115 research outputs found
Nonlinear effects for coda-type elastic waves in stressed granular media
Experimental results and their interpretations are presented on the nonlinear
acoustic effects of multiple scattered elastic waves in unconsolidated granular
media. Short wave packets with a central frequency higher than the so-called
cut-off frequency of the medium are emitted at one side of the statically
stressed slab of glass beads and received at the other side after multiple
scattering and nonlinear interactions. Typical signals are strongly distorted
compared to their initially radiated shape both due to nonlinearity and
scattering. It is shown that acoustic waves with a deformation amplitude much
lower than the mean static deformation of the contacts in the medium can modify
the elastic properties of the medium, especially for the weak contact skeleton
part. This addresses the problem of reproducibility of granular structures
during and after acoustic excitation, which is necessary to understand in the
non destructive testing of the elastic properties of granular media by acoustic
methods. Coda signal analysis is shown to be a powerful time-resolved tool to
monitor slight modifications in the elastic response of an unconsolidated
granular structure
Nonlinear Acoustics at GHz Frequencies in a Viscoelastic Fragile Glass Former
Using a picosecond pump-probe ultrasonic technique, we study the propagation
of high-amplitude, laser-generated longitudinal coherent acoustic pulses in the
viscoelastic fragile glass former DC704. We observe an increase of almost ten
percent in acoustic pulse propagation speed of its leading shock front at the
highest optical pump fluence which is a result of the supersonic nature of
nonlinear propagation in the viscous medium. From our measurement we deduce the
nonlinear acoustic parameter of the glass former in the GHz frequency range
across the glass transition temperature.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Time-domain Brillouin scattering assisted by diffraction gratings
Absorption of ultrashort laser pulses in a metallic grating deposited on a
transparent sample launches coherent compression/dilatation acoustic pulses in
directions of different orders of acoustic diffraction. Their propagation is
detected by the delayed laser pulses, which are also diffracted by the metallic
grating, through the measurement of the transient intensity change of the first
order diffracted light. The obtained data contain multiple frequency components
which are interpreted by considering all possible angles for the Brillouin
scattering of light achieved through the multiplexing of the propagation
directions of light and coherent sound by the metallic grating. The emitted
acoustic field can be equivalently presented as a superposition of the plane
inhomogeneous acoustic waves, which constitute an acoustic diffraction grating
for the probe light. Thus, the obtained results can also be interpreted as a
consequence of probe light diffraction by both metallic and acoustic gratings.
The realized scheme of time-domain Brillouin scattering with metallic grating
operating in reflection mode provides access to acoustic frequencies from the
minimal to the maximal possible in a single experimental configuration for the
directions of probe light incidence and scattered light detection. This is
achieved by monitoring of the backward and forward Brillouin scattering
processes in parallel. Applications include measurements of the acoustic
dispersion, simultaneous determination of sound velocity and optical refractive
index, and evaluation of the samples with a single direction of possible
optical access.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Mathematical analysis of thermal diffusion shock waves
Thermal diffusion, also known as the Ludwig-Soret effect, refers to the separation of mixtures in a temperature gradient. For a binary mixture the time dependence of the change in concentration of each species is governed by a nonlinear partial differential equation in space and time. Here, an exact solution of the Ludwig-Soret equation without mass diffusion for a sinusoidal temperature field is given. The solution shows that counterpropagating shock waves are produced which slow and eventually come to a halt. Expressions are found for the shock time for two limiting values of the starting density fraction. The effects of diffusion on the development of the concentration profile in time and space are found by numerical integration of the nonlinear differential equation
Revealing sub-{\mu}m inhomogeneities and {\mu}m-scale texture in H2O ice at Megabar pressures via sound velocity measurements by time-domain Brillouin scattering
Time-domain Brillouin scattering technique, also known as picosecond
ultrasonic interferometry, which provides opportunity to monitor propagation of
nanometers to sub-micrometers length coherent acoustic pulses in the samples of
sub-micrometers to tens of micrometers dimensions, was applied to
depth-profiling of polycrystalline aggregate of ice compressed in a diamond
anvil cell to Megabar pressures. The technique allowed examination of
characteristic dimensions of elastic inhomogeneities and texturing of
polycrystalline ice in the direction normal to the diamond anvil surfaces with
sub-micrometer spatial resolution via time-resolved measurements of variations
in the propagation velocity of the acoustic pulse traveling in the compressed
sample. The achieved two-dimensional imaging of the polycrystalline ice
aggregate in-depth and in one of the lateral directions indicates the
feasibility of three-dimensional imaging and quantitative characterization of
acoustical, optical and acousto-optical properties of transparent
polycrystalline aggregates in diamond anvil cell with tens of nanometers
in-depth resolution and lateral spatial resolution controlled by pump laser
pulses focusing.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figure
Granular Graphene: direct observation of zigzag and armchair edge waves
We propose a mechanical granular graphene obtained by replacing the carbon
atoms with macroscopic spherical stainless steel beads in contact. The
experimental measured dispersion relation is presented, in conjunction with
evidence of the Dirac points. In addition, wave propagation along the zigzag
and a robust turning effect of edge waves from the zigzag to the armchair
boundary is experimentally revealed, even in the absence of a full band gap for
bulk modes. Our work shows that mechanical granular graphene can serve as an
excellent experimental platform to study novel Dirac, topological and nonlinear
wave phenomena
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Special Issue on Laser Ultrasonics
The field of laser ultrasonics encompasses fundamental research on laser–matter interactions, as well as applications of opto-acoustic and acousto-optic phenomena in industry and biomedicine. Laser ultrasonics is a promising technique for the evaluation of novel materials and elastic/mechanical structures across spatial dimensions that have been realized through recent advances in materials science. New applications of laser ultrasonics in industrial applications continue to emerge as advanced manufacturing techniques are developed. The progress in laser science and development of new lasers, as well as advances in instrumentation and signal processing approaches, have broadened the reach of laser ultrasonics to include studies of ultrafast, nanoscale, and nonlinear phenomena, optical and acoustic interactions in complex and/or light-sensitive materials, and photoacoustic processes in biological media.</p
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