ACTIVE THERMOGRAPHY FOR MATERIALS NON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING

1 ŠVANTNER Michal
Co-authors:
1 VESELÝ Zdeněk
Institution:
1 University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, Czech Republic, EU, msvantne@ntc.zcu.cz, zvesely@ntc.zcu.cz
Conference:
23rd International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials, Hotel Voronez I, Brno, Czech Republic, EU, May 21 - 23, 2014
Proceedings:
Proceedings 23rd International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials
Pages:
851-856
ISBN:
978-80-87294-52-9
ISSN:
2694-9296
Published:
18th June 2014
Proceedings of the conference were published in Web of Science and Scopus.
Metrics:
238 views / 104 downloads
Abstract

Active thermography is an advanced experimental procedure, which uses a thermography measurement of a tested material thermal response after its external excitation. This principle can be used also for non-contact infra-red non-destructive testing (IR-NDT) of materials. The IR-NDT method is based on an excitation of a tested material by an external source, which bring some energy to the material. Halogen lamps, flash-lamps, ultrasound generator or other source can be used as the excitation source for IR-NDT. The excitation causes a tested material thermal response, which is measured by an infra-red camera. It is possible to obtain information about the tested material surface and sub-surface defects or material inhomogeneities by using a suitable combination of excitation source, excitation procedure, infra-red camera and evaluation method. Active thermography and IR-NDT methods are introduced in this contribution. Different IR-NDT configurations and their possibilities and limitations are described. The usage of the IR-NDT for specific applications is shown in the contribution.

Keywords: Active thermography, material defects, non-destructive testing, flash

© This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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