A REMOTE LASER SYSTEM FOR ULTRASONIC VELOCITY-MEASUREMENT AT HIGH-TEMPERATURES

The temperature dependence of the longitudinal ultrasonic velocity in iron and Dural has been obtained using a totally remote laser technique. The ultrasound is generated by irradiation of one face of a sample with a Q‐switched Nd:YAG laser pulse and is detected on the opposite face using a modified Michelson laser interferometer. The system has proved capable of measurements up to temperatures in excess of 1000 °C, with an absolute accuracy in velocity of ±1%, and relative accuracies of better than 0.1%. Anomalies in the data for iron have been discerned at the Curie temperature of ∼768 °C, due to the ferromagnetic to the paramagnetic phase transition, and at 910 °C due to the crystallographic phase transition from ferrite to austenite.