scholarly journals Single-Sided Microwave Near-Field Scanning of Pine Wood Lumber for Defect Detection

Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 1486
Author(s):  
Mohamed Radwan ◽  
David V. Thiel ◽  
Hugo G. Espinosa

Defects and cracks in dried natural timber (relative permittivity 2–5) may cause structural weakness and enhanced warping in structural beams. For a pine wood beam (1200 mm × 70 mm × 70 mm), microwave reflection (S11) and transmission (S21) measurements using a cavity-backed slot antenna on the wood surface showed the variations caused by imperfections and defects in the wood. Reflection measurements at 4.4 GHz increased (>5 dB) above a major knot evident on the wood surface when the E-field was parallel to the wood grain. Similar results were observed for air cavities, independent of depth from the wood surface. The presence of a metal bolt in an air hole increased S11 by 2 dB. In comparison, transmission measurements (S21) were increased by 6 dB for a metal screw centered in the cavity. A kiln-dried pine wood sample was saturated with water to increase its moisture content from 17% to 138%. Both parallel and perpendicular E-field measurements showed a difference of more than 15 dB above an open saw-cut slot in the water-saturated beam. The insertion of a brass plate in the open slot created a 7 dB rise in the S11 measurement (p < 0.0003), while there was no significant variation for perpendicular orientation. By measuring the reflection coefficient, it was possible to detect the location of a crack through a change in its magnitude without a noticeable change (<0.01 GHz) in resonant frequency. These microwave measurements offer a simple, single-frequency non-destructive testing method of structural timber in situ, when one or more plane faces are accessible for direct antenna contact.

IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Maria Antonia Maisto ◽  
Giovanni Leone ◽  
Adriana Brancaccio ◽  
Raffaele Solimene

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 305-312
Author(s):  
Ryan Cardman ◽  
Luís F. Gonçalves ◽  
Rachel E. Sapiro ◽  
Georg Raithel ◽  
David A. Anderson

AbstractWe present electric field measurements and imaging of a Yagi–Uda antenna near-field using a Rydberg atom–based radio frequency electric field measurement instrument. The instrument uses electromagnetically induced transparency with Rydberg states of cesium atoms in a room-temperature vapor and off-resonant RF-field–induced Rydberg-level shifts for optical SI-traceable measurements of RF electric fields over a wide amplitude and frequency range. The electric field along the antenna boresight is measured using the atomic probe at a spatial resolution of ${\lambda }_{RF}/2$ with electric field measurement uncertainties below 5.5%, an improvement to RF measurement uncertainties provided by existing antenna standards.


Author(s):  
Jung-Ick Moon ◽  
J.M. Kim ◽  
J.H. Yun ◽  
S.I. Jeon ◽  
C.J. Kim

1984 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D'Elia ◽  
G. Leone ◽  
R. Pierri ◽  
G. Schirinzi

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