August 5, 2004
Conference Paper

Through Weld Inspection of Wrought Stainless Steel Piping Using Phased-Array Ultrasonic Probes.

Abstract

A study was conducted to assess the ability of phased-array ultrasonic techniques to detect and accurately determine the size of flaws from the far-side of wrought austenitic piping welds. Far-side inspections of these welds are currently performed on a “best effort” basis and do not conform to ASME Code Section XI Appendix VIII performance demonstration requirements. For this study, four circumferential welds in 610mm diameter, 36mm thick ASTM A-358, Grade 304 vintage austenitic stainless steel pipe were examined. The welds were fabricated with varied welding parameters; both horizontal and vertical pipe orientations were used, with air and water backing, to simulate field welding conditions. A series of saw cuts, electro-discharge machined (EDM) notches, and implanted fatigue cracks were placed into the heat affected zones of the welds. The saw cuts and notches range in depth from 7.5% to 28.4% through-wall. The implanted cracks ranged in depth from 5% through wall to 64% through wall. The welds were examined with two phased-array probes, a 2.0 MHz transmit-receive longitudinal wave array and a 2.0 MHz transmit-receive shear wave array. These examinations showed that both phased-array transducers were able to detect and accurately length-size, but not depth size, all of the notches and flaws through the welds. The phased-array results were not strongly affected by the different welding techniques used in each weld.

Revised: June 15, 2011 | Published: August 5, 2004

Citation

Anderson M.T., S.E. Cumblidge, and S.R. Doctor. 2004. Through Weld Inspection of Wrought Stainless Steel Piping Using Phased-Array Ultrasonic Probes. In 16th World Conference on Nondestructive Testing, Aug 30 - Sep 3, 2004 - Montreal, Canada, 8 pp. Montreal:16th World Conference on Nondestructive Testing. PNNL-SA-41518.