Harold E. Kautz
Glenn Research Center
25 Papers
124 Citations
Harold E. Kautz is an academic researcher from Glenn Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ultrasonic sensor & Metal matrix composite. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 25 publications.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Preliminary investigation of acousto-ultrasonic evaluation of metal-matrix composite specimens
Harold E. Kautz,Brad A. Lerch +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a series of (0,8, (90)8, (+/-30)2s, (+/60)2S, (0/90)2 s, and (90/0)2 ) tensile specimens composed of eight laminated layers of continuous, SiC-fiber-reinforced Ti-15-3 matrix were used for measuring the magnitude of the AU signal.
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Damage Assessment of Creep Tested and Thermally Aged Udimet 520 Using Acousto-Ultrasonics
Andrew L. Gyekenyesi,Harold E. Kautz,Wei Cao +2 more
- 04 Jun 2001
TL;DR: In this article, the authors employed the Acousto-Ultrasonics (AU) method in an effort to monitor the state of the material at various percentages of used up creep life in the nickel base alloy, Udimet 520.
Ray propagation path analysis of acousto-ultrasonic signals in composites
Harold E. Kautz
- 01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the stress-wave factor (SWF) calculated from acousto-ultrasonic (AU) signals is sensitive to mechanical properties in composite structures.
Detecting lamb waves with broadband acousto-ultrasonic signals in composite structures
TL;DR: In this article, a basis has been established for analyzing Lamb wave velocities for characterizing composite plates using the acousto-ultrasonic configuration employing broadband transducers, and Lamb wave dispersion curves of lowest symmetric and lowest antisymmetric modes behave in a manner analogous to the graphite/polymer theoretical curves.
•Journal Article
Three dimensional surface depression profiling using focused air coupled ultrasonic pulses
Don J. Roth,Harold E. Kautz,Phillip B. Abel,Mike F. Whalen,J. Lynne Hendricks,James R. Bodis +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a 1 MHz focused air coupled ultrasonic pulses were used to obtain surface topography profiles using a system developed by NASA Glenn Research Center and Sonix, Inc., via a formal cooperative agreement.
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