Paper
17 July 1996 Laseroptical strain sensor: technique and applications
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Abstract
Nowadays in mechanical material testing strains are measured only between two distinctive points on the specimen with probes or by optical analysis of two marked positions on the surface of the specimen. Information about eventual inhomogeneous strain distribution between these two points can not be obtained by these methods. A new laseroptic strain sensor overcomes these restrictions by using the principle oflaser speckle interferometry for measure-ment. In the one dimensional measuring case the specimen is syinetrically illuminated by two bundles of laser light and the image recorded with a high resolution CCD-camera. Computer evaluation of the images shows deformations and strains on the surface of the specimen with high sensitivity. An extended design uses two of these optical setups to provide two inplane measuring directions. Special interest was layed onto the optical set-up which guarantees uniform measuring sensitivities in the whole measuring field and as well very limited adjustment requirements. The laseroptic strain sensor requires no marking on the specimen and gives full field measuring information without contact on nearly any surface. In this paper the operation principle of the laseroptic strain sensor is described. Typical application examples in material testing are given.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Andreas Ettemeyer "Laseroptical strain sensor: technique and applications", Proc. SPIE 2860, Laser Interferometry VIII: Techniques and Analysis, (17 July 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.276307
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Laser marking

Laser applications

Optical analysis

Speckle pattern

CCD cameras

Image analysis

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