Roßteutscher, Immanuel; Blaschke, Oliver; Dötzer, Florian; Uphues, Thorsten; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2024)
Roßteutscher, Immanuel; Blaschke, Oliver; Dötzer, Florian; Uphues, Thorsten...
Sensors 2024/24, 7114 (22).
DOI: 10.3390/s24227114
This study is focused on optimizing electromagnetic acoustic transducer (EMAT) sensors for enhanced ultrasonic guided wave signal generation in steel cables using CAD and modern manufacturing to enable contactless ultrasonic signal transmission and reception. A lab test rig with advanced measurement and data processing was set up to test the sensors’ ability to detect cable damage, like wire breaks and abrasion, while also examining the effect of potential disruptors such as rope soiling. Machine learning algorithms were applied to improve the damage detection accuracy, leading to significant advancements in magnetostrictive measurement methods and providing a new standard for future development in this area. The use of the Vision Transformer Masked Autoencoder Architecture (ViTMAE) and generative pre-training has shown that reliable damage detection is possible despite the considerable signal fluctuations caused by rope movement.
Brand, Felix; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2024)
Sensors 24 (5), S. 1630.
DOI: 10.3390/s24051630
Optoacoustics is a metrology widely used for material characterisation. In this study, a measurement setup for the selective determination of the frequency-resolved phase velocities and attenuations of longitudinal waves over a wide frequency range (3-55 MHz) is presented. The ultrasonic waves in this setup were excited by a pulsed laser within an absorption layer in the thermoelastic regime and directed through a layer of water onto a sample. The acoustic waves were detected using a self-built adaptive interferometer with a photorefractive crystal. The instrument transmits compression waves only, is low-contact, non-destructive, and has a sample-independent excitation. The limitations of the approach were studied both by simulation and experiments to determine how the frequency range and precision can be improved. It was shown that measurements are possible for all investigated materials (silicon, silicone, aluminium, and water) and that the relative error for the phase velocity is less than 0.2%.
Lutter, Klaus; Backer, Alexander; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Sensors 2023 (23), S. 9892.
DOI: 10.3390/s23249892
Panzardi, Enza; Drese, Klaus Stefan; Mugnaini, Marco; Parri, Lorenzo ; Vignoli, Valerio; Fort, Ada (2023)
Panzardi, Enza; Drese, Klaus Stefan; Mugnaini, Marco; Parri, Lorenzo ; Vignoli, Valerio...
IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 2023.
DOI: 10.1109/TIM.2023.3328691
Dötzer, Florian; Hommel, Markus; Drese, Klaus Stefan; Sinzinger, Stefan (2023)
EPJ Web of Conferences 2023, 09017 (287).
DOI: 10.1051/epjconf/202328709017
Frenzel, Daniel; Blaschke, Oliver; Franzen, Christoph; Brand, Felix; Haas, Franziska; Troi, Alexandra; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Frenzel, Daniel; Blaschke, Oliver; Franzen, Christoph; Brand, Felix; Haas, Franziska...
Vortrag: Salt Weathering of Buildings and Stone Sculptures Asia 2023, S. 195-206.
Frenzel, Daniel; Blaschke, Oliver; Franzen, Christoph; Brand, Felix; Haas, Franziska; Troi, Alexandra; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Frenzel, Daniel; Blaschke, Oliver; Franzen, Christoph; Brand, Felix; Haas, Franziska...
Heritage 6 (7), S. 5030-5050.
DOI: 10.3390/heritage6070266
Humidity, salt content, and migration in building materials lead to weathering and are a common challenge. To understand damage phenomena and select the right conservation treatments, knowledge on both the amount and distribution of moisture and salt load in the masonry is crucial. It was shown that commercial portable devices addressing moisture are often limited by the mutual interference of these values. This can be improved by exploiting broadband radar reflectometry for the quantification of humidity in historic masonry. Due to the above-mentioned limitations, today’s gold standard for evaluating the moisture content in historic buildings is still conducted by taking drilling samples with a subsequent evaluation in a specially designed laboratory, the so-called Darr method. In this paper, a new broadband frequency approach in the range between 0.4 and 6 GHz with improved artificial-intelligence data analysis makes sure to optimize the reflected signal, simplify the evaluation of the generated data, and minimise the effects of variables such as salt contamination that influence the permittivity. In this way, the amount of water could be determined independently from the salt content in the material and an estimate of the salt load. With new machine learning algorithms, the analysis of the permittivity is improved and can be made accessible for everyday use on building sites with minimal intervention by the user. These algorithms were trained with generated data from different drying studies on single building bricks from the masonries. The findings from the laboratory studies were then validated and evaluated on real historic buildings at real construction sites. Thus, the paper shows a spatially resolved and salt-independent measurement system for determining building moisture.
Lützelberger, Jan; Arneth, Philipp; Franck, Alexander; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Sensors 23 (13), S. 5942.
DOI: 10.3390/s23135942
The loosening of an artificial joint is a frequent and critical complication in orthopedics and trauma surgery. Due to a lack of accuracy, conventional diagnostic methods such as projection radiography cannot reliably diagnose loosening in its early stages or detect whether it is associated with the formation of a biofilm at the bone–implant interface. In this work, we present a non-invasive ultrasound-based interferometric measurement procedure for quantifying the thickness of the layer between bone and prosthesis as a correlate to loosening. In principle, it also allows for the material characterization of the interface. A well-known analytical model for the superposition of sound waves reflected in a three-layer system was combined with a new method in data processing to be suitable for medical application at the bone–implant interface. By non-linear fitting of the theoretical prediction of the model to the actual shape of the reflected sound waves in the frequency domain, the thickness of the interlayer can be determined and predictions about its physical properties are possible. With respect to determining the layer’s thickness, the presented approach was successfully applied to idealized test systems and a bone–implant system in the range of approx. 200 µm to 2 mm. After further optimization and adaptation, as well as further experimental tests, the procedure offers great potential to significantly improve the diagnosis of prosthesis loosening at an early stage and may also be applicable to detecting the formation of a biofilm.
Blaschke, Oliver; Brand, Felix; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Sensors 23 (10), S. 4616.
DOI: 10.3390/s23104616
For the investigation of moisture and salt content in historic masonry, destructive drilling samples followed by a gravimetric investigation is still the preferred method. In order to prevent the destructive intrusion into the building substance and to enable a large-area measurement, a nondestructive and easy-to-use measuring principle is needed. Previous systems for moisture measurement usually fail due to a strong dependence on contained salts. In this work, a ground penetrating radar (GPR) system was used to determine the frequency-dependent complex permittivity in the range between 1 and 3 GHz on salt-loaded samples of historical building materials. By choosing this frequency range, it was possible to determine the moisture in the samples independently of the salt content. In addition, it was possible to make a quantitative statement about the salt level. The applied method demonstrates that with ground penetrating radar measurements in the frequency range selected here, a salt-independent moisture determination can be carried out.
Backer, Alexander; Fairuschin, Viktor; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Sensors 23 (9), S. 4282.
DOI: 10.3390/s23094282
Guided acoustic waves (GAW) have proven to be a useful tool for structural health monitoring (SHM). However, the dispersive nature of commonly used Lamb waves compromises the spatial resolution making it difficult to detect small or weakly reflective defects. Here we demonstrate an approach that can compensate for the dispersive effects, allowing advanced algorithms to be used with significantly higher signal-to-noise ratio and spatial resolution. In this paper, the sign coherence factor (SCF) extension of the total focusing method (TFM) algorithm is used. The effectiveness is examined by numerical simulation and experimentally demonstrated by detecting weakly reflective layers with a highly dispersive A0 mode on an aluminum plate, which are not detectable without compensating for the dispersion effects.
Fort, Ada; Mugnaini, Marco; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Dötzer, Florian; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2023)
Fort, Ada; Mugnaini, Marco; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Dötzer, Florian...
IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 2023 (72), S. 1-10.
DOI: 10.1109/TIM.2023.3244222
Landskron, Johannes; Dötzer, Florian; Benkert, Andreas ; Mayl, Michael ; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2022)
Landskron, Johannes; Dötzer, Florian; Benkert, Andreas ; Mayl, Michael ...
Sensors 2022 (2), S. 6648.
DOI: 10.3390/s22176648
Fairuschin, Viktor; Brand, Felix; Backer, Alexander; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
Sensors 2021 (19).
DOI: 10.3390/s21196675
Fort, Ada; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Landi, Elia; Mugnaini, Marco; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
Fort, Ada; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Landi, Elia; Mugnaini, Marco...
2021 IEEE International Workshop on Metrology for Industry 4.0 & IoT 2021, S. 583-587.
DOI: 10.1109/MetroInd4.0IoT51437.2021.9488532
Backer, Alexander; Landskron, Johannes; Drese, Klaus Stefan; Lindner, Gerhard (2021)
Journal of Bionic Engineering 2021 (18), S. 534–547.
DOI: 10.1007/s42235-021-0051-x
Fort, Ada; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Landi, Elia; Mugnaini, Marco; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
Fort, Ada; Panzardi, Enza; Vignoli, Valerio; Landi, Elia; Mugnaini, Marco...
2021 IEEE International Workshop on Metrology for Industry 4.0 & IoT (MetroInd4. 0&IoT) 2021, S. 583-587.
DOI: 10.1109/MetroInd4.0IoT51437.2021.9488532
Krempel, Sandro; Backer, Alexander; Dötzer, Florian; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
SMSI 2021-Sensors and Instrumentation.
DOI: 10.5162/SMSI2021/A9.1
Krempel, Sandro; Seidel, N.; Tietze, Sabrina; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
ACTUATOR; International Conference and Exhibition on New Actuator Systems and Applications 2021.
Backer, Alexander; Krempel, Sandro; Ritter, Frank; Tietze, Sabrina; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2021)
Backer, Alexander; Krempel, Sandro; Ritter, Frank; Tietze, Sabrina...
ACTUATOR, International Conference and Exhibition on New Actuator Systems and Applications 2021, Online 2021, S. 66 - 69.
Nowadays in almost all cases, the propulsion of ships is generated by mechanically moved propellers, which causes water flow and thrust. The disadvantage of this technology is the wear of the mechanical moving parts as well as the danger of the rotating parts in the water for example for living beings. The only alternative is still the sail or wind power.
In our approach the propulsion of a boat is generated without moving parts by means of ultrasonic waves emitted into
the water. In contrast to already existing experiments in which surface acoustic waves are conducted directly into the
water on piezoelectric substrates in order to generate a thrust, here the sound input takes place by piezoelectric transducers attached to the backside of non-piezoelectric material at the outer hull of the boat. A 3D printed model boat was
built and tested. In contrast to the previously published literature, the used electronic components and their operation for
the propulsion of the boat are described in detail. Sound generation and propagation are simulated in COMSOL
Landskron, Johannes; Tietze, Sabrina; Wolf, Conrad R.; Drese, Klaus Stefan (2020)
Vortrag auf der Acoustofluidics 2020.
Fakultät Angewandte Naturwissenschaften und Gesundheit (FNG)
Friedrich-Streib-Str. 2
96450 Coburg
T 09561317522 klaus.drese[at]hs-coburg.de
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8829-1161