January 25, 2013
Conference Paper

New International Program to Asses the Reliability of Emerging Nondestructive Techniques (PARENT)

Abstract

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) established the Program to Assess the Reliability of Emerging Nondestructive Techniques (PARENT) to follow on from the successful Program for the Inspection of Nickel alloy Components (PINC). The goal of the PARENT is to conduct a confirmatory assessment of the reliability of nondestructive evaluation (NDE) techniques for detecting and sizing primary water stress corrosion cracks (PWSCC) and applying the lessons learned from PINC to a series of round-robin tests. These open and blind round-robin tests will comprise a new set of typical pressure boundary components including dissimilar metal welds (DMWs) and bottom-mounted instrumentation penetrations. Open round-robin tests will engage research and industry teams worldwide to investigate and demonstrate the reliability of emerging NDE techniques to detect and size flaws with a wide range of lengths, depths, orientations, and locations. Blind round-robin tests will utilize various testing organizations, whose inspectors and procedures are certified by the standards for the nuclear industry in their respective countries, to investigate the ability of established NDE techniques to detect and size flaws whose characteristics range from relatively easy to very difficult for detection and sizing. Blind and open round-robin testing started in late 2011 and early 2012, respectively. This paper will present the work scope with reports on progress, NDE methods evaluated, and project timeline for PARENT.

Revised: December 13, 2013 | Published: January 25, 2013

Citation

Prokofiev I., S.E. Cumblidge, A.A. Csontos, B.G. Braatz, and S.R. Doctor. 2013. New International Program to Asses the Reliability of Emerging Nondestructive Techniques (PARENT). In Review of Progress in Quantitative Nondestructive Evaluation, July 15-20, 2012, Denver, Colorado. AIP Conference Proceedings 1511, edited by DO Thompson and DE Chimenti, 32, 1097-1103. Melville, New York:American Institute of Physics. PNNL-SA-90537. doi:10.1063/1.4789165