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Understanding Acoustic Emission Testing- Reading 1 Part B-A

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Other <strong>Reading</strong>: Rayleigh Waves<br />

Surface waves (Rayleigh waves) are another type of ultrasonic wave used in<br />

the inspection of materials. These waves travel along the flat or curved<br />

surface of relatively thick solid parts. For the propagation of waves of this type,<br />

the waves must be traveling along an interface bounded on one side by the<br />

strong elastic forces of a solid and on the other side by the practically<br />

negligible elastic forces between gas molecules. Surface waves leak energy<br />

into liquid couplants and do not exist for any significant distance along the<br />

surface of a solid immersed in a liquid, unless the liquid covers the solid<br />

surface only as a very thin film. Surface waves are subject to attenuation in a<br />

given material, as are longitudinal or transverse waves. They have a velocity<br />

approximately 90% of the transverse wave velocity in the same material. The<br />

region within which these waves propagate with effective energy is not much<br />

thicker than about one wavelength beneath the surface of the metal.<br />

Charlie Chong/ Fion Zhang

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