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Holographic Interferometry for Flow and Vibration Analysis
Holographic Interferometry uses the fact that light fields can be stored on photosensitive
media when coherent radiation (LASER light) is used. Thus, this technique enables the quantitative
comparison between light waves reflected from surfaces before and after stress is applied, as well
as the determination of density changes in a flow.
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This picture demonstrates the principle of holographic
interferometry when used for opaque objects. One hologram of the object is recorded first,
a small stress is applied - here the receiver of the phone was put on top of the phone and
hot water and been poured into the cup- and then a second hologram is recorded. Both holograms
are reconstructed simultaneously. As an result of the interference of both holograms a fringe
system is visible. This fringe system can be understood as isolines of surface shift due to
the load or due to thermal expansion (isoline level approximately 0.25 micrometer)
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Using pulsed laser systems holographic interferograms can be recorded
at very short time delays. This is a stereoscopic recording of density changes in a
transonic turbine cascade flow taking place within 10 microseconds. Due to the small
changes in density in most places only one interference fringe is visible.
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Especially when using pulsed laser systems digital evaluation
of the interferograms is important to enable the averaging of several recordings for
obtaining mean values of density distribution in highly turbulent flows. But digital
interferogram evaluation also enables the experimentalist to distinguish between
density increase and decrease in a pixeled field of data. Two techniques of interferogram
analysis are established at the Institute for Thermal Turbomachinery and Machine Dynamics,
a "Spatial Carrier Technique" using a two-dimensional Fourier-Analysis of the interference
fringe pattern , as well as a "Phase-Stepping" technique where the holographic interferogram
is recorded using two reference beams. This type uses a subsequent evaluation of the
hologram by digitising a number of interferograms from this hologram with precisely
introduced phase shifts between the reference beams. An overview on these techniques
can be found in recent textbooks (see e.g. D.W.Robinson, G.T.Reid, 1993,
"Interferogram Analysis", Insitute of Physics Publishing, Bristol)
For turbine blade cascade applications see e.g:
Woisetschläger, J., Jericha, H., 1996, "Heterodyne Laser Interferometry
for Cascade Flow Investigations", 13th Symposium on Measuring Techniques for
Transonic and Supersonic Flows in Cascades and Turbomachinery, ETH Zürich,
Optical Measurements, paper 19 (download paper;
postscript 2MB,
zip 1MB)
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Vibration analysis using heterodyne holographic
interferometry enables multidirectional analysis of vibration and deformation amplitude.
The result of such an investigation is the quantitative experimental analysis of the
vibration modes in all three-dimensions which can be compared to a numerical finite-element
analysis directly. As an example you see the first vibration modes of a gas turbine blade
(first bending at 710Hz, first torsion at 1200Hz and second bending at 2340Hz; blade length is 160mm)
see also:Woisetschläger, J., Jericha, H., 1995, "Laserholographische
Messung der Änderung des Schwingungsverhaltens von Gasturbinenschaufeln infolge Erosion",
in "Schwingung in rotierenden Maschinen III", H.Springer, H.Irretier, R.Nordmann, H.Springer,Eds.,
Vieweg , ISBN3-528-06655-5, pp 65-73 (in German)
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