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TWI CSWIP 3.

1 WIS 5 WELDING INSPECTION NDT


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Surface Testing Dye Penetrant Inspection Magnetic Particle Inspection Eddy Current Inspection
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Volumetric Inspection

Ultrasonic Inspection Radiographic Inspection


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Dye Penetrant Inspection

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Liquid Penetrant Inspection


A.K.A. Dye Penetrant Inspection (DPI) Penetrant Flaw Detection (PFD)

Penetrant Testing (PT)

Surface inspection method Applicable to all non-porous, non-absorbing materials


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Penetrant Inspection
Penetrating

fluid applied to surface of component

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Penetrant Inspection
Penetrating fluid enters defect by means of capillary action

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Penetrant Inspection
Excess penetrant removed from surface

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Penetrant Inspection
Developer applied to surface

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Penetrant Inspection
Development time for indications to appear on surface

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Penetrant Inspection
System classification
Type of penetrant Method of penetrant removal Type of developer

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Advantages of Penetrant Inspection


Applicable to non-ferromagnetic materials Able to test large parts with portable kit Suitable for batch testing May not require electricity or water Applicable to small parts with complex geometry Simple, cheap and easy to interpret Sensitivity

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Disadvantages of Penetrant Inspection


Will only detect defects open to the surface Requires careful surface preparation Not applicable to porous surfaces

Temperature dependant
Cannot retest indefinitely Compatibility of chemicals

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Penetrant Inspection

System Classification - Penetrant


Colour contrast Fluorescent Dual

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Penetrant Inspection
System Classification - Removal
Solvent Water washable Post emulsifiable

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System Classification - Development


Dry powder Aqueous Non aqueous (solvent based)

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Fluorescent v Colour Contrast


Fluorescent more sensitive
Less operator fatigue with fluorescent More difficulty in monitoring excess penetrant removal Requires UV-A lamps, with subdued background lighting for fluorescent

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Magnetic Particle Inspection

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Magnetism
Materials will strongly attract pieces of iron to themselves Phenomenon discovered in the ancient Greek city of Magnesia Magnets utilised in navigation Oersted discovered the link between electricity and magnetism Faraday revealed that electrical and magnetic energy could be interchanged
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Magnetic Particle Inspection


Test method for the detection of surface and sub-surface indications in ferromagnetic materials Magnetic field induced in component Defects disrupt the magnetic flux Defects revealed by applying ferromagnetic particles
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Principle of MPI : Flux Leakage


No Defect

Defect

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Permeability of Material
Paramagnetic: Weakly attracted by magnets Examples: Aluminium,Tungsten Diamagnetic: Slightly repelled by magnets Examples Gold,Copper and Water

Ferromagnetic: Strongly attracted Examples Iron,Cobalt and Nickel


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Magnets

Lines of force / Lines of flux


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Electromagnetism
A current flows through a conductor and sets up a magnetic field around it Field is at 90o to the direction of the electrical current Direction of current flow

Direction of magnetic field


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Depth below surface

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Defect Orientation

Defect at 90 degrees to flux : maximum indication


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Defect Orientation

>45 Degrees to Flux:


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Acceptable indication

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Defect Orientation

<45 Degrees to Flux


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Unacceptable indication

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Defect Orientation
Test 1 Test 2

Defects
FIELD Defects Defects

MPI requires 2 tests at 90o to one another


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Equipment
Permanent Magnet
Electromagnets

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Permanent Magnet
Longitudinal field between poles Defects detected at 90 degrees to poles

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Permanent Magnet
Advantages No power supply No electrical contact problems Inexpensive No damage to test piece Lightweight Disadvantages Direct field only Deteriorate over time No control over field strength Poles attract detecting media Tiring to use

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Electromagnetism
A current flows through a conductor and sets up a magnetic field around it Field is at 90o to the direction of the electrical current Direction of current flow

Direction of magnetic field


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Coil Magnetisation

Changes circular field into longitudinal


Increases the strength of the field
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Electromagnets
Soft iron laminates within a coil. Defects detected at 90 degrees to poles

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Electromagnets
Advantages AC,DC or rectified Controllable field strength No harm to test piece Can be used to demagnetise Easily removed Disadvantages Power supply required Longitudinal field only Carry mains supply Poles attract particles Legs must have area contact

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Demagnetisation
Removal of residual magnetisation

Required if Rotating parts Components to be welded,machined or electroplated Aircraft parts


Check for removal with Field strength meter (magnetometer)
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Control and Maintenance Checks


Ink settlement Equipment performance check Viewing efficiency

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Eddy Current Inspection

Coil Eddy currents

Coils magnetic field

Conductive material

Eddy currents magnetic fields

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Eddy Current Inspection


An alternating current is passed through a coil A.C. generates an alternating field Alternating field generates eddy currents in conductors

Eddy currents generate opposing field which modifies current in coil


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Eddy Current Inspection


Electrical currents induced in metals by alternating magnetic fields The size of the current is affected by:Electrical conductivity Stand off distance Flaws

Permeability
Specimen dimensions
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Eddy Current Inspection


Advantages
Sensitive to surface defects Can detect through several layers Can detect through surface coatings Accurate conductivity measurements

Can be automated
Little pre-cleaning required Portability
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Eddy Current Inspection


Disadvantages
Very susceptible to permeability changes Only works on conductive materials

Will not detect defects parallel to the surface


Not suitable for large areas and /or complex geometry Signal interpretation required No permanent record (unless automated)

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Ultrasonic Inspection

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Ultrasonic Inspection

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Acoustic Spectrum
Human 16Hz - 20kHz Ultrasonic Range + 20kHz

Testing
0.5MHz - 50MHz
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Principle waveforms in ultrasonic


There are three Principle waveforms used in ultrasonic inspections
Compression Shear Surface

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Compression waves
Vibration and propagation in the same direction Travel in solids, liquids and gases

Propagation Particle vibration


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Shear waves
Vibration at right angles to direction of propagation Travel in solids only Velocity 1/2 compression (same material) Particle vibration

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Propagation

Surface Waves
Elliptical vibration Velocity 8% less than shear Penetrate one wavelength deep

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Sound travelling through a material


Velocity varies according to the material
Compression waves Steel Shear waves 3245m/sec NA NA 2330m/sec

5960m/sec Steel

Water
Air

1490m/sec Water
344m/sec Air

Copper

4700m/sec Copper

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Probe Design

Probe housing Damping Wear shoe

Electrical connections

Transducer

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Probe Design
Shear Wave

Damping

Transducer

Shear wave
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Perspex wedge
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Ultrasonic Test Methods


Pulse Echo Through Transmission Transmission with Reflection

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Pulse Echo Testing


Single probe sends and receives sound
Gives an indication of defect depth and dimensions

Not fail safe

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Pulse Echo Testing


Sound travels through the steel block at 5.9Km/sec. The returning sound vibrates the crystal, which produces an electrical pulse which is amplified and is shown on the cathode ray tube.

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Pulse Echo Testing


If a large defect is present all the sound will be returned to the probe. The signal on the CRT can show the depth of the defect.

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Pulse Echo Testing


If a smaller defect is present some of the sound will be returned to the probe, some will continue to the back wall.

Note the reduction in size of the defect signal

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Pulse Echo Testing


Defects parallel to the surface will reflect sound back to the probe Defects at an angle to the surface will reflect the sound at an angle

The signal will not appear on the CRT


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Pulse Echo Testing


Angle probes used to reflect sound off inclined defects

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Pulse Echo Testing


Angle probes used to test welds

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Through Transmission Testing

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Through Transmission Testing

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Immersion Testing
Water path distance
Front surface Back surface

Water path distance


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Transmission with Reflection


T R

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Transmission with Reflection


T R

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Time of Flight Diffraction

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Time of Flight Diffraction

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Time of Flight Diffraction (TOFD)

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Time of Flight Diffraction (TOFD)


D-scan is made up of dozens of A-scans set side by side
Top of defect

The echo amplitude is displayed as grey for zero, black for maximum negative and white for maximum positive signals
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Time of Flight Diffraction (TOFD)


Advantages
Does not depend on defect orientation Defect height can be exactly determined Inspection results are immediately available Permanent print is available Higher test speed means costs are less

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Time of Flight Diffraction (TOFD)


Disadvantages
The weld must be reasonably accessible from both sides
There is a dead zone for defect detection close to the surfaces Is more a sizing tool than a detecting tool

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Radiographic Inspection

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Radiographic Inspection
X or Gamma radiation is imposed upon a test object Radiation is transmitted to varying degrees dependant upon the density of the material through which it is travelling Variations in transmission detected by photographic film or fluorescent screens Applicable to metals,non-metals and composites
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Radiographic Inspection

Lower density

Higher density

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Radiographic Inspection
Radiograph of weld showing:-

Crack Slag Lack of fusion Porosity Undercut

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Radiographic Inspection

Advantages
Permanent record Internal flaws Can be used on most materials Direct image of flaws Real - time imaging

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Radiographic Inspection
Disadvantages
Health hazard Sensitive to defect orientation Limited ability to detect fine cracks Access to both sides required Limited by material thickness Skilled interpretation required Relatively slow High capital outlay and running costs
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What is radiation?
Waves of energy associated with electrical and magnetic fields Electrical and magnetic fields at right angles to each other and to the direction of propagation

Electromagnetic Radiation
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
Industrial radiography
Ultra violet Infra red

Microwaves TV

Electric Waves

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X-Ray Production

-ve

+ve

X-ray tube is evacuated to create a vacuum


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Disadvantages of Gamma over X rays


Poorer quality radiographs Exposure times can be longer Sources need replacing

Radiation cannot be switched off


Poorer geometric unsharpness Remote handling necessary
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Radiographic Techniques
Single Wall Single Image(SWSI) Double Wall Single Image(DWSI) Double Wall Double Image(DWDI)

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Advantages of Gamma over X rays


No electrical or water supplies needed Equipment smaller and lighter-More portable Equipment simpler and more robust More easily accessed Less scatter

Equipment initially less costly


Greater penetrating power

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Radiographic Technique
Single wall, single image (SWSI)

Panoramic

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Radiographic Technique
Double wall, single image (DWSI) Double wall, double image (DWDI)

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Radiographic Technique
DWSI DWDI

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Radiographic Technique
Unique identification Interval markers Image Quality Indicators (IQIs) TWI weld 101

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Thank you for staying awake

Any questions??

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