Photoacoustics
February 2023
In this article, we present an overview of recent progress in non-contact remote optical detection of ultrasound in application to nondestructive testing and evaluation of materials. The focus of the review is on the latest advances in optical detection that offer mature and robust field-applicable solutions for diagnostics and imaging of engineered structures. We provide a detailed description of these solutions, including their operation principles, their evolution from the previously known designs to commercial devices, and their contribution to solving the most important problems associated with non-contact optical detection of ultrasound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdhesively bonded metals are increasingly used in many industries. Inspecting these parts remains challenging for modern non-destructive testing techniques. Laser ultrasound (LU) has shown great potential in high-resolution imaging of carbon-reinforced composites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrasound Med Biol
September 2019
Ultrasound shear wave elastography (SWE) is an imaging modality used for noninvasive, quantitative evaluation of tissue mechanical properties. SWE uses an acoustic radiation force to produce laterally propagating shear waves that can be tracked in spatial and temporal domains in order to obtain the wave velocity. One of the ways to study the viscoelasticity is through examining the shear wave velocity dispersion curves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present article, we investigated the sliding of discontinuous tendon subcomponents and the variation of nonhomogeneous deformation in the human Achilles tendon (AT) over time using uniaxial tensile and relaxation tests. The deformation and the resulting strain distribution under uniaxial tension are examined using a vision-based 3-D digital image correlation (DIC) system, which allows estimation of the strain field in the axial and lateral directions. Relaxation test under B-mode ultrasound imaging with the use of DIC method provides information about the local strain variation over time in the axial and anteroposterior directions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical coherence elastography (OCE) can provide clinically valuable information based on local measurements of tissue stiffness. Improved light sources and scanning methods in optical coherence tomography (OCT) have led to rapid growth in systems for high-resolution, quantitative elastography using imaged displacements and strains within soft tissue to infer local mechanical properties. We describe in some detail the physical processes underlying tissue mechanical response based on static and dynamic displacement methods.
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