scholarly journals Measurement Transducer Impulse Response Using an Exponential Sine Sweep Method

Proceedings ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 53
Author(s):  
Jorge Otero ◽  
Ivan Felis

The impulse response of a piezoelectric transducer can be calculated using the electrical equivalent circuit model with the Manson method for bandwidth transducers. Nevertheless, these approaches are not sufficiently precise because the importance of the homogeneous structure medium where the transducer emits the signal in part determines the bandwidth in which it acts due to the medium interactions with the environment. This paper describes preliminary research results on piezoelectric impulse response measurements in a small space, making use of the procedure presented by Angelo Farina for transducers emitting in reverberant spaces. Combining the basics of the exponential sine sweep (ESS) method, techniques of arrival detection, and signal processing it is possible to obtain the impulse response in a piezoelectric transducer emitting in a homogeneous medium.

Author(s):  
Karmjit Singh Sandha

The chapter will start with brief introduction to the interconnects and its importance in an integrated circuit at deep sub-micron technology nodes. The brief discussion about the concept of scaling, interconnects models, and material in use are presented. The limitations of conventional materials at scaled down technology nodes will be discussed next. The focus of the chapter is to present the electrical equivalent circuit model to estimate the impedance parameters of SWCNT bundle and MWCNT bundle as interconnects at different nano-scaled technology nodes for global level interconnect length. Using ESC model of SWCNT, MWCNT, and copper, the performance comparative analysis for delay and power delay product (PDP) will be presented for different interconnect lengths at nano-scaled technology nodes. Finally, the chapter summary and conclusion will be written at the end of the chapter.


Geophysics ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 947-963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tariq Alkhalifah

Nearly all dip‐moveout correction (DMO) implementations to date assume isotropic homogeneous media. Usually, this has been acceptable considering the tremendous cost savings of homogeneous isotropic DMO and considering the difficulty of obtaining the anisotropy parameters required for effective implementation. In the presence of typical anisotropy, however, ignoring the anisotropy can yield inadequate results. Since anisotropy may introduce large deviations from hyperbolic moveout, accurate transformation to zero‐offset in anisotropic media should address such nonhyperbolic moveout behavior of reflections. Artley and Hale’s v(z) ray‐tracing‐based DMO, developed for isotropic media, provides an attractive approach to treating such problems. By using a ray‐tracing procedure crafted for anisotropic media, I modify some aspects of their DMO so that it can work for v(z) anisotropic media. DMO impulse responses in typical transversely isotropic (TI) models (such as those associated with shales) deviate substantially from the familiar elliptical shape associated with responses in homogeneous isotropic media (to the extent that triplications arise even where the medium is homogeneous). Such deviations can exceed those caused by vertical inhomogeneity, thus emphasizing the importance of taking anisotropy into account in DMO processing. For isotropic or elliptically anisotropic media, the impulse response is an ellipse; but as the key anisotropy parameter η varies, the shape of the response differs substantially from elliptical. For typical η > 0, the impulse response in TI media tends to broaden compared to the response in an isotropic homogeneous medium, a behavior opposite to that encountered in typical v(z) isotropic media, where the response tends to be squeezed. Furthermore, the amplitude distribution along the DMO operator differs significantly from that for isotropic media. Application of this anisotropic DMO to data from offshore Africa resulted in a considerably better alignment of reflections from horizontal and dipping reflectors in common‐midpoint gather than that obtained using an isotropic DMO. Even the presence of vertical inhomogeneity in this medium could not eliminate the importance of considering the shale‐induced anisotropy.


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