Ultrasonic characterization of generally anisotropic elasticity implementing optimal zeroth-order elastic bounds and a wave-fitting approach
Diego Cowes, Juan I. Mieza, MArt\'in P. G\'omez

TL;DR
This paper presents an ultrasonic goniometry method for characterizing anisotropic elastic materials, utilizing a plane-wave model, GPU acceleration, and optimal bounds for efficient and accurate inversion.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive ultrasonic approach that accounts for general anisotropy, reduces computational costs with GPU, and employs optimal bounds for improved material property estimation.
Findings
The method accurately characterizes anisotropic materials up to triclinic symmetry.
GPU implementation significantly speeds up waveform fitting.
Optimal bounds improve the efficiency of the inversion process.
Abstract
The elastic behavior of materials is of critical importance for the design, fabrication, and testing of industrial and structural components. The ease with which the wave angle of incidence can be varied makes ultrasonic techniques well suited for the characterization of anisotropic materials, whose properties are direction-dependent. This work aims to develop an ultrasonic goniometry method in which a wave is transmitted through a sample while scanning over spherical coordinates. A plane-wave model is formulated that accounts for fluid-solid interfaces and is applicable to a wide range of sample thicknesses. The model assumes general anisotropy, enabling the characterization of materials with symmetries up to triclinic, and does not require precise sample alignment. Specially designed transducers support the plane-wave approximation, thereby avoiding the need for more computationally…
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