Paper
30 April 2015 Glued structures inspection based on lock-in thermography
Laetitia Perez, Laurent Autrique
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9534, Twelfth International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision 2015; 95341K (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2185131
Event: The International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision 2015, 2015, Le Creusot, France
Abstract
Active thermography is a widely employed technique for parametric identification and non-destructive inspection. This attractive method is based on the observation of thermal waves propagation induced by a periodic heating. For nondestructive testing usual approaches are based on a global heating (a large surface of the inspected material is submitted to thermal excitation). In the following a local approach is investigated: the heated area is small (order of magnitude is one square centimeter) and lateral propagation is studied in order to reveal the defect in the sample. In fact, both modulus (heat wave amplitude) and phase lag (delay) of the measured periodic signal are modified by the defect neighborhood and the search for the most effective area leads to the defect localization. Several results are highlighted in this communication in order to investigate an automated procedure. Temperatures are measured by an infrared camera and analyses of modulus cartography are performed in order to estimate the defect location. In such an aim, the downhill simplex method is implemented in order to converge toward defect location. Illustrations are dedicated to glued structures (two plates separated by a thin glue interface) for which unknown defect is a lack of glue which can be considered as a bubble (air trapped between the lower and the upper plane surface). Automated method attractiveness is established in several configurations.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Laetitia Perez and Laurent Autrique "Glued structures inspection based on lock-in thermography", Proc. SPIE 9534, Twelfth International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision 2015, 95341K (30 April 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2185131
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KEYWORDS
Cartography

Inspection

Wave propagation

Adhesives

Thermography

Glasses

Interfaces

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