Rapid Acquisition of 3D Data at the Mesoscale: TriBeam Tomography and Property Modeling
Dr. Tresa M. Pollock
Alcoa Professor of Materials and Department Chair University of California Santa Barbara, USA
Mackiw Lecture in Metallurgy
3:30pm - September 18, 2014
ETLC 1-001
Host: Dr. Hani Henein
Abstract:
The development of high fidelity material property and life prediction models often requires three-dimensional information on the distribution of phases, grains or extrinsic defects. Acquisition of this information in appropriate representative volume elements ultimately limits the use of conventional tomography techniques. The use of femtosecond lasers for layer-by-layer ablation provides new tomography capabilities in terms of the volume of material that can be sampled in relatively short time periods. The high pulse frequency (1 kHz) of ultra-short (150 fs) laser pulses can induce material ablation with virtually no thermal damage to the surrounding area. Laser-based tomography has been demonstrated ex-situ with optical imaging and more recently in-situ with a "TriBeam" approach that combines the femtosecond laser within a focused ion beam platform to permit high resolution imaging, as well as crystallographic and elemental analysis. Datasets on a spectrum of metallic, polymer and ceramic systems will be presented.