The use of heterodyne speckle photogrammetry to measure high-temperature strain distributionsThermal and mechanical strains have been measured on samples of a common material used in jet engine burner liners, which were heated from room temperature to 870 C and cooled back to 220 C, in a laboratory furnace. The physical geometry of the sample surface was recorded to select temperatures by means of a set of twelve single-exposure specklegrams. Sequential pairs of specklegrams were compared in a heterodyne interferometer which allowed high-precision measurement of differential displacements. Good speckle correlation was observed between the first and last specklegrams also, which showed the durability of the surface microstructure, and permitted a check on accumulated errors. Agreement with calculated thermal expansion was to within a few hundred microstrain over a range of fourteen thousand.
Document ID
19840045836
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Stetson, K. A. (United Technologies Research Center East Hartford, CT, United States)