H. Sontag, A.C. Tam
Canadian journal of physics
Nondestructive laser-induced short ultrasonic pulse generation (duration ≊10 ns) together with broadband detection is used to detect and measure the small elastic anisotropy in opaque solids quickly and precisely. This is demonstrated for an extruded aluminum alloy type 6061-T6. A single laser-induced acoustic pulse propagation measurement over a path length of 47 mm provides a longitudinal ultrasonic velocity measurement accuracy of 0.02%. The longitudinal velocities at ±45°from the extruding direction Z are found to be 2% larger than the velocity along Z, indicating that most of the aluminum crystallites are oriented with a principal axis parallel to Z. Thermal annealing of the sample results in a small increase in ultrasonic veolcity in all directions with the observed acoustic anisotropy remaining essentially unchanged.
H. Sontag, A.C. Tam
Canadian journal of physics
B. Sullivan, A.C. Tam
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
P.T. Leung, Nhan Do, et al.
Journal of Applied Physics
A.C. Tam, W.P. Leung
Physical Review Letters