GLEITER, Andreas ;SPIEßBERGER, Christian ;BUSSE, Gerd . Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation. Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering, [S.l.], v. 56, n.10, p. 619-624, october 2017. ISSN 0039-2480. Available at: <https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/>. Date accessed: 20 dec. 2024. doi:http://dx.doi.org/.
Gleiter, A., Spießberger, C., & Busse, G. (2010). Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation. Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering, 56(10), 619-624. doi:http://dx.doi.org/
@article{., author = {Andreas Gleiter and Christian Spießberger and Gerd Busse}, title = {Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation}, journal = {Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering}, volume = {56}, number = {10}, year = {2010}, keywords = {optical lockin-thermography; ultrasound lockin-thermography; defect-selective imaging; }, abstract = {Thermography is a well established non-destructive testing (NDT) technique providing images of temperature distributions. If the temperature field on a sample surface is modulated by periodical injection of heat either from outside or inside the sample, the time dependence of the temperature field provides information on thermal features hidden underneath the surface. Using the Fourier-transform, this information is finally compressed into a phase and an amplitude image. Phase images are more robust than amplitude images, because surface features and reflections are effectively suppressed. With excitation by ultrasound, the heating mechanism is local conversion of elastic energy into heat which occurs preferably due to local friction losses caused e.g. by the relative motion of boundaries in a crack. As intact material and boundaries are suppressed in such an image, it displays defects selectively. The techniques and their applications are illustrated by examples that were obtained on various industry-relevant components.}, issn = {0039-2480}, pages = {619-624}, doi = {}, url = {https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/} }
Gleiter, A.,Spießberger, C.,Busse, G. 2010 October 56. Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation. Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering. [Online] 56:10
%A Gleiter, Andreas %A Spießberger, Christian %A Busse, Gerd %D 2010 %T Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation %B 2010 %9 optical lockin-thermography; ultrasound lockin-thermography; defect-selective imaging; %! Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation %K optical lockin-thermography; ultrasound lockin-thermography; defect-selective imaging; %X Thermography is a well established non-destructive testing (NDT) technique providing images of temperature distributions. If the temperature field on a sample surface is modulated by periodical injection of heat either from outside or inside the sample, the time dependence of the temperature field provides information on thermal features hidden underneath the surface. Using the Fourier-transform, this information is finally compressed into a phase and an amplitude image. Phase images are more robust than amplitude images, because surface features and reflections are effectively suppressed. With excitation by ultrasound, the heating mechanism is local conversion of elastic energy into heat which occurs preferably due to local friction losses caused e.g. by the relative motion of boundaries in a crack. As intact material and boundaries are suppressed in such an image, it displays defects selectively. The techniques and their applications are illustrated by examples that were obtained on various industry-relevant components. %U https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/ %0 Journal Article %R %& 619 %P 6 %J Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering %V 56 %N 10 %@ 0039-2480 %8 2017-10-24 %7 2017-10-24
Gleiter, Andreas, Christian Spießberger, & Gerd Busse. "Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation." Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering [Online], 56.10 (2010): 619-624. Web. 20 Dec. 2024
TY - JOUR AU - Gleiter, Andreas AU - Spießberger, Christian AU - Busse, Gerd PY - 2010 TI - Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation JF - Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering DO - KW - optical lockin-thermography; ultrasound lockin-thermography; defect-selective imaging; N2 - Thermography is a well established non-destructive testing (NDT) technique providing images of temperature distributions. If the temperature field on a sample surface is modulated by periodical injection of heat either from outside or inside the sample, the time dependence of the temperature field provides information on thermal features hidden underneath the surface. Using the Fourier-transform, this information is finally compressed into a phase and an amplitude image. Phase images are more robust than amplitude images, because surface features and reflections are effectively suppressed. With excitation by ultrasound, the heating mechanism is local conversion of elastic energy into heat which occurs preferably due to local friction losses caused e.g. by the relative motion of boundaries in a crack. As intact material and boundaries are suppressed in such an image, it displays defects selectively. The techniques and their applications are illustrated by examples that were obtained on various industry-relevant components. UR - https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/
@article{{}{.}, author = {Gleiter, A., Spießberger, C., Busse, G.}, title = {Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation}, journal = {Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering}, volume = {56}, number = {10}, year = {2010}, doi = {}, url = {https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/} }
TY - JOUR AU - Gleiter, Andreas AU - Spießberger, Christian AU - Busse, Gerd PY - 2017/10/24 TI - Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation JF - Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering; Vol 56, No 10 (2010): Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering DO - KW - optical lockin-thermography, ultrasound lockin-thermography, defect-selective imaging, N2 - Thermography is a well established non-destructive testing (NDT) technique providing images of temperature distributions. If the temperature field on a sample surface is modulated by periodical injection of heat either from outside or inside the sample, the time dependence of the temperature field provides information on thermal features hidden underneath the surface. Using the Fourier-transform, this information is finally compressed into a phase and an amplitude image. Phase images are more robust than amplitude images, because surface features and reflections are effectively suppressed. With excitation by ultrasound, the heating mechanism is local conversion of elastic energy into heat which occurs preferably due to local friction losses caused e.g. by the relative motion of boundaries in a crack. As intact material and boundaries are suppressed in such an image, it displays defects selectively. The techniques and their applications are illustrated by examples that were obtained on various industry-relevant components. UR - https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/lockin-thermography-with-optical-or-ultrasound-excitation/
Gleiter, Andreas, Spießberger, Christian, AND Busse, Gerd. "Lockin Thermography with Optical or Ultrasound Excitation" Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering [Online], Volume 56 Number 10 (24 October 2017)
Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering 56(2010)10, 619-624
© The Authors, CC-BY 4.0 Int. Change in copyright policy from 2022, Jan 1st.
Thermography is a well established non-destructive testing (NDT) technique providing images of temperature distributions. If the temperature field on a sample surface is modulated by periodical injection of heat either from outside or inside the sample, the time dependence of the temperature field provides information on thermal features hidden underneath the surface. Using the Fourier-transform, this information is finally compressed into a phase and an amplitude image. Phase images are more robust than amplitude images, because surface features and reflections are effectively suppressed. With excitation by ultrasound, the heating mechanism is local conversion of elastic energy into heat which occurs preferably due to local friction losses caused e.g. by the relative motion of boundaries in a crack. As intact material and boundaries are suppressed in such an image, it displays defects selectively. The techniques and their applications are illustrated by examples that were obtained on various industry-relevant components.