Abstract
Abstract
We present a numerical simulation of the beam-steering of ultrasonic guided waves in an isotropic and viscoelastic solid plate, which mimics bovine cortex. The excitation was modeled by a group of five finite-size emitters, each exercised a normal force to the bone plate. Beam steering was achieved by delaying the emitters’ firing. The simulation technique was implemented by a semi-analytical finite element scheme to compute the wave fields. At small steering angles, the simulated time-offset signals show mainly two groups of arrivals. The first group is the fast-traveling and high-frequency bulk waves and the second one is slow-traveling and low-frequency guided waves. The fast-traveling waves gradually diminish with increasing steering angles, in agreement with the excitation function of the source influence theory. The frequency-phase velocity dispersion maps also illustrate the phenomenon. The study has demonstrated that the lowest order Lamb asymmetrical mode, A
0, which is useful for bone characterization, can best be excited when the cortical bone thickness is thin, the beam angle is large, and the excited frequency is low.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),General Engineering
Cited by
1 articles.
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