rexresearch.com
Chiara DARIAO, et al.
Sound Bullets
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/7556854/Sound-bullets-latest-weapon-against-cancer.html
6 Apr 2010
Sound
bullets latest weapon against cancer
A machine that fires powerful ''sound
bullets'' made from concentrated noise could be used to treat cancer,
say scientists
Two researchers have devised a prototype ''acoustic lens'' that focuses
sound into high-energy pulses.
A ''sonic scalpel'' based on the device could target and destroy
tumours, it is claimed.
Other potential uses include medical imaging and testing materials -
and the scientists also hint at possible military applications.
The machine consists of an array of 441 small steel spheres arranged in
21 parallel chains.
Squeezing the spheres together by varying amounts affects the speed at
which sound travels through the chains. This is because sound moves
faster through solid objects than through air.
By carefully adjusting the speed of sound passing through different
chains, the acoustic lens can be ''tuned'' to emit sound waves that
overlap and amplify one another at a specific focal point. The result
is a high-energy compact pulse of sound vibrations.
Dr Allessandro Spadoni and Dr Chiara Daraio, both from the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena, US, described their invention
today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
They wrote: ''The acoustic energy in the host medium is focused into
'sound bullet' - a travelling, compact region of high energy density.
''Sound bullets result from the coalescence of acoustic waves, which
have frequencies in the audible range for the lens parameters we
chose.''
The device allowed the ''generation of compact sound bullets of very
large amplitudes'', said the scientists.
They added: ''Acoustic lenses like the one we demonstrated have the
potential to dramatically impact a variety of applications, such as
biomedical devices, non-destructive evaluation and defence systems.
''For example, sound bullets may conceivably be used as a non-invasive
scalpel to accurately target tumours in hyperthermia (heat treatment)
applications.''
METHOD
AND SYSTEM FOR FORMATION OF HIGHLY NONLINEAR PULSES
US2009229910
WO2009100061
Inventor(s): DARAIO CHIARA
Classification: - international:
G10K15/04; G10K15/04 - European: G10K15/00
Abstract -- A method and system
supporting the formation and propagation of tunable highly nonlinear
pulses using granular chains composed of non-spherical granular
systems. Such a method and system may be used to support the creation
of tunable acoustic band gaps in granular crystals formed of particles
with different geometries (spherical or not) in which the tunability is
achieved by varying the static precompression, type of excitation
and/or pulse amplitude in the system.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001]The present application is related to and claims the benefit of
the following copending and commonly assigned U.S. Patent Applications:
U.S. Patent Application No. 61/063,903, titled "Method and device for
actuating and sensing highly nonlinear solitary waves in surfaces,
structures and materials," filed on Feb. 7, 2008; U.S. Patent
Application No. 61/067,250, titled "System Supporting the Formation and
Propagation of Tunable Highly Nonlinear Pulses, Based on Granular
Chains Composed of Particles with Non Spherical Geometry," filed on
Feb. 27, 2008; U.S. Patent Application No. 61/124,920, titled "Method
and Apparatus for Nondestructive Evaluations and Structural Health
Monitoring of Materials and Structures," filed on Apr. 21, 2008; and
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/251,164, "Method and Apparatus for
Nondestructive Evaluation and Monitoring of Materials and Structures,"
filed on Oct. 14, 2008; whereby the entire contents of these
applications are incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND
[0002]1. Field
[0003]This disclosure relates to a method and system for the formation
and propagation of highly nonlinear pulses with selectable pulse
properties. More particularly, the present disclosure describes the
generation and propagation of pulses through the use of granular chains
consisting of particles with desirable geometries.
[0004]2. Description of Related Art
[0005]The existence of the highly nonlinear regime of wave propagation
in solids was discovered while studying the shock absorption properties
of granular matter. The model typically used to represent the simplest
form of granular systems consisted of a one dimensional (1-D) chain of
spherical beads regulated by Hertzian contact interaction potentials.
However, a new, general wave dynamic theory, supporting compact
solitary waves, was derived for all structured homogeneous materials
showing a highly nonlinear force (F)-displacement (.delta.) response
dictated by the intrinsically nonlinear potential of interaction
between its fundamental components. This general nonlinear spring-type
contact relation can be expressed as shown below in Eq. (1):
F.apprxeq.A.delta..sup.n Eq.(1)
where A is a material's parameter and n is the nonlinear exponent of
the fundamental components' contact interaction (with n>1). For
Hertzian systems, such as those consisting of a chain of spherical
beads, the n exponent of interaction is equal to 1.5.
[0006]Within the present disclosure, "granular matter" is defined as an
aggregate of "particles" in elastic contact with each other, preferably
in linear or network shaped arrangements. In addition to the nonlinear
contact interaction present in such systems, and related purely to the
particle's geometry, another unusual feature of the granular state is
provided by the zero tensile strength, which introduces an additional
nonlinearity (asymmetric potential) to the overall response. In the
absence of static precompression acting on the systems, these
properties result in a negligible linear range of the interaction
forces between neighboring particles leading to a material with a
characteristic sound speed equal to zero in its uncompressed state
(c.sub.0=0): this has led to the introduction of the concept of "sonic
vacuum". This makes the linear and weakly nonlinear continuum
approaches based on Korteveg-de Vries (KdV) equation invalid and places
granular materials in a special class according to their wave dynamics.
This highly nonlinear wave theory supports, in particular, a new type
of compact highly tunable solitary waves that have been experimentally
and numerically observed in several works for the case of 1-D Hertzian
granular systems.
SUMMARY
[0007]Embodiments of the present invention described herein include a
method and system supporting the formation and propagation of tunable
highly nonlinear pulses using granular chains composed of non-spherical
granular systems and a linearized version thereof supporting the
formation of tunable acoustic band gaps. Other embodiments of the
present invention include a method and system to support the creation
of tunable acoustic band gaps in granular crystals formed of particles
with different geometries (spherical or not) in which the tunability is
achieved by varying the static precompression, type of excitation
and/or pulse amplitude in the system.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS
OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008]
FIG. 1 shows a
photograph of stainless steel elliptical particles.
[0009]
FIG. 2A shows an
experimental set up of a vertically stacked chain of stainless steel
elliptical beads.
[0010]
FIG. 2B shows a sensor
particle having an encapsulated piezo-sensor.
[0011]
FIG. 2C shows a wall
sensor having an encapsulated piezo-sensor.
[0012]
FIG. 3 shows the
formation of solitary waves excited by impact in a chain of stainless
steel elliptical beads.
[0013]
FIGS. 4A and 4B
illustrate relative orientations of a pair of cylindrical particles.
[0014]
FIG. 4C shows a
schematic diagram of a 3-D system assembled from an array of
cylindrical contacts.
[0015]
FIG. 4D illustrates the
vertical alignment of the cylindrical contacts in FIG. 4C.
[0016]
FIG. 5 shows
experimental data obtained from a vertically aligned chain of cylinders
oriented perpendicular to each other.
[0017]
FIG. 6 shows a schematic
diagram of a rod-based 3-D system 200 using precompression.
[0018]
FIG. 7A shows a system
in which one dimensional chains of particles are held to each other at
weld points.
[0019]
FIG. 7B shows a system
in which each layer is a molded layer having individual particles of
various geometric shapes.
[0020]
FIG. 8 shows a
photograph of an experimental assembly used for a study of a dimer
chain consisting of alternating stainless steel and Teflon particles.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] Granular materials based on geometrical arrangements of
spherical beads are the simplest and most common systems used
theoretically, numerically, and experimentally for studying the
formation and propagation of the highly nonlinear waves in solids.
Despite being the most studied example for these systems, they are not
the only one possible solution for the creation of systems with a
highly nonlinear response. The continuum theory derived for highly
nonlinear waves indeed is not limited to the Hertzian interactions
(n=3/2) between the discrete components: the theoretical formulation
that describes them has been extended and generalized to all nonlinear
exponents n, with n.noteq.1. Indeed, a similar power-law type response
can be found in many other nonlinear systems. The analytical
formulation of the highly nonlinear waves has also been extended to
heterogeneous systems composed of "layered" structures. Additional work
may be done analytically in parallel with experimental and numerical
analysis for periodic heterogeneous nonlinear systems. The presence of
periodic "defects" (heterogeneities) is particularly relevant for the
design and study of shock protecting structures and energy dissipaters,
as the defects play a relevant role in the scattering, redirecting
sideways, or localization of energy and in the tunability of the
compressive pulses traveling through the material. Such properties, in
particular the ones found in heterogeneous granular systems, may
provide valid alternatives to the present state of the art shock energy
protectors/dissipaters
[0022] The fundamental nonlinear dynamic response present in uniform
systems is governed by the wave equation derived and solved in the
continuum limit. For highly nonlinear uniform systems, the long wave
approximation, derived from the Hertzian interaction law (n=3/2), is
shown below in Eq. (2):
u tt = - c 2 { ( - u x ) 3 / 2 + a 2 10 [ ( - u x ) 1 / 4 ( ( - u x ) 5
/ 4 ) xx ] } x Eq . ( 2 ) ##EQU00001##
where u is the displacement, a is the particle's diameter, c is a
material's constant, and the subscripts indicate the derivative. The
constant c in Eq. (2) is given by Eq. (3) as shown below:
c 2 = 2 E .pi..rho. 0 ( 1 - v 2 ) Eq . ( 3 ) ##EQU00002##
where E is the Young's modulus, .rho..sub.0 is the density, and v is
the Poisson coefficient. The generality of this highly nonlinear wave
equation is given by the fact that it includes also the linear and
weakly nonlinear wave equations.
[0023] Despite its apparent complexity the closed form solution of Eq.
(2) can be obtained. For the case of a granular system with no or very
weak precompression acting on it, the exact solution exists in the form
as shown below in Eq. (4):
.xi. = ( 5 V p 2 4 c 2 ) 2 cos 4 ( 10 5 a x ) Eq . ( 4 ) ##EQU00003##
where .zeta. represents the strain and V.sub.p the system's velocity.
The solitary shape, if the initial prestrain .zeta..sub.0 is
approaching 0, can be taken as one hump of the periodic solution
(provided from Eq. (4)) with finite wave length equal to only five
particle diameters.
[0024] The periodic solution described above demonstrates that in a
highly nonlinear medium (such as in "granular crystals") only two
harmonics contribute to a stationary mode of propagation of the
periodic signal. In analogy with the KdV solutons (as described by
Korteveg and de Vries in "On the change of form of long waves advancing
in a rectangular canal, and on a new type of long stationary Waves,"
London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of
Science, ser. 5, 39, pp. 422-443. (1895)), the highly nonlinear
solitary waves are supersonic, which means that their phase velocity is
larger than the initial sound velocity (c.sub.0) in the nonlinear
medium (especially in the case of an uncompressed system, in which the
c.sub.0=0). One of their unique feature is the independence of their
width on the amplitude (their spatial size is always .about.5 particles
diameter, no matter what wave amplitude or wave speed is present in the
system) which makes them one of the most tractable forms of
"compactons" (described by Rosenau and Hyman in "Compactons: Solitons
with finite wavelength," Physical Review Letters 70, 564 (1993)). This
property is quite different from the properties of weakly nonlinear KdV
solitary waves and it is very important for the use of these solitary
waves as information carriers and in signal transformation devices.
[0025] The speed of the solitary wave V.sub.s, as a nonlinear function
of the maximum particle dynamic strain in purely highly nonlinear
systems, can be expressed as shown below in Eq. (5):
V s = 2 5 c .xi. m 1 / 4 = 0.6802 ( 2 E a .rho. 3 / 2 ( 1 - v 2 ) ) 1 /
3 F m 1 / 6 Eq . ( 5 ) ##EQU00004##
where F.sub.m is the maximum dynamic contacts force between the
particles in the discrete chain. This relationship uncovers a useful
characteristic of such waves, predicted by the theory and validated
numerically and experimentally: their tunability. By changing the
mechanical and/or the geometrical properties of the high nonlinear
medium supporting the formation of highly nonlinear solitary waves, the
shape and the properties of the traveling pulse can be tuned. As such,
the solitary waves in the highly nonlinear media can be engineered for
specific applications
[0026] The analytical expression for the tunability of the solitary
waves speed derived from the discretization of the particles in a
precompressed chain may be expressed as shown in Eq. (6) below:
V s = 0.9314 ( 4 E 2 F 0 a 2 .rho. 3 ( 1 - v 2 ) 2 ) 1 / 6 1 ( f r 2 /
3 - 1 ) { 4 15 [ 3 + 2 f r 5 / 3 - 5 f r 2 / 3 ] } 1 / 2 . Eq . ( 6 )
##EQU00005##
[0027] where F.sub.0 represents the static precompression added to the
system, f.sub.r=F.sub.m/F.sub.0 and F.sub.m is the maximum contacts
force between the particles in the discrete chain. The dependence of
the solitary wave properties on the materials parameters is shown in
Eq. (5) for a non-prestressed system and in Eq. (6) for a prestressed
system. Another feature of the highly nonlinear solitary waves is
determined by the fact that the system is size independent and the
solitary waves can therefore be scalable to any dimension, according to
the needs of each specific application. According to Eqs. (5) and (6),
the tunability of the highly nonlinear solitary waves can be achieved
varying one or more of the characteristic parameters of the nonlinear
media.
[0028] The generalized form of the partial differential equation
describing the highly nonlinear regime in binary heterogeneous periodic
systems has been and can be expressed as shown in Eq. (7) below:
U.sub..tau..tau.=u.sub.x.sup.n-1u.sub.xx+Gu.sub.x.sup.n-3u.sub.xx.sup.3+Hu-
.sub.x.sup.n-2u.sub.xxu.sub.xxx+Iu.sub.x.sup.n-1u.sub.xxxx Eq. (7)
where u is the displacement, .tau. is a rescaled time, n is the
nonlinear exponent found in Eq. (1) and the explicit expression of the
parameters I, H, G can be found in Porter, M.A.; Daraio, C.; Herbold,
E. B.; Szelengowicz, I.; Kevrekidis, P. G. "Highly nonlinear solitary
waves in phononic crystal dimers" Physical Review E, 77, 015601 (R),
2008.
[0029] The solution for Eq. (7), describing the shape and properties of
the highly nonlinear solitary waves, from direct integration is of the
form shown in Eq. (8) below:
u = v = B cos 2 n - 1 ( .beta. .xi. ) , Eq . ( 8 ) ##EQU00006##
where B = ( .mu. [ .beta. 2 s ( s - 1 ) ] ) 1 / n - 1 , .beta. =
.sigma. ( 1 - .eta. ) 2 and s = pI . ##EQU00007##
[0030] Highly nonlinear granular systems composed of spherical beads
have been extensively studied in the past. Embodiments of the present
invention comprise systems that may deviate from the classical Hertzian
approach associated with systems using chains of spherical beads.
Systems that do not rely upon chains of spherical beads include: chains
composed of O-rings described by Herbold and Nesterenko in "Solitary
and shock waves in discrete strongly nonlinear double power-law
materials," Applied Physics Letters, 90, 261902, (2007), and complex
2-D and 3-D granular assemblies as described by Goddard in "Nonlinear
Elasticity and Pressure-Dependent Wave Speeds in Granular Media," Proc.
R. Soc. Lond. A 430, 105 (1990). Coste and Falcon describe the
possibility of obtaining deviations from the Hertzian type response
also in 1-D chains of spherical beads composed of "soft" materials
(i.e. bronze or polymer) in "On the validity of Hertz contact law for
granular material acoustics," European Physical Journal B, 7, 155.
(1999).
[0031] An embodiment of the present invention is a system that uses
aligned stainless steel elliptical grains, such as those shown in FIG.
1. FIG. 1 shows a photograph of elliptical particles fabricated from
stainless steel. Results demonstrate that 1-D chains composed of
elliptical particles support the formation and propagation of highly
nonlinear solitary waves when subjected to impulsive loading, following
a non-Hertzian contact interaction law. FIG. 2A shows an experimental
set up of a vertically stacked chain 100 of 20 stainless steel
elliptical beads 130. Piezoelectric sensors are embedded in two sensor
particles 150 at particles 7 and 12, as well as at a wall sensor 170 in
contact with a wall 110. FIG. 2B shows the sensor particle 150 having a
piezo-sensor 154 encapsulated in a glue layer 153 and sandwiched
between two particle caps 151. Particle sensor leads 152 provide an
electrical output from the sensor particle 150. Similarly, the wall
sensor 170 shown in FIG. 2C has a piezo-sensor 174 encapsulated in a
glue layer 173 sand sandwiched between two wall sensor caps 171. Wall
sensor leads 172 provide an electrical output from the wall sensor 170.
[0032] FIG. 3 shows the formation of solitary waves excited by impact
in the chain of twenty stainless steel elliptical beads. The twenty
stainless steel elliptical beads (supplied by Kramer Industries) had
m=0.925 g.+-.0.001 g; minor axis equal to 4.76 mm; major axis equal to
10.16 mm; modulus of elasticity equal to 193 GPa; and v equal to 0.3.
The beads were stacked in a vertical aluminum guide. Piezoelectric
sensors were provided as shown in FIGS. 2A-2C by gluing custom
micro-miniature wiring (supplied by Piezo Systems, Inc.) between the
two caps of an elliptical bead cut length-wise. The sensors were
calibrated to produce force versus time data by assuming conservation
of linear momentum following the impact of a free falling bead. Impact
was generated with 3.787 g striker traveling at 0.75 m/s striking the
top particle in the chain; the average wave speed was calculated at 525
m/s. In FIG. 3, line 191 represents the data measured at the top sensor
particle 150, Line 193 represents the data measured at the lower sensor
particle 150, and line 195 represents the data measured at the wall
sensor 170. It is noted that although highly nonlinear wave theory was
derived for uniform systems with a general exponent governing their
contact interaction law, experimental validation is typically provided
only through Hertzian interactions and/or using spherical particles.
[0033] According to some embodiments of the present invention, the
empirical determination of the "n" exponent in Eq. (1) for elliptical
grains may be determined by either of the following two methods: a
first method based on the single particle impact and conservation of
momentum; or a second method based on the Force (F.sub.m)-velocity
(V.sub.s) scaling similar to that described, for example, in "On the
validity of Hertz contact law for granular material acoustics,"
European Physical Journal B, 7, 155. (1999) or in Porter et al.,
"Highly nonlinear solitary waves in phononic crystal dimers" Physical
Review E, 77, 015601 (R), 2008, for dimer chains. The second method,
tested on spherical beads to verify its robustness has been shown to be
reliable. The power law fit provided a value of the contact interaction
exponent for irregular elliptical beads n.about.1.449, proving a
deviation from classical Hertzian response.
[0034] A determination of the "n" exponent from Eq. (1) for elliptical
particles was made by analyzing the data summarized in FIG. 3 using the
second method described above. The average velocity of the solitary
wave was determined by dividing the distance between the centers of the
two particle sensors (equal to 5 particle diameters) by the time
interval between the maximum force seen at these sensors. The average
maximum force of the highly nonlinear pulses was determined by
averaging the force amplitudes at the two sensor particles. The average
velocity and average force amplitude for the solitons generated through
various impulsive forces provided for force versus velocity data.
Evaluation of the power-law relationship in light of the equations
above provides that, for the measured elliptical particles,
n.about.1.449.
[0035] An estimate of the "n" exponent from Eq. (1) for elliptical
particles using the first method described above was also made by
impacting a fixed sensor with an elliptical particle. To ensure that
the particle retained proper orientation throughout free fall and
contact with the sensor, a plastic guide rod was cemented to the upper
portion of the particle. Assuming conservation of linear momentum and
integrating numerically the Force versus time plots using Euler's
method (beginning at the point of first contact between the elliptical
particle and the sensor (t.sub.0) until the particle reached a full
stop in its descent (v(t)=0)), velocity versus time was obtained. Using
the same procedure, the resulting velocity versus time curve was
integrated again to produce displacement versus time. By matching
experimentally obtained force data with calculated displacement data, a
force versus displacement curve was produced. Best fit analysis of each
resulting force versus displacement curve enabled determination of the
exponent "n".
[0036] Embodiments of the present invention are not limited to systems
and methods using elliptical beads. The results described earlier for
1-D chains of elliptical beads show the formation and propagation of
highly nonlinear pulses in non-Hertzian systems and support the
examination and use of 1-D granular chains composed of particles with
different geometries. The selection of these grains having more complex
non-spherical shapes may generally require the empirical determination
of the contact interaction laws governing the Force
(F.sub.m)-displacement (.delta.) response between the fundamental
components of the systems; in particular for the cases where the
analytical derivation of the contact mechanics has not been provided.
[0037] Other embodiments according to the present invention include
systems and methods using particles having cylindrical geometry.
One-dimensional arrays of cylinders (as opposed to the elliptical
particles described earlier) may offer a potential for the practical
assembly of 3-D systems and enable a large range of tunability of the
level of nonlinearity (value of the exponent "n" in Eq. (1)). Such
tunability can be achieved by the simple variation of the reciprocal
axial orientation between the cylinders in the chain as described in
additional detail below.
[0038] FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate relative orientations of a pair of
cylindrical particles. In FIG. 4A, the axis of the particles are
oriented parallel to each other with .theta.=0.degree.. In FIG. 4B, the
axis of the particles are oriented perpendicular to each other with
.theta.=90.degree.. FIG. 4C shows a schematic diagram of a 3-D system
assembled from an array of cylindrical contacts having vertical
orientations of 0.degree.<.theta.<90.degree.. FIG. 4D illustrates
the vertical alignment of the cylindrical contacts in FIG. 4C.
[0039] A 1-D array of cylinders with axis oriented parallel with
respect to each other (as in FIG. 4A) do not support the formation of
clean solitary waves because of their linear contact interaction
dynamics. This represents a limit case in Hertz's approach to the study
of interaction laws between solids of revolution and presents no simple
analytical form for its description. An axial misalignment of
0.degree.<.theta.<90.degree. where .theta. represents the angle
between the axis of two consecutive cylinders in the chain (such as
that shown in FIGS. 4C and 4D), brings back the system to a
"manageable" geometry, falling back within the Hertzian treatment
(n=1.5). The other limiting case (.theta.=90.degree., such as in FIG.
4B) falls back into a second limit example and does not have a simple
analytical solution for the contact law.
[0040] Experimental results from a 1-D stack of cylinders oriented at
0.degree. and 90.degree. with respect to each other has shown that by
simply changing the angle of orientation between the axis of the
cylinders it is possible to change dramatically the wave propagation
response of the system. Cylinders oriented at 0.degree. (parallel axis)
excited by an impulse do not show the formation of highly nonlinear
solitary waves (but rather presented the propagation of shock-like
pulses). Chains with cylinders oriented in a 90.degree. degrees
configurations support formation and propagation of highly nonlinear
solitary pulses analogous to the one observed in chains of spherical
beads. FIG. 5 shows experimental data obtained from a vertically
aligned chain of cylinders oriented perpendicular to each other. The
chain consisted of a total of 38 cylinders. Piezogauges were inserted
at a wall and in 3 of the cylinders within the chain. The data obtained
from the wall sensor is shown at line 196; the data from the cylinders
within the chain are shown at lines 197, 198, and 199.
[0041] Rod-based structures similar to the one depicted in FIG. 4C can
be tuned by applying variable static precompression. The application of
such static force can be achieved, for example, by using tension cords,
strings or nets wrapped on two opposing sides of the outer cylinders or
rods edges. The control over the amount of compression applied by such
elements to the assembled rods can be obtained by using small
dynamometers or by tightening screws with measured torques. FIG. 6
shows a schematic diagram of a rod-based 3-D system 200 using
precompression. The system has arrays of lateral rods 201 alternating
with arrays of perpendicular rods 203. The outside ends of the lateral
rods 201 are compressed together with tension cords 210 or other such
fastening apparatus. Similarly, the outside ends of the perpendicular
rods 203 are compressed together with tension cords 210 or other such
fastening apparatus. A dynamometer 211 within each tension cord 210 may
be used to measure and adjust the amount of precompression.
[0042] To obtain the dynamic response "purely" from the granular system
without the influence of the matrix between the chains, it is possible
to create desired three-dimensional systems in a cubic or hexagonal
pattern at different length scales assembling the particles
(elliptical, conical, rods, etc) in a layer-by-layer process. The new
composite granular structures can be manufactured in large quantity in
industrially viable processes. Depending upon the fabrication process
used, it may be possible to create light weight, tunable and even
flexible or wearable protective layers, all exploiting the new
properties offered by the highly nonlinear wave theory discussed above.
Such protective systems may allow for sideway impulse redirection,
energy trapping and/or energy dissipation. FIG. 7A shows a system 230
in which one dimensional chains 231 of particles 232 (that may have
various geometrical shapes) are held to each other at weld points 233
are assembled into layers for a 3-D array of particles. Note that in
FIG. 7A, the particles 232 may be welded, glued or
electrostatically/magnetically interacting together in the horizontal
direction, but are merely contacting one another in the vertical
direction. FIG. 7B shows a system 240 in which each layer 241 is a
molded layer having individual particles 242 of various geometric
shapes. Note that in FIG. 7B (similar to 7A), the layers 241 comprise
molded particles in the horizontal direction, but are the layers are
241 are merely contacting one another in the vertical direction. As
discussed above, the systems shown in FIGS. 7A and 7B may also have
precompression applied.
[0043] The methods and systems described above have application for
acoustic band gaps in tunable highly nonlinear crystals. Linear or
weakly nonlinear periodic crystals with two or more atoms per primitive
basis (precompressed dimer or trimer chains as described in Porter et
al., "Highly nonlinear solitary waves in phononic crystal dimers,"
Physical Review E, 77, 015601 (R), 2008. and Porter et al.,
"Propagation of Highly Nonlinear Solitary Waves in Phononic Crystal
Dimers and Trimers," Physica D, submitted 2007) are known to have a
classical phonon dispersion relation in which for each polarization
mode in a given propagation direction, the dispersion relation develops
two branches, known as the acoustical and optical branches. Depending
on such relation, the system can present one or more frequency band
gaps between the branches as a function of the mass ratio in the system
and the precompression level applied to it. For a simple cubic crystal
where atoms (analogous to Hertzian grains in the systems described
above) of mass ml lie on one set of planes and atoms of mass m.sub.2
lie on planes interleaved between them, the lower bound (f.sub.1) and
upper bound (f.sub.2) of the bandgap can be expressed by Eq. 9 shown
below:
f 1 = 1 2 .pi. ( 2 .beta. m 1 ) 1 / 2 , f 2 = 1 2 .pi. ( 2 .beta. m 2 )
1 / 2 . Eq . ( 9 ) ##EQU00008##
In Eq. 9, .beta. is a constant proportional to the material's
parameters (Youngs modulus, Poisson's coefficient and particle's radii)
and static precompression applied to the system (see. For example,
Herbold, E. B.; Kim, J.; Nesterenko, V. F.; Wang, S.; Daraio, C.
"Tunable frequency band-gap and pulse propagation in a strongly
nonlinear diatomic chain" Acta Mechanica (submitted and published
online), 2008).
[0044] Preliminary results were obtained from the study of dimer
systems of stainless steel and Teflon particles excited by continuous
sinusoidal signals at variable frequencies. FIG. 8 shows a photograph
of the experimental assembly used for the study in which the dimer
chain consisted of alternating stainless steel and Teflon particles.
The band gap calculated for this model system was between .about.7-14
kHz. The excitations with frequencies comprised in the estimated gap
(as provided in Eq. (9)) remained confined in the exciter particle and
its immediate surrounding.
[0045] A numerical model for a 1-D generic granular system according to
embodiments of the present invention treats particles as rigid bodies
connected by nonlinear springs to study acoustic excitations in the
systems and the presence of band gaps, wave decay and possible presence
of gap solitons deriving from the nonlinearity of the system response.
Such a model can show that when a pulse was excited within the gap, the
system responds with a rapid decay of the initial excitation already
within the first 10 particles in the chain, with relevant attenuation
of the pulse's intensity in the audible frequency range. Thanks to the
high tunability of the highly nonlinear crystals, the forbidden
frequency range can be effectively designed and varied at will, simply
choosing the appropriate particles' mass ratio and static
precompression applied to the system.
[0046] As indicated above, embodiments of the present invention may
have particular application to linearized granular crystals (as
phononic crystals). Just as crystalline materials can be said to
possess a lattice structure, with atoms occupying various positions in
the lattice, phononic-crystal engineered composite systems (i.e.,
"metamaterials") can be pictured as a lattice structure with nano to
macro scale particles replacing their atomic counterparts. Such
phononic crystals based on granular materials are most fundamentally
typified in a statically precompressed one dimensional (1-D) chain of
macroscopic particles. Due to zero tensile strength in the particle
chain and a power-law relationship between force and displacement,
linear, weakly nonlinear or highly nonlinear wave dynamics may arise,
enabling the formation and propagation of solitary waves following
impulsive loading and yielding desirable properties in their acoustic
and mechanical response. Static compression of the particle chain prior
to impulsive loading or "pre-compression" as discussed above enables
the system to be tuned from highly nonlinear to weakly nonlinear to
linear wave dynamics, enabling potential engineering applications in
shock absorption, vibration dampening, and acoustic filtering (by
forming acoustic band gaps).
[0047] Due to the nonlinear force versus displacement relationship and
the discrete nature of granular-crystal systems, solitary (compression)
waves readily form. Employing the long wave approximation, L>>a
(where L is the width of the solitons and a is distance between
particle centers), for any power law material of the form
F.varies..delta..sup.n, the speed of a solitary wave is given by Eq.
(10) below:
V s = ( A n .times. a n + 1 ) 1 2 .times. 2 n + 1 .times. ( .xi. m ) (
n - 1 ) 2 Eq . ( 10 ) ##EQU00009##
where A.sub.n is some constant dependant upon material properties, a is
the particle diameter (distance between two particles centers), n is
the exponent governing the force versus displacement relationship, and
.zeta..sub.m is the maximum strain in the system.
[0048] Relating .zeta..sub.m to the maximum force in the system
(F.sub.m), Eq. (10) can be rewritten as Eq. (11) below:
V s = a .times. 2 .times. A n 1 n ( n + 1 ) .times. m ( n - 1 n )
.times. ( F m ) ( n - 1 ) 2 n Eq . ( 11 ) ##EQU00010##
Just as pre-compression of a particle chain "tunes" the mechanical
response to impulsive loading. Eq. (11) demonstrates that adjusting the
exponent (n) provides an additional means of control over linearized
granular crystals.
[0049] From an analytical perspective, the discrete nature of a 1-D
granular crystal can be ignored if the system is treated as a continuum
and if the particles are homogeneous in mass and material
characteristics. However, the introduction of new material compositions
and/or masses yields a "defect" into the system (i.e., an interface)
and causes a breakdown of the analytical description of the system.
Such "defects" introduce fundamentally different behavior into the
granular medium and may have potential in energy trapping/redirecting,
localization phenomena and shockwave mitigation applications. Returning
to the test apparatus shown in FIG. 8, the chain of alternating
stainless steel and Teflon beads demonstrated the nearly complete
energy transfer across the interface between the Teflon and stainless
steel beads in the uncompressed case, as shown by the lack of a
reflected compression wave into the stainless steel beads. Introduction
of multiple "defects" into a 1-D granular crystal through an
alternating pattern of different particles/materials like in the case
of Teflon and stainless steel beads demonstrates the ability of such a
system to transform a shock-like impulse into a sequence of smaller
amplitude pulses.
[0050] Observation of solitary waves in a 1-D chain of elliptical beads
and empirical measurement of the exponent governing the force versus
displacement relationship for elliptical particles provides
experimental validation that a non-Hertzian system can support solitary
wave propagation. Such an experimental validation also demonstrates
that particle geometry changes offer a realizable mechanism for tuning
the mechanical and acoustic response of linearized granular crystals.
[0051] The foregoing Detailed Description of exemplary and preferred
embodiments is presented for purposes of illustration and disclosure in
accordance with the requirements of the law. It is not intended to be
exhaustive nor to limit the invention to the precise form or forms
described, but only to enable others skilled in the art to understand
how the invention may be suited for a particular use or implementation.
The possibility of modifications and variations will be apparent to
practitioners skilled in the art. No limitation is intended by the
description of exemplary embodiments which may have included
tolerances, feature dimensions, specific operating conditions,
engineering specifications, or the like, and which may vary between
implementations or with changes to the state of the art, and no
limitation should be implied therefrom. This disclosure has been made
with respect to the current state of the art, but also contemplates
advancements and that adaptations in the future may take into
consideration of those advancements, namely in accordance with the then
current state of the art. It is intended that the scope of the
invention be defined by the Claims as written and equivalents as
applicable. Reference to a claim element in the singular is not
intended to mean "one and only one" unless explicitly so stated.
Moreover, no element, component, nor method or process step in this
disclosure is intended to be dedicated to the public regardless of
whether the element, component, or step is explicitly recited in the
Claims. No claim element herein is to be construed under the provisions
of 35 U.S.C. Sec. 112, sixth paragraph, unless the element is expressly
recited using the phrase "means for . . . " and no method or process
step herein is to be construed under those provisions unless the step,
or steps, are expressly recited using the phrase "comprising step(s)
for . . . "
WO2009099469
USPA20090204344
METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR
NONDESTRUCTIVE EVALUATION AND MONITORING OF MATERIALS AND
STRUCTURES
Inventor: DARAIO CHIARA [US] ; RIZZO PIERVINCENZO [US]
Applicant: CALIFORNIA INST OF TECHN [US]
; UNIV PITTSBURGH [US] (+2)
EC: G01N29/34B; G01N29/24E
IPC: G01N29/12; G01N29/04; G01N29/12; (+1)
Abstract -- A method and
apparatus for nondestructive evaluation (NDE) of structures and
materials using a highly nonlinear medium for the generation and
detection of one or multiple highly nonlinear pulses (or highly
nonlinear waves) impinging on a material or structure. The apparatus
includes pulse exciters that induce the propagation of highly
nonlinear, weakly nonlinear or linear stress waves in the material,
system, or structure to be inspected and/or detectors for the
observation and the detection of the output waves from the
material/structure being tested. The NDE method includes the use of the
tunable highly nonlinear apparatus as impulse exciter alone, or in
combination with an accelerometer or a nonlinear sensor to detect the
outgoing pulse.
Inventors: Daraio; Chiara; (Pasadena, CA) ; Rizzo;
Piervincenzo; (Pittsburgh, PA)
U.S. Current Class: 702/39; 73/600
U.S. Class at Publication: 702/39; 73/600
Intern'l Class: G01N 29/11 20060101 G01N029/11; G06F
19/00 20060101 G06F019/00
Description
BACKGROUND
[0002]1. Field
[0003] This disclosure relates to a method and apparatus for the
excitation and transmission of highly nonlinear pulses with selectable
pulse properties into a structure or material and the detection of such
pulses from the structure or material. More particularly, the present
disclosure describes a method and apparatus for exciting a selectable
number of controllable highly nonlinear pulses with desired shapes,
amplitudes, frequencies and/or durations, which may then be used for
nondestructive evaluations and/or structural health monitoring.
[0004] 2. Description of Related Art
[0005] Non-destructive evaluation of a material or structure may be
accomplished through the use of impact testing. In impact testing, the
material or structure is typically struck with an impact device and
sound waves propagating through the material or structure are then
measured to provide some indication of defects within the material or
structure. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,165,270 to Sansalone, et
al., dated Nov. 24, 1992. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,165,270, the impact device
is a number of differently weighted spheres that are each designed to
produce a different duration of impact, thereby imparting different
stress waves into the structure to be tested. The different stress
waves have different frequency values depending on the impact duration.
Each sphere is disposed on one end of a spring-steel rod. At the start
of the test, a selected sphere is in a resting position. The sphere is
withdrawn from the rest position by a pair of jaws to a given height
above the structure. This action deflects the spring-steel rod, thus
increasing the potential energy of the impact sphere. At a
predetermined release point, the sphere is released causing it to
impact the structure and impart a given energy to the structure. The
impact produces stress (sound) waves that are reflected from the
external surfaces and/or internal defects of the structure. The
reflected waves are detected by a transducer that converts the normal
surface displacements caused by the waves into an electrical signal.
The electrical signal is then processed to provide an
amplitude/frequency spectrum indicative of either the thickness of the
structure or the defects disposed therein.
[0006] Other impact testing apparatus and techniques are known in the
art, but generally use approaches similar to that described above,
i.e., strike the material to be tested and measure the stress wave
propagation. The impact devices (i.e., strikers) used in impact-testing
technology typically cost several hundreds of dollars or more and need
coupling to a signal conditioner. Line-powered signal conditioners are
used to power sensors and condition their output signals for
transmittal to readout and recording instruments. Impact hammers are
used for delivering impulse forces into test specimens and the signal
conditioner is used to provide electrical measurement signals of the
amplitude and frequency content of the applied force. Hammers and
conditioners used for non-destructive evaluation may be very expensive.
Embodiments of the present invention as described below may provide for
less costly apparatus for nondestructive evaluation of materials and
structures.
SUMMARY
[0007] Embodiments of the present invention rely on the use of highly
nonlinear waves (HNWs), including highly nonlinear solitary waves
(HNSWs), which can form and travel in highly nonlinear systems (i.e.,
systems that may comprise granular, layered, fibrous or porous
materials). Compared to conventional stress waves used in prior art
systems using sonic-, ultrasonic-, or impact-based technology, HNWs
offer significantly higher tunability in terms of wavelength, wave
speed (proportional to the wave amplitude and to the material's
properties), number of generated pulses, and amplitude control in a
simple and reproducible setup that can be adjusted at will.
[0008] Embodiments of the present invention may provide for
improvements over prior art systems that include: 1) larger tunability
range of the frequency, amplitude and velocity of induced pulses
resulting in a broader range of sizes of detectable cracks, defects,
and inclusions in a material (i.e., multiscale defects sensitivity); 2)
enhanced repeatability of measurements, improving a measurements
system's reliability and avoiding the required high operator skills
typically needed by prior art methods; 3) simpler and more scalable
design of the instruments within the measurement system (such as wave
actuators and sensors) to different dimensions (which may also provide
more versatility of applications); 4) reduced power requirement
characteristics of the instruments; and 5) reduced cost of assembling
and manufacturing of the process components, sensors and actuators (up
to 2 orders of magnitude lower than present commercially available
impact hammers).
[0009] Some embodiments of the present invention comprise methods and
apparatus for nondestructive evaluation and/or structural health
monitoring (NDE/SHM) based on highly nonlinear sensors and/or actuators
combined together (fully nonlinear system) or coupled with conventional
sensing/actuating methods. For example, one embodiment comprises a
NDE/SHM method in which a highly nonlinear actuator is used in
combination with a classical receiver (such as an accelerometer, laser
interferometer, piezogauge or other detectors known in the art), where
the actuator provides an input to a material to be inspected and the
classical receiver measures the output. Another embodiment comprises an
NDE/SHM method in which classical impact echo/tap testing methods of
actuation are used together with a highly nonlinear receiver, where the
classical impact/tap test provide input and the highly nonlinear
receiver measures the output. Still another embodiment comprises an
NDE/SHM method in which a highly nonlinear actuator and a highly
nonlinear receiver are used together, where the actuator provides the
input and the receiver measures the output.
[0010] An embodiment of the present invention is a method for
performing an inspection of an element or structure comprising:
generating one or more highly nonlinear waves; directing the one or
more highly nonlinear waves into the element or structure to be
inspected; and, detecting pulses deriving from the waves directed into
the element or structure after the waves have propagated through at
least a portion of the element or structure to be inspected.
[0011] Another embodiment of the present invention is a system for
inspecting an element or structure comprising: a highly nonlinear wave
actuator, wherein the actuator is configurable to impinge highly
nonlinear pulses to the element or structure to be inspected, and a
pulse detector configurable to detect pulses from the actuator
propagating through at least a portion of the element or structure to
be inspected.
[0012] Still another embodiment of the present invention is A method
for performing an inspection of an element or structure comprising:
generating an inspection pulse; directing the inspection pulse into the
element or structure to be inspected; directing the inspection pulse
after it has propagated through at least a portion of the element or
structure to be inspected into a nonlinear receiver; and detecting the
inspection pulse after it has propagated through at least a portion of
the nonlinear receiver.
[0013] Still another embodiment of the present invention is A system
for inspecting an element or structure comprising: a pulse actuator,
wherein the actuator is configurable to apply pulses to the element or
structure to be inspected, and a nonlinear receiver configurable to
detect pulses from the actuator propagating through at least a portion
of the element or structure to be inspected.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS
OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014]
FIG. 1A shows a
schematic representation of a system for production and/or detection of
highly nonlinear waves.
[0015]
FIG. 1B illustrates a
bead with an embedded piezoelement.
[0016]
FIG. 2A illustrates a
system for producing or detecting highly nonlinear waves.
[0017]
FIG. 2B illustrates a
system for producing or detecting highly nonlinear waves.
[0018]
FIG. 3A is a schematic
diagram representing the creation, propagation and detection of highly
nonlinear solitary waves in relation to a bulk highly nonlinear, weakly
nonlinear, or linear medium.
[0019]
FIG. 3B is a schematic
diagram representing the transmission of highly nonlinear waves in
waveguide structures made of highly nonlinear, weakly nonlinear, or
linear medium.
[0020]
FIG. 4 depicts a system
where a highly nonlinear actuator is used in combination with a
classical receiver.
[0021]
FIG. 5 depicts a system
where a classical impact echo/tap testing hammer is used in combination
with a highly nonlinear receiver.
[0022]
FIG. 6 depicts a system
where a highly nonlinear actuator is used in combination with a highly
nonlinear receiver.
[0023]
FIG. 7 is a flow chart
showing steps of a method for performing nondestructive evaluations and
structural health monitoring.
[0024]
FIG. 8 is a flow chart
showing steps for characterizing a material by using an inverse
approach.
[0025]
FIG. 9 is a flow chart
showing steps for determining whether a material or structure has any
damages based on highly nonlinear wave measurements.
[0026]
FIG. 10 illustrates the
application of a highly nonlinear solitary wave to a damaged structure
and propagation of the highly nonlinear solitary wave through the
structure and a test setup to detect the damage.
[0027]
FIG. 11 depicts an
undamaged seven wire steel strand and a damaged seven wire steel strand
and the application of a highly nonlinear solitary wave thereto.
[0028]
FIGS. 12A and 12B show
experimental results where highly nonlinear solitary wave induced
pulses are propagated within a steel rod.
[0029]
FIGS. 13A and 13B show
experimental results where highly nonlinear solitary wave induced
pulses are propagated within a steel rod using a test setup similar to
that depicted in FIG. 4.
[0030]
FIGS. 14A and 14B show
experimental results where highly nonlinear solitary wave induced
pulses are propagated within a steel rod using a test setup similar to
that depicted in FIG. 4, but with only two sensors.
[0031]
FIGS. 15A and 15B show
time history results where highly nonlinear solitary wave induced
pulses are propagated within a steel rod and precompression is used.
[0032]
FIGS. 16A and 16B show
frequency-intensity results where highly nonlinear solitary wave
induced pulses are propagated within a steel rod and precompression is
used.
[0033]
FIG. 17 shows a system
for automated evaluation and monitoring of pavements, railroads, floor
spaces and other such structures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0034] Embodiments of the present invention provide for nondestructive
evaluation and monitoring of materials and structures through the use
of highly nonlinear pulses and waves generated in one dimensional
chains of granular components. In this disclosure, the granular
components or grains may comprise granular matter, which is defined as
an aggregate of particles or layers in elastic contact with each other,
preferably in linear or network shaped arrangements. While embodiments
of the present invention use highly nonlinear pulses and waves,
additional advantages may be provided when highly nonlinear solitary
waves or pulses are used, generated, and/or detected. For purposes of
this disclosure, highly nonlinear solitary waves are to be considered
as a specific case of highly nonlinear waves. Additionally, highly
nonlinear solitary pulses are to be considered as a specific case of
highly nonlinear pulses. Hence, any references to highly nonlinear
waves herein are to be considered as including highly nonlinear
solitary waves and any references to highly nonlinear pulses herein are
to be considered as including highly nonlinear solitary pulses unless
otherwise denoted.
[0035] The contact interaction between the grains is regulated by the
highly nonlinear force F--displacement .delta. relationship shown in
Eq. 1:
F.apprxeq.A.delta..sup.n (Eq. 1)
where A is a material's parameter and n is the nonlinear exponent (with
n>1). An unusual feature of the granular state is the negligible
linear range of the interaction forces between neighboring particles
resulting in zero sound speed in an uncompressed material. This makes
the linear and weakly nonlinear continuum approaches based on
Korteveg-de Vries (KdV) equation invalid and places granular materials
in a special class according to their wave dynamics. The dynamic
response of granular materials is controlled by the highly nonlinear
wave theory that supports the formation and propagation of highly
nonlinear compact solitary waves.
[0036] In granular materials composed by perfectly spherical beads, the
highly nonlinear behavior stems from the dynamics of the contact
interactions, regulated by Hertz law, for which the exponent n in Eq. 1
is equal to 1.5. This highly nonlinear response can also be found in
many other nonlinear systems composed by grains with different
geometries and the theoretical formulation has been extended and
generalized to all nonlinear exponents n, with n.noteq.1. For example,
other geometries may include irregular grains with conical contacts
where n=2; forests of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes where n=2.2;
transverse vibration in a fiber with discrete particles where n=3 and
plug chain gas-liquid systems where n=3. The continuum treatment of the
highly nonlinear wave theory extends to periodic heterogeneous media,
such as, granular systems where the particles composing the chain are
not identical, and periodic defects alternate throughout its length.
[0037] Highly nonlinear solitary waves are stationary pulses forming in
ordered granular media by the balancing effects of their geometric
nonlinearity and the dispersion present in the medium. A unique feature
of the highly nonlinear solitary waves (that makes them different from
all other previous solitary waves or solitons described in various
other physical systems, such as in fluids, atomistics and
electromagnetic waves), is the independence of their wave width from
their amplitude. For granular systems, in which Hertz law is valid and
the exponent n=1.5, their spatial size is always 5 particles diameter,
no matter what wave amplitude or wave speed is present in the system.
Using the notation found in the most general treatment of the nonlinear
wave theory, the wave equation for a uniform highly nonlinear system,
derived from the Hertzian interaction law, is shown in Eq. 2 below:
u.sub..tau..tau.=u.sub.x.sup.n-1u.sub.xx+Gu.sub.x.sup.n-3u.sub.xx.sup.3+Hu-
.sub.x.sup.n-2u.sub.xxu.sub.xxx+Iu.sub.x.sup.n-1u.sub.xxxx (Eq. 2)
where u is the displacement, .tau. is a resealed time, n is the
nonlinear exponent found in Eq. 1 and the explicit expression of the
parameters I, H, G can be found in Porter, M. A.; Daraio, C.; Herbold,
E. B.; Szelengowicz, I.; Kevrekidis, P. G. "Highly nonlinear solitary
waves in phononic crystal dimers" Physical Review E, 77, 015601(R),
2008.
[0038] The solution for Eq. 2, describing the shape and properties of
the highly nonlinear solitary waves, from direct integration is of the
form shown in Eq. 3 below:
u = v = B cos 2 n - 1 ( .beta. .xi. ) , where B = ( .mu. [ .beta. 2 s (
s - 1 ) ] ) 1 / n - 1 , .beta. = .sigma. ( 1 - .eta. ) 2 and s = pI . (
Eq . 3 ) ##EQU00001##
[0039] The generality of the highly nonlinear wave equation shown in
Eq. 2 is given by the fact that it includes also the linear and weakly
nonlinear regimes of wave propagation. These regimes can be
extrapolated by adding an initial prestrain (precompression) to the
system. Its solution demonstrates that in a highly nonlinear medium
only two harmonics contribute to a stationary mode of propagation of
the periodic signal. The solitary shape, if the initial prestrain
.xi..sub.0 is approaching 0, can be taken as one hump of the periodic
solution provided by Eq. 3 with finite wave length equal only to five
particle diameters in the case of a Hertzian granular system. In
analogy with the KdV solitons, the highly nonlinear solitary waves are
supersonic, which means that their phase velocity is larger than the
initial sound velocity (c.sub.0) in the nonlinear medium (especially in
the case of an uncompressed system, in which the c.sub.0=0). For
granular chains composed by spherical particles, the speed of the
solitary wave V.sub.s as nonlinear function of the maximum particle
dynamic strain can be expressed as shown in Eq. 4:
V s = 2 5 c .xi. m 1 / 4 = 0.6802 ( 2 E a .rho. 3 / 2 ( 1 - v 2 ) ) 1 /
3 F m 1 / 6 , ( Eq . 4 ) ##EQU00002##
where F.sub.m is the maximum dynamic contacts force between the
particles in the discrete chain.
[0040] The relationship shown in Eq. 4 may provide for applications in
the field of dynamics and acoustic properties of materials. Such waves,
as predicted by the theory and validated numerically and
experimentally, have tunability characteristics. By changing the
mechanical and/or the geometrical properties of the high nonlinear
medium supporting the formation of HNWs, the shape and the properties
of the traveling pulse can be tuned. In other words, the properties of
the nonlinear waves in the highly nonlinear media can be "engineered"
for a specific application. These "controllable" waves may then be used
as new boundary conditions in various structures for testing. It may
also be desirable to generate a train of nonlinear waves rather than a
single nonlinear pulse.
[0041] The analytical expression for the tunability of the solitary
waves speed in a Hertzian system derived from the presence of added
precompression and obtained from the discretization of the particles in
the chain, is expressed as shown in Eq. 5 below:
V s = 0.9314 ( 4 E 2 F 0 a 2 .rho. 3 ( 1 - v 2 ) 2 ) 1 / 6 1 ( f r 2 /
3 - 1 ) { 4 15 [ 3 + 2 f r 5 / 3 - 5 f r 2 / 3 ] } 1 / 2 . ( Eq . 5 )
##EQU00003##
where F.sub.0 represents the static prestress (precompression) added to
the system, f.sub.r=F.sub.m/F.sub.0 and F.sub.m is the maximum contacts
force between the particles in the discrete chain.
[0042] The dependence of the solitary wave properties on the materials
parameters is shown in Eq. 4 for a non-prestressed system and in Eq. 5
for a prestressed system. Also note that, with HNSWs, the system is
size independent but sensitive to the presence of periodic
heterogeneities in the chain. Therefore, the solitary waves may be
scalable to various sizes, according to the needs of each specific
application.
[0043] According to Eqs. 4 and 5, the tunability of the HNSWs can be
achieved by varying one or more parameters of the nonlinear medium. For
example, increasing the particle size of the highly nonlinear medium
increases the wavelength and the wave speed and amplitude decrease.
This tunability provides the possibility of reducing or eliminating the
electronic equipment, such as function generators, necessary to excite
stress waves of a given shape and wavelength. Therefore, embodiments of
the present invention may reduce some of the power demands in
ultrasonic actuation needed by prior art systems and may allow the use
wireless technology instead of tethered technology known in the art. In
addition, the high-sensitivity of wave amplitude and wave speed to the
state of stress state in highly nonlinear material may also allow for
improvements in the estimation of applied stress over that obtained by
conventional acoustoelastic methods.
[0044] Embodiments of the present invention also allow for the use of
particles having morphology different than the one described by the
classical Hertzian shape (n=1.5), which can add another element to the
tunability, that is by varying n in Eq. 1 the wavelength (and,
therefore, the signal's frequency) will vary significantly. Further, a
HNW or HNSW traveling in a system composed of alternating short chains
of hard and soft beads (that can be interpreted as defects) or in any
periodic heterogeneous system will induce significant changes in the
properties of the traveling pulse. Systems composed of randomized
assemblies of particles, such as chains including particles of
different materials, masses and diameters in a disordered and
quasi-disordered configuration, present thermalization phenomena that
induce pulse decomposition and excitation of higher frequency modes.
[0045] The use of solitary waves for defect and impurity detection in
granular media is discussed in Sen, S., Manciu, M., and Wright, J. D.,
"Solitonlike Pulses in Perturbed and Driven Hertzian Chains and Their
Possible Applications in Detecting Buried Impurities," Phys. Rev. E,
57, no. 2, 2386-2397 (1998) and in Hong, J. & Xu, A.,
"Nondestructive identification of impurities in granular medium." Appl.
Phys. Lett., 81, 4868-4870 (2002). Solitary waves have been
demonstrated to be sensitive to the granular materials properties, such
as elastic modules, and applied stress and the dependence of the
velocity and shape of the backscattered signal on the presence of light
and heavy impurities in a granular chain have also been noted. Highly
nonlinear solitary pulses have been studied numerically and
experimentally in various one-dimensional highly nonlinear systems
assembled from chains of stainless-steel, glass, brass, nylon,
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and Parylene coated steel beads. As
predicted by the theoretical formulation, the numerical and
experimental validation showed a significant difference in the speed
and amplitude of the supported solitary waves as a function of the
materials parameters.
[0046] The equations discussed above generally apply to HNSWs. However,
embodiments of the present invention may rely upon the generation
and/or detection of HNWs, treating the generation and/or detection of
HNSWs as just a special case of HNWs. A schematic representation of a
system for production and/or detection of HNWs is shown in FIG. 1A. In
FIG. 1A, a chain 501 of particles or beads 505, 507, 509 is positioned
between stays 603. By impinging the first particle 505 into the second
particle 507, a HNW is generated (however, the generated HNW may
stabilize into a HNSW). In this configuration, the first particle 505
may be considered as a striker particle. The wave propagates as long as
the particles 505, 507, 509 stay in contact. Wavelength, speed, and
amplitude of the wave can be tuned by selecting a desired combination
of chain size (diameter and number of particles), particle material,
and pre-compression on the particles. Some of the particles 509 may
have embedded piezoelements or other detection apparatus that can be
used to monitor the propagation of HNWs within the chain 501. The
system shown in FIG. 1A can also be used for the detection of HNWs by
coupling the system to a material or structure and using the detector
particles 509 with the piezoelements to detect the waves.
[0047] FIG. 1B illustrates a detector particle 509 with an embedded
piezoelement to detect HNWs. The detector particle 509 comprises
particle halves 62 and a piezoelement 64 sandwiched between the two
halves 64. The piezoelement 64 is preferably attached to the two halves
62 with an adhesive layer 66, where the adhesive layer 66 may comprise
epoxy or other adhesive material. The particle halves 62 may be notched
to allow for leads 65 from micro-miniature wiring associated with the
piezoelement 64 to be embedded within the particle 509. The
piezoelement 64 may have the wiring of the opposite faces of the
piezoelement or in the same face by using a wrap around electrode and
lead attachment. Preferably, the piezoelement 64 is calibrated to
increase the accuracy of wave detection.
[0048] Systems for producing or detecting HNWs are depicted in FIGS. 2A
and 2B. FIG. 2A shows a three dimension view of an actuating and or
sensing apparatus. As shown in FIG. 2A, four rods 30 are used to
confine a chain of beads 44 that are used for the creation of highly
nonlinear pulses for transfer to an element 20 or material to be
tested. FIG. 2B shows a vertical cross-section of an apparatus similar
to the one depicted in FIG. 2A where the four rods are replaced by a
hollow cylindrical container 32 within which a chain of beads 44 is
constrained. As discussed above, it may be useful to apply
precompression for tuning the highly nonlinear waves. In FIG. 2A,
element 50 depicts a system that may be used to apply static
precompression. Element 50 may comprise a levitating ring magnet, a
system to suspend controlled weights, a screw/load-cell controlled
prestraining device, some other element or system that can compress the
chain of beads 44, or some combinations of the elements and systems
listed herein. As shown in FIG. 2B, a magnetic bead (or a bead holding
suspended weights) 42 may be placed on top of the chain of beads 44 to
allow for the application of static precompressive force. FIG. 2B also
shows an outer holder 54 for handling and anchoring the hollow
cylindrical container 30 on the element 20 or structure to be tested.
[0049] The constrained chain of beads 44 shown in FIGS. 2A and 2B may
serve to produce or detect HNWs. For the production of such waves, a
striker 40 may be used to initiate the formation of the HNW in the
chain of beads 44. The striker 40 may be actuated through the use of an
electromagnet 46 to move the striker 40 to strike the chain of beads
44. For example, the striker 40 may comprise a stainless steel ball
lifted and released through an alternating magnetic field created by
the electromagnet 46. The magnetic bead 42 shown in FIG. 2B may also
serve as a means by which the chain of beads 44 are struck to produce
pulses. A magnetically or an electro-magnetically controlled apparatus
may be capable of generating pulses at frequencies greater than 20 kHz.
Alternative embodiments may use a different activation mechanism such
as a spring loaded system or a compressed air loaded system.
[0050] FIG. 3A is a schematic diagram representing the wave propagation
of HNWs in a bulk highly nonlinear, weakly nonlinear or linear medium.
A highly nonlinear pulse generator 10 (also referred to herein as a
highly nonlinear actuator/exciter) generates a single or a train of
highly nonlinear waves 14 that is directed into the element 20 or
structure under test. FIG. 3A shows the propagation of the wave 14
through the element 20, which may comprise a bulk highly nonlinear,
weakly nonlinear or linear medium. The propagating wave within the
medium under testing may comprise linear stress waves and/or highly non
linear waves. An output pulse 16 is received by a highly nonlinear
receiver 12. FIG. 3B shows the generation of the single HNW 14 by the
actuator 10 in the element 20, which may comprise a waveguide structure
made of highly nonlinear, weakly nonlinear or linear medium. In FIG.
3B, the actuator 10 for HNWs is used also as sensing element for pulses
18 reflected by the waveguide edges and or defects.
[0051] One embodiment of the present invention comprises a method and
system where a highly nonlinear actuator is used in combination with a
classical receiver (such as an accelerometer, laser interferometer,
piezogauge or other detectors known in the art). FIG. 4 depicts a
system with this configuration. In FIG. 4, a highly nonlinear
actuator/exciter 10 provides pulses to the element 20 that is
undergoing testing with a potential defect 489. Element 20 may have a
bulk or waveguide geometry and may comprise a highly nonlinear, weakly
nonlinear or linear medium. The nonlinear actuator/exciter 10 has a
striker particle 40 to initiate the formation of the HNW in the
actuator 10. A first piezogauge 481 detects signals entering the
element 20 under testing and a second piezogauge 482 detects the output
signal after traveling in the tested element 20. A computer 90 may be
used to process and store data to provide an analysis of the
characteristics of the measured element 20. One or more calibrated
piezogauges 64 disposed within elements of the actuator 10 may be used
to detect the HNW propagating within the actuator/exciter 10 to provide
the ability to additionally control or tune the actuator/exciter 10 to
produce an HNW with desired characteristics.
[0052] Another embodiment of the present invention comprises a method
and system where a classical impact echo/tap testing hammer (or other
such methods or apparatus known in the art) is used in combination with
a highly nonlinear receiver. FIG. 5 depicts a system with this
configuration. In FIG. 5, a classical or a modally tuned hammer 96 is
used to provide pulses to the element 20 or structure under test.
Element 20 may have a bulk or waveguide geometry and may comprise a
highly nonlinear, weakly nonlinear or linear medium. Typically, the
hammer 96 may contain a piezogauge to detect and/or control pulses
generated by the hammer 96. A nonlinear receiver 12 is coupled to the
element 20 under test to receive pulses transmitted through the element
20 under test. The nonlinear receiver 12 may also be coupled to a
piezogauge 482 which receives the HNW that has propagated through the
nonlinear receiver 12. The nonlinear receiver 12 may also have one or
more piezogauges 64 disposed within elements of the receiver 12 to
detect the HNW propagating within the receiver 12. The receiver
piezogauge 64 may be used in addition to or as an alternative to the
piezogauge 482 to provide data on the characteristics of the element 20
under test. The receiver piezogauge 64 may also provide the capability
to tune the response of the nonlinear receiver 12. A computer 90 may be
used to collect and store data from the piezogauges 64, 482 and the
hammer 96 to provide an analysis of the element or structure under test.
[0053] Still another embodiment of the present invention comprises a
method and system where a highly nonlinear actuator is used in
combination with a highly nonlinear receiver. FIG. 6 depicts a system
with this configuration. In FIG. 6, a highly nonlinear actuator/exciter
10 provides pulses to the element 20 that is undergoing testing. As
discussed previously, the actuator 10 may have one or more piezogauges
64 embedded within elements of the actuator 10 for HNW detection. A
nonlinear receiver 12 is coupled to the element 20 under test to
receive either highly nonlinear or linear pulses or a combination of
both transmitted through the element 20 under test. Element 20 may have
a bulk or waveguide geometry and may comprise a highly nonlinear,
weakly nonlinear or linear medium. As discussed previously, the
nonlinear receiver 12 may also have one or more piezogauges 64 disposed
within elements of the receiver 12 to detect the HNW propagating within
the receiver 12. The nonlinear receiver 12 may also be coupled to a
piezogauge 482 which receives the HNW that has propagated through the
nonlinear receiver 12 from the element 20 under test. A computer 90 may
be used to collect and store data from the piezogauges 64, 482 to
provide an analysis of the element or structure under test.
[0054] FIG. 7 is a flow chart showing steps of a method for performing
nondestructive evaluations and structural health monitoring according
to an embodiment of the present invention. In block 105, a striker is
used to generate a pulse. In block 106, the pulse is coupled to a chain
of beads serving as a transmitter for the formation of a HNSW. Block
107 depicts the detection and measurement of that wave within the
transmitter and/or at the interface between the transmitter and the
material or structure to be tested. Block 108 represents the
propagation of the HNSW, or the propagation of linear bulk or linear
guided waves within the material or structure to be inspected. Block
109 depicts the reception of one or more of those waves by a chain of
beads with embedded piezoelement(s) acting as a receiver and the
detection of the highly nonlinear pulses within the receiver and/or at
the interface between the receiver and the material or structure under
test. The signal detected prior to the material or structure under test
and the signal detected after the material or structure under test are
digitized at block 110 and measurements of the pulses made at block
111. Pulse measurement block 111 may include linear waves detected at
the interface between the receiver and the material/structure under
test. These nonlinear pulse measurements can then be used to
characterize the material measured by an inverse approach, as shown in
block 112, and/or detect damage within the structure or material, as
shown in block 113.
[0055] FIG. 8 is a flow chart showing steps for characterizing a
material by using an inverse approach according to an embodiment of the
present invention. In FIG. 8, block 114 represents the measurements of
highly nonlinear pulses, such as those provided as shown in block 111
in FIG. 7. Calculations are then performed to determine the
characteristics of the measured pulse or pulses as shown in block 115.
Block 117 shows the collection of data related to the elastic
properties of a large class of materials. Block 118 shows the
calculation of a theoretical model of wave pulse propagation for a
selected material type. Decision block 116 shows the comparison of
measured pulse characteristics as provided by block 115 with
theoretical characteristics as provided by block 118. If the measured
and theoretical pulse characteristics are the same or nearly the same,
block 120 shows that the properties of the measured material or
structure can be characterized based on the measured pulses. If the
measured and theoretical pulse characteristics do not sufficiently
match, the differences can be provided to a digitizer 119 and then used
to select a different material type for calculation of a theoretical
model in block 118.
[0056] FIG. 9 is a flow chart showing steps for determining whether a
material or structure has any damage based on various excitations. In
FIG. 9, block 121 represents the acquisition of measured pulsed data,
such as that shown in block 111 in FIG. 7 and, for example, acquired by
one of the methods depicted in FIGS. 4, 5 and/or 6. Block 122 shows the
digital signal processing that may be performed on the pulse data to
extract time domain related characteristics, frequency domain related
characteristics, joint time-frequency domain characteristics, or other
mathematical representations of the measured pulse data. Block 123
represents the calculations that may be performed to extract features
of interest that may be used to identify and/or characterize damage.
These features may be then used to construct a damage index vector, as
shown in block 124, that may have one or more parameters related to
damage identification. A supervised learning algorithm (as shown in
block 125) or an unsupervised learning algorithm (as shown in block
126) may then be used to process the damage index vector and provide
information as to the presence of defects or damage within the measured
material or structure.
[0057] FIG. 10 illustrates the application of a HNW to a damaged
structure and propagation of the excited pulse through the structure
and a test setup to detect the damage. In FIG. 10, a nonlinear actuator
10 forms and applies a HNW 14 to the element 24 under test. Element 24
can be a bulk, waveguide or semi-infinite structure made of highly
nonlinear, weakly nonlinear, or linear medium. As depicted in FIG. 10,
the element 24 may comprise a panel, plate, pavement, tile, flooring,
etc. Sensors 48, such as accelerometers, laser interferometers,
piezogauges, pressure sensors or other such detectors, detect and
measure the propagation of the pulses through the element. The presence
of a crack/void/deformation 22 in the element is expected to alter the
amplitude and shape of the waves detected in output signals from the
detectors 48. Analysis of the data obtained from the sensors should
allow a user to locate and characterize the defect 22.
[0058] Embodiments of the present invention may also be used to detect
defects in cylindrical waveguides made of highly nonlinear, weakly
nonlinear, or linear medium. For example, FIG. 11 depicts a seven-wire
steel strand 261 and a damaged seven wire steel strand 263. Such wire
strands are widely used parts in prestressed concrete and cable-stayed
suspension bridges. In FIG. 11, a nonlinear actuator 10 is used to
apply the HNW and a nonlinear receiver 12 is used to detect the HNW. In
the damaged strand 263, the presence of a prestress/temperature induced
stress/strains and/or crack/void/deformation (as represented by the
void 22) is expected to alter the amplitude and shape of the solitary
waves detected by the nonlinear receiver 12. Alternative embodiments of
the present invention allow for the detection of defects within cable
configurations other than stranded steel.
[0059] FIGS. 12A and 12B show experimental results where HNWs-induced
pulses are propagated within a steel rod. In FIG. 12A, pulses were
generated with a variable number (n) of beads into a chain of stainless
steel beads. In FIG. 12B, pulses were generated by impacting a
miniature hammer and by using n=10, 30 of HNW-inducing beads. As can be
seen from FIGS. 12A and 12B, the time domain characteristics of the
pulses change with the number of beads used to induce the HNW,
indicating the tunability of the HNW actuator.
[0060] Experimental data shows that a HNW can be excited in a damaged
and undamaged structure. The pulse detected after traveling in a
damaged structure will differ from one detected after propagating
through an undamaged structure. FIGS. 13A and 13B show experimental
curves obtained for a test setup as shown in FIG. 4, where the element
20 under test is a steel rod. FIG. 13A depicts data obtained from
positioning 4.76 mm diameter beads on a pristine steel rod, while FIG.
13B depicts data obtained from positioning 4.76 mm diameter beads on a
damaged steel rod. Sensors were positioned in one of the central beads
composing the chain (curve labeled "bead sensor" and corresponding to
element 64 in FIG. 4), at the interface (corresponding to element 481
in FIG. 4) and at the base below the steel rod (corresponding to
element 482 in FIG. 4). The impulses were generated by dropping a 0.45
g steel bead from a height of 3 cm on the top particle of the chain.
FIGS. 14A and 14B show experimental curves obtained for a test set up
similar to that shown in FIG. 4 where the element 20 under test is
again a steel rod. However, sensors were positioned only at the
interface and at the rod's base. FIG. 14A depicts data obtained from
positioning 2.38 mm diameter beads on an undamaged steel rod and FIG.
14B depicts data obtained from positioning 2.38 mm diameter beads on a
damaged rod. The impulses were generated dropping a 0.45 g steel bead
from a height of 3 cm on the top particle of the chain.
[0061] As discussed above, precompression may also serve to tune the
HNW provided by a nonlinear actuator. FIGS. 15A, 15B, 16A and 16B
illustrate the effect that precompression may have. FIG. 15A depicts
time data obtained from positioning 20 vertically aligned stainless
steel particles on top of a 4.76 mm diameter steel rod with added
static precompression (F.sub.0=2.38 N). The test setup was similar to
that shown in FIG. 4, where sensors were positioned in one of the
central beads composing the chain (curve labeled "bead sensor" and
corresponding to element 64 in FIG. 4), at the interface (corresponding
to element 481 in FIG. 4) and at the base below the steel rod
(corresponding to element 482 in FIG. 4). FIG. 15B shows time data
obtained with a similar set up using a damaged rod. FIG. 16A shows
intensity verses frequency data obtained from measurements made from
the pristine rod, while FIG. 1 6B shows intensity versus frequency data
obtained from the damaged rod.
[0062] An embodiment of the present invention may comprise a method and
system for automated evaluation and monitoring of pavements, railroads,
floor spaces and other such structures. FIG. 17 is a schematic view of
such an embodiment. In FIG. 17, a trolley 80 has both a nonlinear
actuator 10 and a nonlinear receiver 12 mounted on it. The nonlinear
actuator 10 and a nonlinear receiver 12 are both mounted in a fashion
that allows them to contact the structure 20 under test. In operation,
the nonlinear actuator 10 provides highly nonlinear pulses and the
nonlinear receiver 12 detects the highly nonlinear pulses. As indicated
above, alternative embodiments may use classical impact methods known
in the art (such as an impact hammer) instead of the nonlinear actuator
10 to provide pulses for detection by the nonlinear receiver 12. Other
embodiments may use the nonlinear actuator 10, but the pulses from the
actuator 10 may be detected by classical detection methods or apparatus
instead of the nonlinear receiver 12.
[0063] In the system depicted in FIG. 17, the computer 90 may provide
for control over the nonlinear actuator 10 and the nonlinear receiver
12 and also control the motion of the trolley. Signals to and from both
the nonlinear actuator 10 and the nonlinear receiver 12 may be coupled
to a data collection station 70 that may be coupled, either wirelessly
or with a wired connection, to the computer 90. For example, the data
collection station may comprise a unit from National Instruments
utilizing PXI technology running LabView.RTM. or analogous
hardware/software. The computer 90 may comprise a laptop computer which
could then be configured to form a client-server Ethernet link with the
data collection station 70. The data collection station 70 may be
configured to control the generation of test pulses by the nonlinear
actuator 10, acquire signals from the nonlinear receiver 12, process
the signals to limit noise, and produce a real-time quality index for
the monitored structure 20. The computer 90 may then be used to start
and stop the acquisition, modify the pulse and pulse processing
settings, monitor the results in real-time, and provide report windows.
[0064] The system depicted in FIG. 17 may provide a user the ability to
exploit HNW induced pulses propagating across and along the thickness
of the structure 20 and within the structure 20 itself. While FIG. 17
only shows a single actuator 10/receiver 12 pair, multiple
actuator/receiver pairs may be deployed to form a grid that covers
large sections of the structure 20 at once. This may speed up the rate
at which the structure 20 can be inspected and also improve the quality
of the inspection.
[0065] The foregoing Detailed Description of exemplary and preferred
embodiments is presented for purposes of illustration and disclosure in
accordance with the requirements of the law. It is not intended to be
exhaustive nor to limit the invention to the precise form or forms
described, but only to enable others skilled in the art to understand
how the invention may be suited for a particular use or implementation.
The possibility of modifications and variations will be apparent to
practitioners skilled in the art. No limitation is intended by the
description of exemplary embodiments which may have included
tolerances, feature dimensions, specific operating conditions,
engineering specifications, or the like, and which may vary between
implementations or with changes to the state of the art, and no
limitation should be implied therefrom. This disclosure has been made
with respect to the current state of the art, but also contemplates
advancements and that adaptations in the future may take into
consideration of those advancements, namely in accordance with the then
current state of the art. It is intended that the scope of the
invention be defined by the Claims as written and equivalents as
applicable. Reference to a claim element in the singular is not
intended to mean "one and only one" unless explicitly so stated.
Moreover, no element, component, nor method or process step in this
disclosure is intended to be dedicated to the public regardless of
whether the element, component, or step is explicitly recited in the
Claims. No claim element herein is to be construed under the provisions
of 35 U.S.C. Sec. 112, sixth paragraph, unless the element is expressly
recited using the phrase "means for . . . " and no method or process
step herein is to be construed under those provisions unless the step,
or steps, are expressly recited using the phrase "comprising step(s)
for . . . "
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