Ultrasonic Guided Waves for Monitoring Underwater Corrosion
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Abstract
This thesis reports the investigation of corrosion and its progression in plate specimen
simulating ship hulls in uncoated and paint coated states using ultrasonic guided
waves .The effectiveness of guided waves technique for corrosion monitoring in
various states of ship hull structure (as in actual conditions in ships) has been studied.
Current work proposes to use immersion transducers to generate guided elastic waves
in plate geometries in first healthy state. Then guided waves are generated in steel
plates undergoing corrosion damages. The signals in pitch catch orientation are send
and received at particular critical angles. The variation in the signal received should
lead to identify, locate and evaluate corrosion damage and determine the residual life
of the structure.
However, several key technologies must be established before the guided waves could
be utilized in the monitoring of health of marine structures, a reliable technique for
prediction of propagation of waves through submerged damaged specimens taking
into account the fluid structure interaction must be established; a number of steel
plates structures in uncoated and paint coated with and without initial scratch or
damage conditions must be investigated and extend of corrosion be characterized to
facilitate on site application of the developed methodology. The methodology is
successfully to plates undergoing corrosion in marine environment.
This thesis reports a non-contact, in-situ and non-destructive corrosion monitoring
methodology for submerged plates using ultrasonic guided waves. Specific surface
sensitive and core sensitive guided wave modes are utilized for monitoring plates
undergoing accelerated impressed current corrosion in the presence of chlorides.
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ME, MED
