing light reflected from the object onto a
photographic media through use of a converging lens having a portion of
one of its surface covered by a wedge-shaped prism to form two focused
images of the object slightly displaced relative to one another so as to
have an area of overlap which comprises a substantial portion of both
focused images; applying said stress to the object; focusing the light
reflected from the object after the application of stress through said
wedge and prism to form two overlapping images of the object, coincident
with the first two overlapping images; and developing the photographic
media.
9. The method of claim 8 including the further step of processing the
resultant image of the object through a fringe-frequency discriminatory
Fourier filter to produce an image of the object having a high degree of
contrast between fringes of different frequency.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein the step of filtering the object with a
Fourier filter comprises illuminating a transparency of the object with a
converging light beam derived by passing a point source through a lens and
placing a stop in the resulting Fourier plane image.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the stop is disposed at the center of
the Fourier plane image to block low frequency fringes.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the filtered image is displayed on a
screen.
13. Apparatus for generating an image of an object containing interference
fringes arrayed as a function of the strain produced in the object by an
applied stress, comprising: a laser for generating a beam to illuminate
the object; a camera including a converging lens having a substantial
portion of its surface covered by a wedge-shaped prism adapted to record a
focused image of the object consisting of two images displaced with
respect to one another so that a major portion of their areas overlap; and
a Fourier plane, fringe frequency discriminatory filter operative to
create an image of the object with interference fringes of high contrast.
14. The method of analyzing the relative deformation of points on an object
between two conditions, comprising: illuminating the object with a
coherent light source; exposing a photographic media through a lens having
a portion of one of its surfaces covered by a wedge-shaped prism to two
pairs of focused images of the object, each pair consisting of a pair of
images displaced with respect to one another and the two pairs being taken
in two conditions of the object; developing the photographic media; and
analyzing the resultant image of the object with a fringe-frequency filter
to create an image of the object with fringe families superimposed and
arrayed as a function of the relative displacement of the object between
the two conditions.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the object is undergoing vibration and
the two conditions represent the two extreme time average positions of the
object during vibration.
16. In apparatus for generating an image of an object containing
interference fringes arrayed as a function of the strain produced in the
object by an applied stress, of the type operative to form a double
exposed image of the object surface with each image consisting of two
images displaced with respect to one another, the improvement comprising:
means for forming a focused image of the object consisting of two images
displaced with respect to one another so that a major portion of their
areas overlap comprising a converging lens having a first area of one of
its surfaces covered by a wedgeshaped transparent prism with the prism
having a thickness at any point proportional to the thickness of the
portion of the lens covered by that point.
17. The improvement of claim 16 wherein the prism covers a portion of the
surface of the lens opposite to the side of the lens adjacent to the
object. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a method and apparatus for mapping the
deformation which occurs on a surface of an object as a result of
stressing the object and more particularly to such a method employing the
coherent photographic techniques.
2. Prior Art
A knowledge of the deformation patterns which occur in an object when the
object is subjected to a stress is useful in areas such as stress
analysis, vibration studies, inspection of hidden flaws in structures,
material properties evaluation, velocity measurement, thermal measurement,
and optical component testing. As employed hereinafter, the term
"deformation" refers to the relative displacement of points on the
object's surface relative to one another resulting from the imposed
stress, as opposed to overall, uniform displacements resulting from the
stress.
The simplest and oldest method of determining such surface deformation
involved the point-by-point mapping of the object surface before and after
imposition of the stress employing any of a variety of measurement
techniques ranging from contact surface gaging, through strain gages, to
the highly precise optical interference techniques. These methods are
inherently extremely slow or yield information relating to relatively few
points on the object surface and are generally unsuitable for any form of
testing that must be regularly repeated, such as for production inspection
use.
The invention of practical holography techniques during the 1960's led to
the development of holographic interferometric techniques for mapping the
displacement of an entire object surface resulting from an applied stress.
The object was illuminated with coherent light and a photographic media
was exposed to the interference pattern between unimaged light reflected
from the object and a reference beam of coherent light from the
illuminating source. In the real time version of the process the
photographic media was then developed to form a hologram and the object
was then stressed and coherently illuminated and the coherent
reconstruction, from the hologram, of the image of the object before
testing was superimposed on the object itself. Interference between light
reflected from the object in real time and the reconstructed image
resulted in an array of interference fringes on the object displaced as a
function of the deformation of the object as a result of stressing. In the
double exposure version of the technique the media was subjected to two
exposures made before and after stressing of the object, and when an image
of the object was reconstructed from the resulting hologram using coherent
light an array of interference fringes resulting from interference between
the two exposures and arrayed as a function of the deformation of the
object between the two exposures was visible on the object's surface.
These displacement mapping techniques are disclosed in Grant et al U.S.
Pat. No. 3,545,259. They enjoyed a certain degree of commercial success in
analyzing subsurface flaws and like imperfections in manufactured objects
but its application was limited because of the relatively severe
limitations of holography. In the practice of holography the model and the
optical apparatus must be aligned with a high degree of precision and the
set-up must be highly stabilized and isolated from any possible vibration
employing heavy damped tables and the like. The size of an object that can
be analyzed is severely limited by the coherence length of the laser and
extremely high resolution and low speed photographic medias had to be
employed. The process had to be performed in the absence of any ambient
light other than that provided by the laser and the light was restricted
to a single frequency.
These holographic interferometric techniques do not measure the
displacement of points on the object surface relative to one another as a
result of the applied stress but rather measure the overall translation
displacements due to deformation and rigid body motion. Great difficulty
is encountered in distinguishing the interference fringes attributable to
various imperfections or non-uniformities in the object from those
resulting from overall deflection of the object as a result of stressing.
For example, if a rubber tire to be analyzed for subsurface
non-uniformities were stressed by modifying the ambient pressure on the
tire, the surface under examination would undergo an overall deformation
and the surface area immediately over the flaw might undergo a greater
deformation. In the reconstruction of the image of the object from the
resulting double exposure hologram it would be difficult to separate the
fringe families resulting from the anomalous deformation from those
resulting from the uniform deformation. While efforts were made to modify
the optical set-up between exposures to minimize the fringes resulting
from overall deformation, for example see Kersch et al U.S. Pat. No.
3,860,346, this problem was never fully resolved and greatly limited the
application of the holographic interferometric technique.
The present invention is broadly directed toward an interferometric
technique for producing the same broad type of analysis as double exposure
holographic interferometry without the limitations of that prior art
technique with respect to the accuracy of set-up, support and the like,
and moreover to such a method which eliminates the problem of the fringes
representative of anomalous distortion being masked by fringes resulting
from a uniform deformation of the object as a result of stress. The method
of the present invention also obviates the need for the use of a coherent
light source to view the resulting interference fringes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention broadly involves the formation of a photographic
double exposure interferogram of a coherently illuminated object surface,
with the exposures being taken before and after stress is applied to the
object. Each exposure of the interferogram represents an interferogram
itself, produced by focusing a pair of images of the coherently
illuminated object surface on a photographic medium with a slight
displacement of one image relative to the other, so that the images
overlap through the major portion of their areas, but are not coincident.
This will result in a slightly blurred image being recorded on the
photographic medium with a superimposed interference pattern. The two
exposures are made coincident with one another so that if the object were
not stressed between the two exposures, the two identical interferograms
would appear as one developed medium. The two interference patterns
recorded on the photographic media during the double exposure, one before
and one after stressing the object, will themselves interfere to form an
interference pattern. This interference pattern, along with a slightly
blurred but clearly recognizable image of the object appears on the
developed photographic media.
To better understand the mechanism of the invention consider the case in
which the stress imposed on the object between the two exposures produces
a slight uniform translation of the object laterally to the central axis
of the optics. The resulting interference pattern between the first and
second interference patterns would be uniform over the entire object area,
in the manner of the uniform pattern produced by the superimposition of
two identical grids relative to one another. In the practical case, the
stress imposed on the object does not produce a totally uniform strain in
the object because of the object's structural design and/or various
imperfections in the object. Accordingly, the interference patterns
recorded during the two exposures are not identical and the final
interference pattern recorded on the film, representing the interference
between the two separate interference patterns, is non-uniform; the
frequency of the interference lines varies over the object surface. The
interference frequency at any point on the object's surface is a measure
of the deformation of the object's surface.
The fringes produced in this final interferogram are of essentially
constant amplitude and constant duty cycle and are typically quite fine so
that while an image of the object is visible in this developed
interferogram, the average density of the fine interference pattern is
uniform over the object's surface and is accordingly difficult to analyze,
even if it contains relatively large variations in fringe frequency
produced by differing displacements in the object's surface caused by the
applied stress.
While it would be possible to measure the fine fringe frequency at any
point on the developed picture with the superimposed interferogram
employing instruments such as a microscope, in accordance with a preferred
embodiment of the present invention these fringes are rendered visible to
the naked eye by processing the developed image-interferogram which
results from the double exposure process through a fringe-frequency
discriminatory filter. This filter preferably takes the form of a Fourier
plane filter with a stop for a selected fringe frequency band.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention the photographic media is
developed as a transparency, or a transparency is produced from a positive
print. This transparency is illuminated by a light beam developed from a
point source and the beam is focused. The source need not be coherent. A
stop is supported on the opposite side of the transparency from the
illumination source at the Fourier plane; i.e., the image plane of the
point source. The stop may be central to the optical axis, to block low
frequency fringes, or it may be annular in shape to block high frequency
fringes. The use of the low frequency block is preferred as it has less
deleterious effect on the resulting image of the object. An objective lens
focuses an image of the filtered interferogram on a screen to allow for
visual viewing of the final result. Alternatively a photographic record
may be made of the filtered image. In this final image various fringe
arrays are clearly visible. The arrays are centered about points of
maximum non-uniform strain of the object as a result of the applied
stress.
On the final image there are no visible fringes which result from uniform
deformation of the object since the fringes resulting from overall
deformation are of constant frequency and are either all passed or all
blocked by the Fourier filtering process, and accordingly result in a
uniform optical density of the final image; only the fringes
representative of anomalous movement of the section are visible.
This anomalous deformation may have resulted from the design of the object
or from anomalous structural characteristics of the object, such as
cracks, subsurface separations, voids or inclusions or areas of
non-uniform strength which affect the surface deformation. The present
invention is accordingly useful as a design aid or for the testing of
prototype or production parts.
The present invention may be employed in all the applications that have
been suggested for holographic interferometry including the detection of
cracks in welds, of subsurface voids, separations and nonuniformities in
vehicle tires, separations in sandwich honeycombs and other fabricated
structures, etc. The present method is much simpler in practice than
holographic interferometry because of the relaxation of the positioning
requirement, the need for coherent light viewing and the need for
complicated vibration isolation. The results obtained from the method are
superior because of the high visibility of the fringes that map areas of
anomalous deformation and the absence of interfering fringes resulting
from uniform deformation.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention the interferograms are formed
using a camera which is conventional in construction except for the
formation of its lens. The lens is divided into two segments which focus
two separate images of the object's surface on the photographic media. On
segment may be conventional and the other may have a prism-like wedge
formation to shift the focused image that it produces laterally into
substantial superposition with the image formed with the regular segment.
The camera may be used in a conventional manner and conventional accuracy
restrictions are imposed on its operation. Any overall motion of the
object between the formation of the two images, within relatively wide
limits, results in a uniform interference pattern on the developed
photograph-interferogram and does not interfere with the practice of the
present invention.
The invention can also be used to map the slopes of the deformation that a
vibrating object undergoes. In this embodiment of the invention an object
undergoing steady state vibration is imaged by the special camera of the
invention through an exposure time of several vibration periods. The film
records the time-integrated interference pattern between the two
predominant time average positions of the object during the vibration.
This image can be processed in the same manner as a double exposure image
obtained with the other embodiments of the invention to generate a visible
interference pattern arrayed as the slopes of the vibrational amplitude.
The fringe families representative of anomalous deformation patterns which
are obtained through use of the present invention are easier to interpret
than the interferograms obtained from the practice of holographic
interferometry because of the sharpness of the fringes and the absence of
any fringes representative of uniform object motion.
Other objectives, advantages and applications of the present invention will
be made apparent by the following detailed description of the preferred
embodiment of the invention. The description makes reference to the
accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an apparatus for forming a double exposure
interferogram of a coherently illuminated object surface at two values of
ambient pressure on the object;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of the apparatus for forming the
interferogram;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged view of a small section of an interferogram
illustrating the constant amplitude, variable frequency fringes obtained
on the interferogram with the method of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of apparatus for processing an interferogram
of the present invention with a Fourier plane filter; and
FIG. 5 is an illustration of the resulting object image with superimposed
fringe patterns arrayed as a function of the anomalous deformation of the
pattern during stressing, obtained after processing with the apparatus of
FIG. 4.
The apparatus illustrated in FIG. 1 is adapted to analyze the strain
pattern occurring on the surface of some object 10 under study as a result
of a stress imposed on the object by way of altering the ambient pressure
on the object. This pressure change is achieved by supporting the object
on a table 12 within a domed pressure cover 14. An air pump 16, connected
to the atmosphere at one end, communicates to the volume between the cover
14 and the table 12 through a valve 18. By control of the pump 16 and the
valve 18 the pressure within the domed cover 14 may be controlled; it may
be made equal to, greater or less than the atmospheric pressure. Using the
apparatus of FIG. 1, one exposure of the double exposure process may be
made at first pressure and then the pressure may be altered to a second
level after which a second exposure is made, so that the strain on the
surface of the object resulting from this pressure change may be analyzed.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention the stress may be imposed
upon an object under study in other ways such as changing the temperature
of the object, changing the mechanical loading of the object, etc. The
present invention is in no way limited by these stressing methods.
In FIG. 1 the object 10 is illustrated as a tapered block. The block may
be, by way of example, a rubber molding that is to be tested for
inclusions adjacent to the surface 20 to be examined.
The section of the surface 20 to be studied is illuminated with coherent
light derived from a laser 22. The laser beam is passed through a
diverging lens 24 and a pinhole filter 26. Alternatively, the beam could
be expanded with a ground glass diffuser or the like. This illuminating
apparatus is disclosed as being contained within the pressurized domed
cover 14 but in alternative embodiments could be supported externally with
the illuminating beam entering into the cover through an appropriate
window (not shown).
Coherent light reflected from the surface 20 of the block is focused onto a
photographic plate 28 by a special lens 30 which will be termed a shearing
lens and will subsequently be disclosed in detail. The lens 30 and
photographic plate 28 could be supported within a camera, externally of
the domed cover 14. A window would then be provided through the cover 14
for the passage of light reflected from the surface to the camera.
The optical nature of the shearing lens 30 is disclosed in the schematic
diagram of FIG. 2. The lens consists of two parts. One part 32 constitutes
a conventional double convex camera lens. A wedge 34 of optical glass
covers one half of the lens. The uncovered half of the lens acts to focus
light from the illuminated surface 20 onto the photographic plate 28 in a
conventional manner. For example, light from a point A on the surface 20
is focused on a point A' on the photographic media 28 and light from a
point B from the object surface 20 is focused at a point B'.
Light passing through the wedge 34 from the object 20 is also focused on
the photographic plate 28 by the lens 30 to form an image of the surface
20 on the plate, but the image produced is shifted slightly with respect
to the image produced by light passing through the uncovered lens section.
For example, light reflected from the point A on the object is focused at
point A" on the photographic surface 28. It is thus not coincident with
light from point A passing through the lens section 32, but rather reaches
the point B'.
Thus through use of the shearing lens 30, 34, light from points A and B on
the object interfere with one another at the point A"- B'. Likewise, the
two images focused on the photographic media 28 by the covered and
uncovered lens sections interfere with one another in their overlapping
regions. The shift produced by the wedge section 34 is preferably
relatively slight compared to the overall dimension of the focused image.
Therefore, if the photographic plate were to be developed a slightly
blurred image of the object would be visible, much like an image that is
observed when an object photographed with a conventional camera moves
during the exposure. The blurred image would have an interference pattern
superimposed on its surface resulting from a coherent interference from
the two sheared images of the object. This interference pattern would be
uniform both in frequency and in amplitude. Other optical elements capable
of producing the shearing overlapping images could be employed as
alternatives to the lens 30, 34.
Following the recording of this first image on the photographic plate 28,
and without shifting the plate or developing the image recorded thereon,
the object is stressed. Preferably this is done by utilizing the pump 16
to alter the pressure within the domed cover 14. The pressure may be
increased or decreased relative to that of the first exposure. Then the
laser 22 is turned on and another exposure is made on the photographic
plate 28 of the illuminated object surface 20.
Suppose that the pressure change resulted in no strain on the object
surface 20. The photographic media 28 would then have been exposed to two
identical sheared images and upon development of the plate 28 a slightly
blurred image of the object surface 20 with irregular pattern of equal
frequency equal amplitude fringe lines would be observed.
Suppose further that the change in pressure resulted in some uniform change
in position of the surface 20 of the object relative to the photographic
media; for example, a slight shift toward the medium or a slight shift
laterally from the medium. In this event a second blurred image of the
object would be recorded on the photographic plate along with an
interference pattern resulting from the interference of the first set of
interference fringes with the set resulting from this second blurred
image. The two interference patterns would interfere with one another
producing an overall interference pattern. Because of the uniform movement
of the object this pattern would be regular over the entire object
surface. When the media was developed a blurred image of the object would
be seen and the regular interference pattern would be largely invisible
because of its fine size and the fact that the regular amplitude,
regularly spaced fringes would result in a uniform darkness level over the
entire image.
Suppose however, as is the practical case, that the change in pressure
produced an irregular strain over the object surface 20. For example, if a
void existed in the object at one point in close proximity to the surface
20 an increase in the ambient pressure might cause a relatively large
deflection of that point relative to the balance of the object. In that
event the interference pattern produced on the photographic plate as a
result of interference of the two patterns produced during the first and
second exposures would be irregular; the frequency of the fringes would
vary as a function of the displacement of each point on the object's
surface between the two exposures.
The resulting fringe pattern would have rings of alternating high frequency
and low frequency fringes surrounding points of anomalous strain. FIG. 3
is an enlarged view of a small section of such a resulting interferogram.
Assume that the point 36 has undergone an anomalous deformation. Rings of
fringes 38 would surround this point. However, these fringe patterns would
be extremely difficult to view with the naked eye because of the fine
nature of the fringes and the fact that the amplitude of the fringes and
their duty cycles are equal so that the uniform illumination level is
provided.
To render these variations in fringe frequency readily visible the
developed double exposure interferogram 40 is processed with the apparatus
of FIG. 4. The interferogram 40 is preferably developed in the form of a
transparency. In alternative embodiments a positive print could be made
and filtering could be performed in other manners. In the apparatus of
FIG. 4 the transparency 40 is illuminated with a converging beam of light
developed from any conventional non-coherent source 42 as through a
pinhole filter 44. The beam from the pinhole is collected by an objective
lens 46 and passed through a transparency 40. At the Fourier plane 48 a
central stop 50 is positioned. This stop acts as a block to the passage of
all fringes below a predetermined frequency. The resulting virtual image
is projected by a lens 52 onto a screen 54. The screen 54 thus exhibits a
blurred image of the object with fringe arrays formed thereon. Since the
low frequency fringes have been blocked, blackened areas appear on the
image at the position of the low frequency fringes. The resultant image is
illustrated in FIG. 5. The blackened areas 52 map the deformation
anomalies in the object surface 20.
In alternative embodiments of the invention other forms of fringe-frequency
filtering could be employed, for example, an annular, high fringe
frequency stop could be employed in the Fourier plane.
To analyze the slopes of vibrational amplitudes of the member, the member
10 could be caused to vibrate with suitable apparatus and only a single
exposure made using the optical apparatus. The developed exposure could be
processed in the same manner as a double exposure print.
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Description  |
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