Non-linear enhancement of laser generated ultrasonic Rayleigh waves by cracks

Laser generated ultrasound has been widely used for detecting cracks, surface and sub-surface defects in many different materials. It provides a non-contact wideband excitation source, which can be focused into different geometries. Previous workers have reported enhancement of the laser generated Rayleigh wave, when a crack is illuminated by pulsed laser beam irradiation. We demonstrate that the enhancement observed is due to a combination of source truncation, the free boundary condition at the edge of the crack and interference effects. Generating a Rayleigh wave over a crack can lead to enhancement of the amplitude of the Rayleigh wave signal, a shift in the dominant frequency of the wideband Rayleigh wave and strong enhancement of the high frequency components of the Rayleigh wave.