Computed tomography system with strict real-time synchronization for in-situ 3D analysis of periodically vibrating objects

Authors

  • Václav Rada Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Tomáš Fíla Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Petr Zlámal Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Petr Koudelka Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Jan Šleichrt Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Michael Macháček Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Daniel Vavřík Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic
  • Daniel Kytýř Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Prosecká 809/76, 190 00 Prague 9, Czech Republic

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14311/APP.2023.42.0072

Keywords:

harmonic motion, real-time synchronization, computed tomography, hardware trigger, subtraction tomography

Abstract

In the contribution, we present a laboratory system capable of X-ray computed tomography (XCT) scanning of an periodically moving or oscillating object. The system is an in-house developed XCT setup with electromagnetic voice coil actuator mounted on top of the rotary stage of the setup. The strict synchronization of the components, the rotary stage, the electromagnetic actuator movement and the detector readout is accomplished with use of the detector hardware trigger and hard real-time Linux operating system. Cylindrical sample manufactured from epoxy resin with metal particles to enable movement tracking is scanned in a stationary position and during periodical movement induced by the vibration stage. The volumetric data of the scans is compared and the results of this contribution represent an important step towards identification of defects through modal analysis of in-situ harmonically vibrating object.

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Published

2023-10-12

How to Cite

Rada, V., Fíla, T., Zlámal, P., Koudelka, P., Šleichrt, J., Macháček, M., Vavřík, D., & Kytýř, D. (2023). Computed tomography system with strict real-time synchronization for in-situ 3D analysis of periodically vibrating objects. Acta Polytechnica CTU Proceedings, 42, 72–76. https://doi.org/10.14311/APP.2023.42.0072