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Application of homomorphic signal processing to stress wave factor analysis

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors modeled the stress wave factor (SWF) signal generated in an isotropic elastic plate as the superposition of successive reflections and applied homomorphic signal processing to obtain estimates of the log spectra of individual reflections for cases in which the reflections are overlapped.
Abstract
The stress wave factor (SWF) signal, which is the output of an ultrasonic testing system where the transmitting and receiving transducers are coupled to the same face of the test structure, is analyzed in the frequency domain. The SWF signal generated in an isotropic elastic plate is modelled as the superposition of successive reflections. The reflection which is generated by the stress waves which travel p times as a longitudinal (P) wave and s times as a shear (S) wave through the plate while reflecting back and forth between the bottom and top faces of the plate is designated as the reflection with p, s. Short-time portions of the SWF signal are considered for obtaining spectral information on individual reflections. If the significant reflections are not overlapped, the short-time Fourier analysis is used. A summary of the elevant points of homomorphic signal processing, which is also called cepstrum analysis, is given. Homomorphic signal processing is applied to short-time SWF signals to obtain estimates of the log spectra of individual reflections for cases in which the reflections are overlapped. Two typical SWF signals generated in aluminum plates (overlapping and non-overlapping reflections) are analyzed.

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The Acousto-Ultrasonic Approach

TL;DR: Acousto-ultrasonics as mentioned in this paper is an NDE technique combining aspects of acoustic emission methodology with ultrasonic simulation of stress waves for detecting and mapping variations of mechanical properties, which is less concerned with flaw detection than with the assessment of the collective effects of various flaws and material anomalies.
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