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1.
Ultrasonics ; 69: 259-67, 2016 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27026585

RESUMEN

Picosecond laser ultrasonics is an all-optical experimental technique based on ultrafast high repetition rate lasers applied for the generation and detection of nanometric in length coherent acoustic pulses. In optically transparent materials these pulses can be detected not only on their arrival at the sample surfaces but also all along their propagation path inside the sample providing opportunity for imaging of the sample material spatial inhomogeneities traversed by the acoustic pulse. Application of this imaging technique to polycrystalline elastically anisotropic transparent materials subject to high pressures in a diamond anvil cell reveals their significant texturing/structuring at the spatial scales exceeding dimensions of the individual crystallites.

2.
Sci Rep ; 5: 9352, 2015 Mar 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25790808

RESUMEN

The time-domain Brillouin scattering technique, also known as picosecond ultrasonic interferometry, allows monitoring of the propagation of coherent acoustic pulses, having lengths ranging from nanometres to fractions of a micrometre, in samples with dimension of less than a micrometre to tens of micrometres. In this study, we applied this technique to depth-profiling of a polycrystalline aggregate of ice compressed in a diamond anvil cell to megabar pressures. The method allowed examination of the characteristic dimensions of ice texturing in the direction normal to the diamond anvil surfaces with sub-micrometre spatial resolution via time-resolved measurements of the propagation velocity of the acoustic pulses travelling in the compressed sample. The achieved imaging of ice in depth and in one of the lateral directions indicates the feasibility of three-dimensional imaging and quantitative characterisation of the acoustical, optical and acousto-optical properties of transparent polycrystalline aggregates in a diamond anvil cell with tens of nanometres in-depth resolution and a lateral spatial resolution controlled by pump laser pulses focusing, which could approach hundreds of nanometres.

3.
Ultrasonics ; 44(2): 221-9, 2006 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16430937

RESUMEN

The present work is related to the characterization of air-saturated porous media by using parametric demodulated ultrasonic waves. One uses two different powerful ultrasonic emitters working either at 47 kHz or at 162 kHz which are electronically amplitude modulated over the 200 Hz-4 kHz or 2 kHz-40 kHz bandwidths respectively. The demodulation process takes place in air, due to its nonlinearity enabling to generate audio range acoustical waves or alternatively low frequency ultrasonic waves which can be used to characterize porous materials in the reflection configuration at normal incidence. Some appropriate theoretical calculations are introduced for three configurations of interest, i.e. a porous slab, a porous layer mounted onto a rigid plate, and a porous half space, in the case of the equivalent-fluid model. Comparisons between theoretical modeling and experimental data are provided and prospective industrial applications are discussed.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 90(12): 124301, 2003 Mar 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12688875

RESUMEN

A new phenomenon of self-induced hysteresis has been observed in the interaction of bulk acoustic waves with a cracked solid. It consists in a hysteretic behavior of material nonlinearity as a function of the incident pump wave amplitude. Hysteresis manifests itself in the self-action of the monochromatic pump wave and in the excitation of its superharmonics and of its subharmonics. The proposed theoretical models attribute the phenomenon to hysteresis in transition of the acoustically forced oscillation of cracks from a nonclapping regime to a regime of clapping contacts.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 90(7): 075501, 2003 Feb 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12633240

RESUMEN

Logarithmic-in-time slow dynamics has been found for individual cracks in a solid. Furthermore, this phenomenon is observed during both the crack acoustic conditioning and the subsequent relaxation. A thermoelastic mechanism is suggested which relates the log-time behavior to the essentially 2D character of the heating and cooling of the crack perimeter and inner contacts. Nonlinear perturbation of the contacts by a stronger (pump) wave causes either softening or hardening of the sample, and induces either additional absorption or transparency for a weaker (probe) acoustic wave depending on frequency of the latter.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 89(10): 105502, 2002 Sep 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12225205

RESUMEN

A new mechanism is proposed for the linear and amplitude-dependent dissipation due to elastic-wave-crack interaction. We have observed one of its strong manifestations in a direct elastic-wave analog of the Luxemburg-Gorky effect consisting of the cross modulation of radio waves at the dissipative nonlinearity of the ionosphere plasma. The counterpart acoustic mechanism implies, first, a drastic enhancement of the thermoelastic coupling at high-compliance microdefects, and, second, the high stress-sensitivity of the defects leads to a strong stress dependence of the resultant dissipation.

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