This is the U.S. National Phase of International Application No. PCT/FR2004/01602 filed 24 Jun. 2004, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to the field of magneto-optical imaging methods and devices.
More particularly, the invention relates to a magneto-optical imaging method comprising:
Such methods, as well as magneto-optical apparatuses implementing such methods, are already known, in particular, by virtue of documents U.S. Pat. No. 4,625,167, U.S. Pat. No. 4,755,752, U.S. Pat. No. 5,053,704 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,446,378.
Such methods and devices are generally used, but not exclusively, to undertake nondestructive testing by eddy current. They combine the use of eddy currents and of the Faraday effect. They make it possible to detect defects, such as cracks at the feet of rivets or corrosion, that are present in a conducting target.
They find applications especially in the aeronautical and nuclear industries.
However, the known methods and devices allow only a qualitative characterization of a defect. The images obtained are binary.
An object of the invention is to provide a magneto-optical imaging method and device allowing quantitative characterization of defects.
According to an aspect of the invention, it provides a method which, in addition to the characteristics already mentioned, has the following additional characteristics:
By virtue of the invention, and in particular by virtue of the use of an active material whose Faraday rotation is proportional to the field in which it is bathed, it is possible to determine, on the basis of a local luminous intensity, the value, in modulus and in phase, of the characteristic interfering magnetic field that are due to the defects in the target material. This therefore provides access, in real time, to a map of the target material accurately characterizing the defects (depth of corrosion, dimension of the cracks, etc.), especially when the method according to the invention is associated with a modeling of the means for generating of the exciting magnetic field.
The method according to the invention may furthermore comprise one and/or other of the following provisions:
According to another aspect, the invention relates to a magneto-optical imaging device, for forming an image oaf target material, this device comprising:
characterized in that the Faraday rotation of the active material is substantially proportional to its magnetization when it is subjected to an interfering magnetic field produced in the target material, perpendicular to said face and varying in a minimum range extending between substantially −100 Oersted and substantially +100 Oersted.
The device according to the invention may furthermore comprise one and/or other of the following provisions:
A nonlimiting exemplary embodiment of the device according to the invention is described hereinbelow in conjunction with
More precisely, the optical device 3 comprises a light source 9, a polarizer 11 and an analyzer 13. The polarizer 11 and the analyzer 13 are of a type known to the person skilled in the art.
The light source 9 is for example constituted by a light-emitting diode. Diodes of high luminosity are available on the market for varied wavelengths. A red diode 10 mm in diameter and of high luminosity (reference TLRH190P from TOSHIBA Company) will be chosen for example.
An optically active material 15 is interposed between the polarizer 11 and the analyzer 13, in the optical path. This polarizer/active material/analyzer assembly constitutes a magneto-optical light modulator. The principle of this magneto-optical modulator is illustrated by
The optically active material 15 is for example a ferrimagnetic garnet having a linear, soft magnetization cycle with little hysteresis. It is for example a (GdPrBiTm)3(AlFe)5O12 compound deposited as a film 5.9 μm thick, by liquid phase epitaxy at 768° C., on an SGGG [(GdCa)3(GaMgZr)5O12] substrate one inch in diameter.
In this type of garnet, the direction of easy magnetization is normal to the plane of the film.
In this type of compound, the Bi3+ and Pr3+ ions make it possible to obtain a strong Faraday rotation. Furthermore, they are compatible with the use of wavelengths corresponding to colors close to red. Advantageously, the magnetic domains of this type of garnet are of small dimensions compared with the size of the pixels of the photodetector means 7, thereby making it possible to average the contributions from domains with magnetization direction that are opposite.
As represented in
One of the faces of the film of active material 15 is covered with a fine coating of aluminum acting as a mirror and thus ensuring near-total reflection of the light rays originating from the light source 9.
The optically active material 15 is immersed in a sinusoidal magnetic field of frequency f=ω/2π, created by the magnetic field generating means 5. The frequency f is for example 100 kHz.
The magnetic field generating means 5 are for example constituted by an inductive plate 17 suitable for inducing eddy currents in the target 2 (see
The photodetector means 7 are advantageously constituted by a matrix, rather than by a single sensor associated with a mechanical scanning device. An analog CCD camera associated with a video acquisition card appears to be appropriate. It may be for example the XC-75CE model from SONY Company. It has indeed the following advantages:
Such CCD cameras allow the acquisition of an image every 25 to 30 milliseconds.
For compatibility between the sampling period of this CCD camera and the frequency f of excitation of the active material, the luminous intensity of the light source 9 is modulated by stroboscopy, by energizing the light source 9 with voltage pulses. In a homodyne version of the device according to the invention, the voltage pulses have a frequency identical to those of the sinusoidal current I and are with constant n2π/N out of phase (where n∈[0,N-1]).
Hence, through techniques of digital lock-in detection, it is possible to deduce the amplitude H0 and the phase of the interfering magnetic field, with respect to the reference constituted by the sinusoidal current I energizing the inductive plate 17.
Indeed, if the magnetization M, of the active material, is proportional to the interfering magnetic field H0, we have a Faraday rotation of the form:
ρ(H)=kH0 sin(ωt)
The luminous intensity detected by the CCD camera is then proportional to cos2(ν+ρ(H)) and, after simplification for small values of ρ, we obtain a luminous intensity proportional to (1+cos 2ν)/2−kH0 sin 2ν sin(ωt)
It is thus possible to get back to the amplitude H0 of the interfering field related to the defect to be characterized.
By associating these results with a modeling, for example with 3D finite elements, of the means generating the exciting magnetic field 5, it is possible to accurately characterize the crack with its dimensions.
According to a variant of the method and of the device according to the invention such as were described hereinabove, a heterodyne setup is made. In this case, the frequencies of the inductive current I and of the light source are slightly different.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03 07850 | Jun 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2004/001602 | 6/24/2004 | WO | 00 | 12/27/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/001467 | 1/6/2005 | WO | A |
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4410277 | Yamamoto et al. | Oct 1983 | A |
4625167 | Fitzpatrick | Nov 1986 | A |
4755752 | Fitzpatrick | Jul 1988 | A |
4896103 | Shimanuki et al. | Jan 1990 | A |
5053704 | Fitzpatrick | Oct 1991 | A |
5446378 | Reich et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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40 21 359 | Jan 1992 | DE |
0 351 171 | Jan 1990 | EP |
0 510 621 | Oct 1992 | EP |
01209356 | Aug 1989 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060146328 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |