A physics-informed wave tomography framework for defect reconstruction: A collaborative network scheme

Liu, Hairui, Li, Qi, Qian, Zhi, Li, Peng, Qian, Zhenghua and Liu, D. Z. (2025) A physics-informed wave tomography framework for defect reconstruction: A collaborative network scheme. Journal of Nondestructive Evaluation. ISSN 1573-4862 (In Press)

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Abstract

It is challenging for guided wave tomography methods to intelligently solve problems in the area of structural defect detection, as this requires more data to achieve the high-accuracy reconstruction of defects. To meet this end, a physics-informed wave tomography framework (PIWT) with a collaborative network scheme is proposed in this paper to reconstruct defects in metal plates with high levels of accuracy and efficiency. First, taking the spatial coordinate information of the point source and sampling points as the input s of the deep learning collaborative network, a physical principle-based prediction framework is established by minimizing the loss functions to realize the mapping of inputs to outputs, which are represented as the travel time and wave velocity in two collaborative networks for defect reconstruction. To effectively guide the convergence direction of the collaborative network for efficient computations, the waveguide governing equations and boundary conditions are leveraged as the constraints on PIWT to realize the defect reconstruction. As the developed approach belongs to the class of mesh-free methods, its superiority over the conventional mesh-based ultrasonic Lamb wave tomography imaging (ULWTI) technique is demonstrated for defect reconstruction throughout the numerical and experimental examples in terms of accuracy. Moreover, the effects of pre-training on the accelerated convergence and accuracy of the PIWT framework are discussed to allow the training with few epochs and also help effectively achieve real- time high-precision defect reconstruction in the fields of non -destructive testing and structural health monitoring, thus offering a promising solution for broader engineering applications.

Item Type: Article
Faculty \ School: Faculty of Science > School of Engineering, Mathematics and Physics
UEA Research Groups: Faculty of Science > Research Groups > Sustainable Energy
Faculty of Science > Research Groups > Materials, Manufacturing & Process Modelling
Depositing User: LivePure Connector
Date Deposited: 30 May 2025 14:30
Last Modified: 30 May 2025 14:30
URI: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/99368
DOI: issn:1573-4862

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