Measurement of Surface SH-Wave Velocities Generated on the Surface of Japanese Cypress Column ()
ABSTRACT
Polyetherimide resin wedge transducers were used to generate a shear wave that was obliquely incident relative to the surface of a Japanese cypress column for measuring the surface SH-wave velocity. As the inter-transducer distance increased, the propagation time increased and the am-plitude became smaller. The propagation time and the amplitude were significantly correlated with the inter-transducer distance. The SH-wave velocity ranged from 1270 m/s to 1496 m/s. Surface SH-wave velocity was lower in the central part of the column and higher in the outer part. Velocity was negatively correlated with moisture content at 1% of significance level. These results suggest the accomplishment of the first target for applying the surface SH-wave acoustoelastic technique to nondestructive evaluation of drying stress in wood.
Share and Cite:
Hasegawa, M. and Matsumura, J. (2014) Measurement of Surface SH-Wave Velocities Generated on the Surface of Japanese Cypress Column.
Open Journal of Acoustics,
4, 177-183. doi:
10.4236/oja.2014.44018.
Cited by
No relevant information.