Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique

This work describes the development and implementation of an infrared thermal NDE procedure for the evaluation of subsurface defects. The approach is called Pulse-Modulated Lock-In Thermography (PMLT) and is based on the analysis of the frequency response of the measured temperature and compariso...

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Main Author: Pitarresi G.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2010-06-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100638014
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spelling doaj-7c12c774834644628ca9d725acab295f2021-08-02T12:18:40ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2010-06-0163801410.1051/epjconf/20100638014Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography techniquePitarresi G.This work describes the development and implementation of an infrared thermal NDE procedure for the evaluation of subsurface defects. The approach is called Pulse-Modulated Lock-In Thermography (PMLT) and is based on the analysis of the frequency response of the measured temperature and comparison with the carrier frequencies launched by the external heat delivering source. The heat deposited on the object is in particular modulated as a train of square waves. This is easily achieved by periodically shuttering the heat source. The temperature is then sampled throughout the deposition of a few square waves. A lock-in algorithm is then implemented able to selectively filter out components at the main carrier frequencies of the heating signal and evaluate the phase information. Defected areas at different depths can be marked based on phase contrast, by using data from a single experiment as in Pulsed-Phase Thermography. An artificially defected thick GRP panel typical of naval monolithic hull structures, is investigated to validate the proposed technique. Experimental data have confirmed the potentials of PMLT as a flexible IR NDT approach, and its ability to be implemented by means of low cost heating and IR equipments. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100638014
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pitarresi G.
spellingShingle Pitarresi G.
Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Pitarresi G.
author_sort Pitarresi G.
title Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
title_short Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
title_full Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
title_fullStr Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
title_full_unstemmed Thermal NDE of thick GRP panels by means of a Pulse Modulated Lock-In Thermography technique
title_sort thermal nde of thick grp panels by means of a pulse modulated lock-in thermography technique
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2010-06-01
description This work describes the development and implementation of an infrared thermal NDE procedure for the evaluation of subsurface defects. The approach is called Pulse-Modulated Lock-In Thermography (PMLT) and is based on the analysis of the frequency response of the measured temperature and comparison with the carrier frequencies launched by the external heat delivering source. The heat deposited on the object is in particular modulated as a train of square waves. This is easily achieved by periodically shuttering the heat source. The temperature is then sampled throughout the deposition of a few square waves. A lock-in algorithm is then implemented able to selectively filter out components at the main carrier frequencies of the heating signal and evaluate the phase information. Defected areas at different depths can be marked based on phase contrast, by using data from a single experiment as in Pulsed-Phase Thermography. An artificially defected thick GRP panel typical of naval monolithic hull structures, is investigated to validate the proposed technique. Experimental data have confirmed the potentials of PMLT as a flexible IR NDT approach, and its ability to be implemented by means of low cost heating and IR equipments.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100638014
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