An instrument that is sensitive to the interference
of two or more acoustic waves. It provides information on acoustic wavelengths
that is useful in determining the velocity and absorption of sound in
samples of gases, liquids, and materials, and it yields information on
the nonlinear properties of solids.
In its simplest form, an acoustic interferometer for use in liquids
has a fixed piezoelectric crystal (acting as a transmitter) tuned to
the frequency of interest and a parallel reflector at a variable distance
from it. Driven by an oscillating electrical volt age, the piezoelectric
crystal generates a sound wave, which in turn is reflected by the reflector.
The acoustic pressure amplitude on the front face of the crystal depends
on the velocity amplitude at the face and the distance to the reflecting
surface. The amplitude ratio (radiation impedance) of the acoustic pressure
to the velocity and the relative phase shift between the two oscillating
quantities depend solely on the distance to the reflecting surface. If
the reflector acts as a rigid surface, this amplitude ratio is ideally
zero whenever the net round-trip distance between the crystal and the
reflector is an odd number of half-wavelengths because the reflected
wave is then exactly out of phase with the incident wave at the crystal’s
location. The crystal then draws the maximum current since the oscillations
are unimpeded.
During operation, the current drawn by the crystal is monitored as
the reflector is gradually moved away from the crystal. Whenever the
reflector position is such that the crystal is at a pressure anti-node
(place of maximum pressure in a standing wave), there is a strong dip
in the current drawn due to the relatively high radiation impedance presented
by the standing wave to the crystal face. Consecutive antinodes are a
half-wavelength apart. For a given frequency f, a measured distance L between
the location of anyone anti-node and that of its nth successor yields
the wavelength 2L/n and the speed of sound c = 2Lf/n.
An acoustic interferometer based on this principle can achieve a precision
of 0.01%. Since the current drawn by the crystal is relatively in sensitive
to the frequency for a given radiation impedance, the sound speed can
also be determined by keeping the distance between the crystal and the
reflector fixed and gradually sweeping the frequency.
The pressure nodes and antinodes correspond to the local maxima and
minima, respectively, in the current drawn. The peak of the current amplitude
decreases with the distance traversed by the reflector. If the separation
distance is sufficiently large that the exponential decrease associated
with absorption dominates any spreading losses, the absorption coefficient
for the medium can be derived by measurement of the ratios of current
amplitudes at two successive points where the current drawn is a local
maximum.
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