Suppression of Lamb wave excitation via aperture control of a transducer array for ultrasonic clamp-on flow metering
J.M. Massaad Mouawad (TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)
P. L.M.J. van Neer (TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)
D. M. van Willigen (TNO)
M.A.P. Pertijs (TU Delft - Electronic Instrumentation)
N. de Jong (TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)
M. D. Verweij (TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)
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Abstract
During ultrasonic clamp-on flow metering, Lamb waves propagating in the pipe wall may limit the measurement accuracy by introducing absolute errors in the flow estimates. Upon reception, these waves can interfere with the up and downstream waves refracting from the liquid, and disturb the measurement of the transit time difference that is used to obtain the flow speed. Thus, suppression of the generation of Lamb waves might directly increase the accuracy of a clamp-on flow meter. Existing techniques apply to flow meters with single element transducers. This paper considers the application of transducer arrays and presents a method to achieve a predefined amount of suppression of these spurious Lamb waves based on appropriate amplitude weightings of the transducer elements. Finite element simulations of an ultrasonic clamp-on flow measurement setting will be presented to show the effect of array aperture control on the suppression of the Lamb waves in a 1-mm-thick stainless steel pipe wall. Furthermore, a proof-of-principle experiment will be shown that demonstrates a good agreement with the simulations.