Silverstein SD, Thomas LJ. Analytical comparison of sensor signal processing enhancements for NDT synthetic aperture ultrasonic imaging.
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING : A PUBLICATION OF THE IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING SOCIETY 1993;
2:60-67. [PMID:
18296195 DOI:
10.1109/83.210866]
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Abstract
The results of a detailed analytical study of the effects of sensor processing techniques on clutter suppression and image enhancement for nondestructive testing (NDT) systems are presented. A relatively simple beamforming/diffraction model is developed for near-field, wideband, synthetic aperture ultrasonic imaging in NDT systems. The physical model is used to quantitatively evaluate a variety of front-end sensor signal processing tradeoffs for the enhanced detection and sizing of defects. It is shown using statistical microscopic scattering calculations that a combination of increased spatial sampling and rectangular windowing can increase the signal-to-clutter ratio by ~10 dB while maintaining crack size resolutions well below future projected specifications. The sensor signal processing image enhancements are demonstrated by the construction of simulated strip-map SAFT (synthetic aperture focusing technique) images of metallic crack defects in the presence of large numbers of randomly distributed clutter (simulated grain boundary) scatterers.
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