Acoustic characterization of doped silica glasses with a GeO,, Pz05, F, TiO,, Al,Oj, or B,O, dopant having different concentrations is presented. Quantitative measurements were performed with a 225-MHz line-focus-beam scanning acoustic microscope. The acoustic velocity variation due to different dopant concentrations is given. It has been found that the AI,O, dopant increases, but the other dopants decrease, the acoustic velocity as compared with that of the pure fused silica. We have also found that the fractional change in acoustic velocity is greater than that in refractive index for a given dopant concentration.
Laser-ultrasonics is an emerging nondestructive technique using lasers for the generation and detection of ultrasound which presents numerous advantages for industrial inspection. In this paper, the problem of detection by laser-ultrasonics of small defects within a material is addressed. Experimental results obtained with laser-ultrasonics are processed using the Synthetic Aperture Focusing Technique (SAFT), yielding improved flaw detectability and spatial resolution. Experiments have been performed on an aluminum sample with a contoured back surface and two flat-bottom holes. Practical interest of coupling SAFT to laser-ultrasonics is also discussed.
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