1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910960442403321

Autore

Maldague Xavier P.V

Titolo

Nondestructive Evaluation of Materials by Infrared Thermography / / by Xavier P.V. Maldague

Pubbl/distr/stampa

London : , : Springer London : , : Imprint : Springer, , 1993

ISBN

1-4471-1995-9

Edizione

[1st ed. 1993.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XXXII, 207 p. 21 illus.)

Disciplina

620.1

Soggetti

Mechanics, Applied

Electronics

Materials - Analysis

Condensed matter

Engineering Mechanics

Electronics and Microelectronics, Instrumentation

Characterization and Analytical Technique

Condensed Matter Physics

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

1 Overview of Nondestructive Evaluation (NDE) Using Infrared Thermography -- 1.1 General Considerations -- 1.2 Active and Passive Approaches in TNDE -- 1.3 New Materials -- 1.4 Detectors for Infrared Imaging -- 1.5 TNDE: Pros and Cons -- 2 Theoretical Aspects -- 2.1 Radiometry -- 2.2 Heat Transfer Modelling -- 3 Experimental Apparatus -- 3.1 Description of the System and Intended Use -- 3.2 Acquisition Process: Signal Restoration -- 3.3 System Calibration -- 4 External Thermal Stimulation: Methods and Image Processing -- 4.1 General Considerations -- 4.2 Study of Graphite Epoxy Composites: Procedures, Investigation, Processing -- 4.3 Study of Aluminium Laminates: Procedures, Investigation, Processing -- 4.4 Automatic Defect Detection -- 5 Internal Thermal Stimulation: Methods and Image Processing -- 5.1 General Considerations -- 5.2 Case Study I: Evaluation of Corrosion Damage to Pipes -- 5.3 Case Study II: Inspection of Jet Turbine Blades -- 6 Quantitative Analysis of Delaminations -- 6.1 General Considerations -- 6.2 The Inverse



Problem -- 6.3 Experimental Procedure: Thermogram Processing -- 6.4 Discussion on the Quantitative Characterization Procedure -- 7 Inspection of Materials With Low Emissivity by Thermal Transfer Imaging -- 7.1 General Considerations -- 7.2 Thermal Transfer Imaging -- 7.3 Physical Behaviour of Thermal Transfer Imaging Technique -- 7.4 Experimental Results -- 8 Thermal Diffusivity Measurements of Materials -- 8.1 General Considerations -- 8.2 Classical Thermal Diffusivity Measurement Method -- 8.3 Diffusivity Measurement Method Based on the Laplace Transform -- 8.4 Diffusivity Measurement Method Based on Phase Measurement -- 9 Thermal Tomography -- 9.1 General Considerations -- 9.2 Method -- 9.3 Some Results -- 10 Thermal NDE of Nonplanar Surfaces -- 10.1 General Considerations -- 10.2 Principle of Surface Curvature Correction -- 11 Applications of Infrared Thermography to High Temperatures -- 11.1 Detection of Rolled-in Scale on Steel Sheets -- 11.2 Thermal Inspection of High Temperature Industrial Structures -- Appendix A Computer Model -- Appendix B Smoothing Routine -- Appendix C Parabola Computation -- Appendix D Higher Order Gradient Computation Based on the Roberts Gradient -- References.

Sommario/riassunto

With national trade barriers falling, causing the expansion of the com­ petitive global market, the question of quality control has become an essential issue for the 1990s. The time where the promise was to replace a product if it does not work seems to have passed; what is more impor­ tant now is not so much a reduction in what is going wrong but an increase of what is going right the first time (Feigenbaum 1990). This new trend is sometimes referred to as total quality. Among the many advantages ofthis zero-defect manufacturing policy, we can enumerate (Laurin 1990): superior marketability of wholly de­ pendable products, enormous gain in productivity, elimination of waste­ ful cost in replacing poor quality work and retrofitting rejected products from the field. Although total quality is a relatively new and attractive concept for mass products such as cars, consumer electronics and per­ sonal computers, in many fields, mainly aerospace and military, it has been the rule for years because of security reasons.