Uppsala universitet
Maximum a posteriori Deconvolution of Ultrasonic Data
with Applications in Nondestructive Testing:
Multiple transducer and robustness issues.

Tomas Olofsson

PhD Thesis, Uppsala University, ISBN 91-506-1440-1, December 2000.

Dissertation in Signal Processing to be publicly examined in room K23, Magistern, Dag Hammarskjölds väg 31, Uppsala on December 1 2000 at 1.15p.m.
Faculty Opponent: Prof Joergen Arendt Jensen
Dept of Information Technology, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby.


Paper copies of the thesis can be obtained from Ylva Johansson, Signals and Systems Group, Uppsala University, Box 534, SE-75121 Uppsala, Sweden.


Outline:
The thesis deals with processing of signals acquired during ultrasonic nondestructive testing (NDT) of materials. By using ultrasound, flaws and discontinuities in a material can be detected. Examples are fatigue cracks in metals, inclusions in cast materials and porosity in composite materials.

Furthermore, material properties such as density and stiffness can be estimated using ultrasound and it can also be used for thickness measurements. Altogether, ultrasonic NDT plays an important role in quality control of structural components in different engineering areas such as the nuclear power industry and the aerospace industry.

More on our research on robust filtering using stochastic error models .

Abstract:
In the thesis, various aspects of deconvolution of ultrasonic pulse-echo signals in nondestructive testing are treated. The deconvolution problem is formulated as estimation of a reflection sequence which is the impulse characteristic of the inspected object and the estimation is performed using either maximum a posteriori (MAP) or linear minimum mean square error (MMSE) estimators.

A multivariable model is proposed for a certain multiple transducer setup allowing for frequency diversity, thereby improving the estimation accuracy. Using the MAP estimator three different material types were treated, with varying amount of sparsity in the reflection sequences. The Gaussian distribution is used for modelling materials containing a large number of small scatters. The Bernoulli--Gaussian distribution is used for sparse data obtained from layered structures and a genetic algorithm approach is proposed for optimizing the corresponding MAP criterion.

Sequences with intermediate sparsity suitable of modelling composite materials have been treated using a prior Gaussian distribution with unknown sample variances. An heuristic discrete-time model for modelling dispersion caused by absorption in plastic composite materials is also presented. Robustness against inaccurate impulse responses or position errors in the multiple transducer setup is treated by letting the model of the unknown system belong to an uncertainty set of possible models. The robustness is accomplished by designing linear MMSE estimators that minimize the average estimation error over the models in the uncertainty set.

It is verified experimentally that the robust estimators outperform candidate estimators on the average. The problem of transducer normalization encountered when calibrating an input signal to an automatic characterization system is also treated. It is shown that the solution to this problem decouples into the solution of the deconvolution problem followed by a trivial filter operation.

Keywords:
Ultrasonic pulse-echo testing, nondestructive testing, maximum a posteriori estimation, linear minimum mean squared error estimation, robust filtering, multivariable filtering, sparse deconvolution

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