A Laser Ultrasound System to Non-Invasively Measure Compression Waves in Granular Ice Mixes

J. Chris McCaslin, T. Dylan Mikesell, Hans-Peter Marshall

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Abstract

Accurate knowledge of snow mechanical properties, including Young's modulus, shear modulus, Poisson's ratio, and density, is critical to many areas of snow science and to snow-related engineering problems. To facilitate the assessment of these properties, an innovative non-contacting laser ultrasound system (LUS) has been developed. This system acquires ultrasound waveform data at frequencies ranging from tens to hundreds of kHz in a controlled cold-lab environment. Two different LUS devices were compared in this study to determine which recorded more robust ultrasound in granular ice mix samples. We validated the ultrasound observations with poro-elastic traveltime modeling based on physical and empirical constitutive relationships, comparison to and replication of previous studies, and the use of other accredited snow property measurement systems, i.e., the SnowMicroPen. For ice mixes, we determined that the PSV-400 Scanning Vibrometer (Polytec GmbH) produces higher quality ultrasonic wavefield observations (i.e. has a better signal-to-noise ratio) than the VibroFlex Fiber Vibrometer (Polytec GmbH) in the lab conditions tested here. Using the PSV-400, we then demonstrated the utility of this new LUS to study the relationship between snow compression-wave speed and density during snow compaction experiments.

Original languageAmerican English
Article number104157
JournalCold Regions Science and Technology
Volume221
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2024

Keywords

  • Compression waves
  • Laser ultrasonics
  • Poro-elastic waves
  • Snow density

EGS Disciplines

  • Earth Sciences
  • Geophysics and Seismology

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