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Photoacoustics of Small Gas Clouds
The photoacoustic effect - production of sound from light - may be
exploited for detection and localization of gas leaks on the surface
of otherwise sealed components. The technique involves filling the
test component with a photoactive tracer gas, and irradiating the
component to produce photoacoustic sound from any leak site where a
tracer gas cloud forms. This presentation describes experiments
utilizing 10.6-micron radiation from a carbon-dioxide laser with
sulfur hexafluoride as a tracer gas. Here, photoacoustic sounds from a
laminar plume of sulfur hexafluoride and several NIST-traceable
calibrated leak sources with leak rates between 1 cubic centimeter in
4.6 hrs and 1cubic centimeter in 6.3 years were recorded with four or
twelve microphones in a bandwidth from 3 kHz to ~100 kHz. The measured
photoacoustic waveforms compare well with those from an approximate
theoretical development based on the forced wave equation when the
unmeasured size of the photoactive gas cloud is adjusted within the
likely gas-cloud diffusion zone. However, for small gas clouds, the
photoacoustic sound amplitudes predicted by the approximate theory
fall far below the experimental observations and several potential
reasons for this mismatch will be offered. Interestingly, the higher
measured signal amplitudes imply that the sensitivity of photoacoustic
leak testing may reach or even exceed the capabilities of the most
sensitive commercial leak test systems based on helium
mass-spectrometers
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