This website uses some of the more advanced technologies available on the web today. We have detected that your browser will not be able to cope with these processes and needs to be upgraded to take advantage of the full benefits of this website. Please upgrade your browser to at least Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 2 or Safari 2.

Professor Jasson Gryzagoridis

Speaker Affiliation: 
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Cape Town

Jasson Gryzagoridis, Ph.D. Mech.Eng. University of Cape Town, 1972, is Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of Cape Town and Part time postgraduate students’ mentor and research consultant at Cape Peninsula University of Technology. Immediate past positions include Headship of the Dept. of Mechanical Engineering at UCT, Chairperson of the Engineering Health and Safety Committee, Member of CERECAM – the Centre for Research in Computational and Applied Mechanics, a three year term as IAEA/AFRA NDT National Project Co-ordinator, Acting Director of UCT’s Energy Research Institute, Past member of ECSA’s University Accreditation Teams, Member of the Int. Steering Committee of Condition Monitoring and Diagnostic Engineering Management – COMADEM, and Member of the Advisory Board of the Journal of Engineering, Design and Technology.


He is a member of S.A. Institution of Mechanical Engineering (SAIMechE), S.A. Institution of Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, S.A. Institution of Non-Destructive Testing, S.A. Association of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, New York Academy of Sciences.


Awards and Membership:
Honorary Citizen of Texas, USA
Research Fellow of Iowa State University, Engineering Research Institute
Associate member of the Graduate School of Iowa State University
Certificate of valuable contribution to the 12th world conference on NDT – Amsterdam 1989
The SAIMechE Campbell-Pitt Award 1997
 

Abstract

 

Laser Based Nondestructive Inspection Techniques


The most familiar laser based optical non-destructive methods are based on the interference of the wave fronts of monochromatic light reflected from a test surface. We explore the origins, applications, advantages and limitations of these techniques with a journey through the realm of Holographic Interferometry, Electronic Speckle Pattern Interferometry and Shearography. These methods are applied to the widest range of materials from metals to composites attempting to determine the conditions of the material that contribute to failure, in for example critical parts of a structure. These techniques are inherently of fairly high sensitivity, are non-contacting, they are able to inspect a whole field in a single procedure and results are obtained at almost real time. The inspection procedure on a test piece is identical for all three techniques. An image of the object’s surface is recorded and stored in a suitable medium; subsequently the object is perturbed mildly by mechanical or thermal means which results in its surface being deformed. At this stage a second image is captured and is made to interfere with the first image resulting in an image of the surface with zebra like stripes superimposed on it. This is known as a fringe pattern and abrupt changes in direction or spacing of these fringes may indicate a subsurface condition that affects the surface deformation. Thus porosity, voids, de-bonds, cracks, de-laminations etc. are detected. These techniques have also limitations particularly with the stability of the test piece and the inspecting instrument in relation to each other. Particular attention is paid in avoiding excessive test piece motion or environmental vibration both which will exceed the stringent requirements for fringe formation. It is well established that these laser based NDT techniques have found innumerable applications in the laboratory/field/factory environment and particularly Shearography but surprisingly it does not yet have a standard, like for example an ISO International Standard, hence we are calling for the involvement in this respect by the technical committee TC 135 of the ISO.

 

Keywords: Holographic Interferometry, Electronic Speckle Pattern Interferometry, Shearography, fringe pattern, composites, porosity, voids, de-bonds, cracks, de-laminations, ISO Standard.
 

Back to Exhibition Products

Final Conference Programme Uploaded
Final Provisional Conference Programme has been uploaded
Nobel Prizewinner Speaks
Noted Nobel Laureate due to speak
Abstract Submissions has now closed
Abstract submission is now closed

Conference News

Final Provisional Conference Programme uploaded More
Why should the SA Engineering fraternity attend the World Conference? More
WCNDT Conference draws Nobel Prizewinner More

Delegate Registration

Please submit your details below to receive information on delegate registration

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Back to Exhibition Products