Publications by authors named "Magne Aanes"

We present an ultrasonic method of detecting cracks in pipelines based on using normally incident transducers in a pitch-catch setup, which can only excite Lamb modes of higher order than the fundamental modes A and S commonly used in crack detection applications. By excitation and measurements of the Lamb modes S, S, and A, in a steel plate immersed in fluid with and without a notch (to emulate a crack), the performance of the modes towards crack detection is quantified by assessing whether it returns a high leaky component and whether the notch has a large impact on the leaky component. In order to narrow the scope of measurements necessary to investigate notch sensitivity for different system parameters, and to potentially optimize the system setup, we present a computationally efficient theoretical model based on angular spectrum method (ASM) and the theoretical sensitivity kernel formulation from the field of seismology that accounts for a scatterer in the wave path between the transmitter and receiver.

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An angular spectrum method (ASM) full-wave description of stress and energy density in a fluid-immersed plate for the optimization of leaky Lamb wave applications is presented. It models the case when leaky Lamb waves are generated by an external finite transmitter in the immersion fluid, and can calculate the associated stress, energy density, and other field variables within the plate. The normal component of the stress tensor and the energy density are compared against calculations in COMSOL with good agreement, but with some differences due to the two methods.

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Transit-time flow meters based on guided ultrasonic wave propagation in the pipe spool have several advantages compared to traditional inline ultrasonic flow metering. The extended interrogation field, obtained by continuous leakage from guided waves traveling in the pipe wall, increases robustness toward entrained particles or gas in the flow. In reflective-path guided-wave ultrasonic flow meters (GW-UFMs), the flow equations are derived from signals propagating solely in the pipe wall and from signals passing twice through the fluid.

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Plane-wave theory for fluid-embedded isotropic plates is often used in ultrasonic guided-wave applications, and to estimate wall thickness, corrosion, or sound velocities in plates and pipes. In such structures, measured ultrasonic transmission through the solid material is affected by acoustic beam diffraction effects, and the results may deviate from plane-wave descriptions, which are insufficient to describe the complex effects that occur. When exciting a fluid-embedded steel plate with a pulsed ultrasonic beam at normal incidence, resonance frequency downshift, axial sound pressure level increase, and beam narrowing have been observed, for measured resonance peaks in the frequency regions of certain leaky Lamb mode branches of the plate.

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The characteristics of a sound beam transmitted through a fluid-embedded viscoelastic plate at normal incidence can deviate significantly from those of a plane-wave. Phenomena such as frequency shift, signal amplification or reduction, and changed beam properties, are observed for resonance peaks associated with specific leaky Lamb modes. When interpreting measurements using plane-wave theory, such deviations will influence the measurement of material parameters and plate thickness.

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