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Open AccessBook ChapterDOI

Ultrasonic Interrogation of Polycrystalline Materials

TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that grain scattering depends on size, shape, orientation and anisotropy of the grains, and the structure, thickness and chemistry of their boundaries.
Abstract
It is accepted that the same features of microstructure that dominate α, attenuation of ultrasonic waves also determine mechanical properties of industrial materials. For example, in polycrystalline metals the grain size greatly influences both ultrasonic attenuation [1–4] and material strength, ductility, toughness and formability [5]. Since ultrasonic inspection is less expensive than the destructive tests required to assess mechanical properties many analytical and experimental studies have been directed at establishing whether and how features of microstructure may be inferred from ultrasonic inspection data. One significant contribution to attenuation in polycrystalline materials is scattering by the grains [1,2] and precipitates [6]. This results from interaction with material defects comparable to one wavelength λ in size, such as grain boundaries. Scattering depends on size, shape, orientation and anisotropy of the grains, and the structure, thickness and chemistry of their boundaries. The standard assumptions used when modeling grain scattering are that the discontinuity of the grain boundary is of elastic nature; an individual grain scatterer has a simple shape with the mean grain size D; the grains are randomly located and randomly oriented; the number of grains is large; and the scatter from individual grains is not coherent.

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References
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DissertationDOI

The influence of metal grain structure on the attenuation of an ultrasonic acoustic wave

TL;DR: In this paper, an approach for the study of the propagation of ultrasonic acoustic waves in solid bodies and its applications in metallurgy is described for the case of cold worked aluminum and the effect of anneal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasonic attenuation based on the Roney generalized theory and multiple power-law grain-size distributions

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between the wavelength dependence of ultrasonic attenuation and a single power-law grain-size distribution was further validated and generalized to cases where the grain size distribution follows multiple power-laws.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasonic Attenuation in S.A.E. 3140 and 4150 Steel

TL;DR: In this article, the attenuation of longitudinal ultrasonic waves from 5 to 95 Mc is studied by the pulse technique in blocks of S.A.E. 3140 and 4150 steel to determine the loss mechanism and to find possible methods for precision testing the microstructure of materials.
Book ChapterDOI

The Inverse Problem in Materials Characterization through Ultrasonic Attenuation and Velocity Measurements

TL;DR: The inverse problem in materials characterization is most often skipped over in favor of a correlation because the inverse problem is so difficult and the correlation is only tedious, not hard as mentioned in this paper, and the basic difficulty of inverse problem field is illustrated by two examples: finding grain size in metals when ultrasonic attenuation is measured.
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