US20180231508A1 - Ultrasonic inspection configuration with beam overlap verification - Google Patents
Ultrasonic inspection configuration with beam overlap verification Download PDFInfo
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- US20180231508A1 US20180231508A1 US15/429,700 US201715429700A US2018231508A1 US 20180231508 A1 US20180231508 A1 US 20180231508A1 US 201715429700 A US201715429700 A US 201715429700A US 2018231508 A1 US2018231508 A1 US 2018231508A1
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- 238000012795 verification Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 50
- 238000007689 inspection Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 19
- 239000000523 sample Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 62
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 26
- 230000007547 defect Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 15
- 238000012360 testing method Methods 0.000 claims description 26
- 238000009659 non-destructive testing Methods 0.000 claims description 12
- 238000005457 optimization Methods 0.000 claims description 5
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 17
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 9
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 3
- 238000002604 ultrasonography Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000015572 biosynthetic process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004422 calculation algorithm Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000004364 calculation method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000739 chaotic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000005094 computer simulation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000012805 post-processing Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010200 validation analysis Methods 0.000 description 1
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N29/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of ultrasonic, sonic or infrasonic waves; Visualisation of the interior of objects by transmitting ultrasonic or sonic waves through the object
- G01N29/22—Details, e.g. general constructional or apparatus details
- G01N29/30—Arrangements for calibrating or comparing, e.g. with standard objects
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N29/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of ultrasonic, sonic or infrasonic waves; Visualisation of the interior of objects by transmitting ultrasonic or sonic waves through the object
- G01N29/04—Analysing solids
- G01N29/043—Analysing solids in the interior, e.g. by shear waves
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N29/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of ultrasonic, sonic or infrasonic waves; Visualisation of the interior of objects by transmitting ultrasonic or sonic waves through the object
- G01N29/22—Details, e.g. general constructional or apparatus details
- G01N29/26—Arrangements for orientation or scanning by relative movement of the head and the sensor
- G01N29/262—Arrangements for orientation or scanning by relative movement of the head and the sensor by electronic orientation or focusing, e.g. with phased arrays
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N29/00—Investigating or analysing materials by the use of ultrasonic, sonic or infrasonic waves; Visualisation of the interior of objects by transmitting ultrasonic or sonic waves through the object
- G01N29/44—Processing the detected response signal, e.g. electronic circuits specially adapted therefor
- G01N29/4409—Processing the detected response signal, e.g. electronic circuits specially adapted therefor by comparison
- G01N29/4427—Processing the detected response signal, e.g. electronic circuits specially adapted therefor by comparison with stored values, e.g. threshold values
Definitions
- the present disclosure generally relates to a method and a system for conducting non-destructive testing/inspection (NDT/NDI) by phased array ultrasonic testing (PAUT), and more particularly to a system and method of creating a scan plan with validation of the overlap of ultrasonic beams of a PAUT configuration.
- NDT/NDI non-destructive testing/inspection
- PAUT phased array ultrasonic testing
- PAUT Phased array ultrasonic testing
- NDT non-destructive testing
- Single-element (non-phased array) probes known technically as monolithic probes, emit a beam in a fixed direction.
- a conventional probe must be physically moved or turned to sweep the ultrasonic beam through the area of interest.
- the beam from a PAUT probe can be moved electronically, without moving the probe, and can be swept through a wide volume of material at high speed.
- the beam is controllable because a PAUT probe is made up of multiple small elements, each of which can be pulsed individually at a computer-calculated timing, forming incidence angles.
- phased refers to the timing
- array refers to the multiple elements.
- the element that contributes to a beam formation is defined as the aperture of the beam; the aperture can include a portion or all of the elements of the PAUT probe.
- multiple ultrasound beams are generated from a single or multiple apertures at various incidence angles. These generate an image showing reflections (or diffractions) of the ultrasonic waves that are associated to defects within the scanned area in the test object.
- the area of interest, or the scanned area is usually the weld and its surrounding area.
- the images are called a sectorial scan or S-scan.
- the images are called a linear scan or E-scan.
- generation of the multiple ultrasound beams may be designed according to a scan plan which defines the combination of:
- a general purpose of the invention is to provide a method of validating the overlap of all relevant adjacent beams in a PAUT configuration.
- the method takes advantage of the fact that prior to any inspection, the PAUT configuration must be calibrated by scanning the probe and wedge on a calibration block having side-drilled holes (SDH) at depths appropriate to the expected depth of inspection in an actual test object.
- the purpose of the calibration is generally to set up the angle corrected gain (ACG) and/or time corrected gain (TCG) parameters for the particular configuration.
- ACG angle corrected gain
- TCG time corrected gain
- the data obtained may also be used to provide verification of the actual overlap of all relevant adjacent beams, rather than relying on a calculated overlap from the scan plan.
- An advantage of the present invention is that the same data acquired for the TCG/ACG calibration may be used for verification of the overlap according to the present disclosure.
- the beam response is usually acquired without an encoder system, and in a relatively chaotic way.
- the user typically moves the probe back and forth until the amplitude envelope is smooth—for a sector scan, this means that there is a relatively continuous amplitude response between consecutive angles. Because the data is acquired in such a manner, any method used to extract useful overlap information from the data must be independent of the particular sequence of data acquisition.
- the overlap verification apparatus and method of the present disclosure is based on predetermined relationships between the overlap percentage of adjacent beams and intersection amplitudes of adjacent plots of response amplitude vs probe scan position. These predetermined relationships are used to verify that the overlap percentage of the adjacent beams at a code specified amplitude drop (usually ⁇ 6 dB) is greater than a predetermined threshold as specified by the relevant code.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic flow chart of an overlap verification system and method according to the present disclosure.
- FIG. 2A is a schematic view of ultrasonic beams intersecting with a weld.
- FIG. 2B shows the same schematic view as in FIG. 2A , but with multiple reflections illustrated through mirror images.
- FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of a probe and wedge scanning on a calibration block, showing two ultrasonic beams and their respective beam response amplitudes vs scan position.
- FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating intersection amplitudes and overlap percentages determined according to the present disclosure.
- FIG. 5 is a graph of amplitude drop vs beam overlap according to the present disclosure.
- FIG. 1 shows a schematic flow chart of the overlap verification process during a calibration, which is to be carried out with prior knowledge of the actual geometry for a subsequent measurement on a test object 28 .
- a scan plan module 2 having information about a weld geometry 4 , is used to generate a beam definition 12 , which comprises a definition of N ultrasonic beams having M pairs of adjacent beams.
- Scan plan module 2 further defines a suitable probe 6 , a wedge 8 and a calibration block 10 . While probe 6 is generating ultrasonic beams according to scan plan module 2 , probe 6 and wedge 8 are manually scanned on the surface of calibration block 10 .
- Acoustic response signals received by probe 6 are directed to a data acquisition unit 14 where the signals are digitized.
- ACG and TCG calibrations are applied to the digital data by an ACG/TCG application unit 15 , and the calibrated data is passed to a beam relevance module 18 .
- Calibration block 10 includes a number I of side drilled holes, designated SDH(1), SDH(2) . . . SDH(I).
- beam relevance module 18 Based on information about weld geometry 4 , beam definition 12 and side drilled hole SDH(i) 16 , beam relevance module 18 makes a determination as to whether a particular response from probe 6 is or is not relevant. During calibration, a relevant response is defined as one which emanates from a relevant area 38 of calibration block 10 as described below in relation to FIG. 2B . Relevant area 38 as shown in FIG. 2B is directly related to weld geometry 4 to be used in a subsequent measurement on test object 28 . Beam relevance module 18 directs probe response signals which are not relevant to a rejected beam location 20 , and such beams receive no further consideration. Relevant beams are directed to an intersection amplitude unit 22 , which determines intersection amplitudes between each adjacent pair of relevant beams.
- Relevant beam pairs are designated BeamPair(1), BeamPair(2) . . . BeamPair(M), where M is the total number of relevant beam pairs with respect to the i th side drilled hole, SDH(i).
- intersection amplitude unit 22 determines amplitudes of a set of intersection points as described below in connection with FIG. 4 .
- the intersection amplitudes for each beam pair are designated Intersections for BeamPair(1), Intersections for BeamPair(2) . . . Intersections for BeamPair(M). In FIG.
- intersection amplitude unit 22 a set of Intersections for BeamPair(m) 220 is shown in intersection amplitude unit 22 , together with intersection amplitudes from neighboring beam pairs, namely Intersections for BeamPair(m ⁇ 1) 219 and Intersections for BeamPair(m+1) 221 . It is to be understood that intersection amplitudes for all M relevant beam pairs are determined by intersection amplitude unit 22 , and intersections 218 and 222 are shown in dotted lines to represent all the remaining sets of intersection amplitudes within intersection amplitude unit 22 .
- Intersection amplitudes for all relevant beam pairs are directed from intersection amplitude unit 22 to an overlap verification module 24 , which performs an overlap verification of each of the beam pairs, with respect to side drilled hole SDH(i) 16 .
- Overlap verification is performed by measuring the overlap of each relevant beam pair according to the methods which are described below in connection with FIGS. 3-5 , and then comparing each measurement with a minimum overlap specified in the relevant code.
- SDH(i) 16 Having completed verification for all M beam pairs with respect to the i th side drilled hole, SDH(i) 16 , the value of i is incremented, a new set of relevant beams is obtained from beam relevance module 18 , new sets of intersection points are derived for each beam pair by intersection amplitude unit 22 , and overlap verification module 24 repeats verification of all new relevant beam pairs for a different side drilled hole.
- an overlap optimization module 25 may optionally communicate with scan plan module 2 to increase the angular density of beams generated by probe 6 .
- overlap optimization module 25 may optionally communicate with scan plan module 2 to reduce the angular density of beams generated by probe 6 , thereby reducing the total number of beams N so that the overall testing time is reduced while still satisfying the code overlap criterion.
- FIG. 2A shows a schematic view of ultrasonic beams intersecting with a weld 31 in test object 28 having an upper surface 27 and a lower surface 29 .
- Weld 31 has weld bevel interfaces 30 and 30 ′, and heat affected zone (HAZ) boundaries 32 and 32 ′.
- the limits of relevant beams for inspecting weld 31 are represented by a first line 34 which intersects HAZ boundary 32 at its intersection point with lower surface 29 , and a second line 36 which reflects from lower surface 29 and then intersects HAZ boundary 32 ′ at its intersection point with upper surface 27 .
- FIG. 2B shows the same geometry as FIG. 2A , but, for simplicity of viewing, reflections from lower surface 29 are illustrated by mirror images of weld 31 , line 36 and upper surface 27 . Use of such mirror images is common practice in PAUT NDT.
- FIG. 2B illustrates the definition of relevant area 38 which is shown shaded and is bounded by first line 34 and mirror images of second line 36 , upper surface 27 and HAZ boundaries 32 and 32 ′. Also shown are three depths, d 1 , d 2 and d 3 , approximately representing the top, middle and bottom respectively of relevant area 38 . These are the depths of three side drilled holes in a calibration block 10 a which is suitable for calibration prior to NDT inspection of weld 31 , and which is illustrated in FIG. 3 .
- FIG. 3 shows calibration block 10 a having three side drilled holes 40 a, 40 b and 40 c at depths d 1 , d 2 and d 3 respectively.
- Two adjacent ultrasonic beams, 42 and 44 are shown emerging from probe 6 and wedge 8 .
- Beams 42 and 44 each have an angular width which is represented by beam boundaries 42 a, 42 b and 44 a, 44 b respectively. It is to be understood that beam boundaries 42 a and 42 b represent a drop of beam intensity of ⁇ 6 dB from the maximum intensity of beam 42 at its center, and beam boundaries 44 a and 44 b represent a drop of beam intensity of ⁇ 6 dB from the maximum intensity of beam 44 at its center.
- Probe 6 and wedge 8 are manually scanned along an upper surface 9 of calibration block 10 a in the direction illustrated by arrow 54 .
- beams 42 and 44 intersect side drilled hole 40 b with varying intensity, and therefore there is a varying amplitude of the response signal as a function of the probe position.
- a first beam amplitude plot 142 is a plot of probe response amplitude vs scanning position for beam 42 reflected from SDH 40 b.
- a second beam amplitude plot 144 is a plot of response amplitude vs scanning position for beam 44 reflected from SDH 40 b.
- beam 42 intersects SDH 40 b near to its maximum amplitude, and this is shown by the intersection of a line 52 with beam amplitude plot 142 .
- beam 44 intersects SDH 40 b close to boundary 44 a, where the amplitude of beam 44 is considerably below its maximum amplitude, and this is shown by the intersection of line 52 with beam amplitude plot 144 .
- beam amplitude plots 142 and 144 are not actually available to acquisition unit 14 because acquisition unit 14 can only measure response amplitudes while, in the absence of a position encoder, probe positions are unknown. Therefore, beam amplitude plots 142 and 144 serve only as representations of the amplitude responses which are useful in describing the present invention.
- the data in beam amplitude plots such as 142 and 144 are acquired after the application of an ACG/TCG post processing algorithm, in which amplitude of response from a SDH is calibrated to be the same for all beam angles and all SDH depths.
- FIG. 4 shows beam amplitude plots 142 and 144 , representing adjacent beams 42 and 44 as shown in FIG. 3 . Since beams 42 and 44 are adjacent and angle corrected, they may be represented without major error by plots 142 and 144 which have the same amplitude and shape. As described above, plots 142 and 144 are not available to acquisition unit 14 . However, for each pair of adjacent beams, intersection amplitude unit 22 has access to the response amplitudes at a set of intersection points, namely intersection points 62 , 63 , 63 ′, 64 and 64 ′.
- the amplitudes at points 63 and 63 ′ may be measured at the positions of probe 6 which give the maximum response amplitudes for beams 142 and 144 respectively due to calibration defect 40 b.
- the amplitude at intersection point 64 may then be measured as the response amplitude for beam 144 while probe 6 is in the position at which the response amplitude for beam 142 is at its maximum value.
- the amplitude at intersection point 64 ′ may be measured as the response amplitude for beam 142 while probe 6 is in the position at which the response amplitude for beam 144 is at its maximum value.
- the reduction in response amplitude at intersection point 64 relative to the maximum amplitude at intersection point 63 is represented by an amplitude reduction B
- the reduction in response amplitude at intersection point 64 ′ relative to the maximum amplitude at intersection point 63 ′ is represented by an amplitude reduction B′.
- Amplitude reductions B and B′ are conventionally measured in dB, but any other form of relative measurement may be used.
- the amplitude at intersection point 62 may be measured by finding a location of probe 6 at which the response amplitudes of beams 142 and 144 are equal.
- the reduction in response amplitude at intersection point 62 relative to the maximum amplitude at intersection point 63 is represented by an amplitude reduction A
- the reduction in response amplitude at intersection point 62 relative to the maximum amplitude at intersection point 63 ′ is represented by an amplitude reduction A′.
- Amplitude reductions A and A′ are conventionally measured in dB, but any other form of relative measurement may be used.
- a 0 max ( A, A′ ) (1)
- the measured amplitudes at intersection points 62 , 63 , 63 ′, 64 and 64 ′ are stored in intersection amplitude unit 22 .
- beams 42 and 44 are represented by BeamPair(m)
- measured amplitudes at intersection points 62 , 63 , 63 ′, 64 and 64 ′ are stored in Intersections for BeamPair(m) 220 as shown in FIG. 1 .
- the amplitudes at intersection points for all relevant beam pairs are passed to overlap verification module 24 , which calculates amplitude reductions A 0 and B 0 and then verifies the overlap of beams 42 and 44 , and all other relevant beam pairs, as described below.
- amplitude reduction A 0 corresponds to an overlap percentage of 0% and amplitude reduction B 0 corresponds to an overlap percentage of 50%.
- a line 66 corresponding to an amplitude drop of ⁇ 6 dB which may be specified by the relevant inspection code.
- the beam width is W C
- the overlap amount is O C
- the minimum value of Overlap C is specified in the relevant inspection code, and it is a purpose of the present disclosure to determine the overlap percentage between beams 42 and 44 at ⁇ 6 dB amplitude drop and to compare that overlap percentage with Overlap C .
- an amplitude drop of ⁇ 6 dB in the relevant inspection code is used only by way of example. Any specified amplitude drop in the code may be used, and all specified amplitude drops in the code are within the scope of the present disclosure.
- the ⁇ 6 dB amplitude drop is shown to be less than amplitude drop B 0 but greater than amplitude drop A 0 . This is commonly the case, but is not a requirement.
- the ⁇ 6 dB amplitude drop may be greater than amplitude drop B 0 or less than amplitude drop A 0 .
- FIG. 5 is a graph of amplitude drop plotted against beam overlap percentage.
- a point 72 on the graph represents measurement of amplitude drop A 0 at a beam overlap of 0%
- a point 74 on the graph represents measurement of amplitude drop B 0 at a beam overlap of 50%.
- An interpolation line 76 represents an interpolation between points 72 and 74 .
- the interpolation shown in FIG. 5 is linear, but any functional interpolation is within the scope of the present invention.
- interpolation line 76 may be a non-linear interpolation based on computer modeling of beams 42 and 44 .
- a horizontal line 77 is drawn at the level of ⁇ 6 dB amplitude drop according to the code and intersects interpolation line 76 at a point 78 .
- a vertical line 79 is drawn from point 78 and intersects the beam overlap axis at a beam overlap value of X %, which is the value of overlap at ⁇ 6 dB between beams 42 and 44 measured according to the present disclosure.
- Also shown in FIG. 5 is an arrow 80 representing a beam overlap value of Y %, which is the minimum overlap value at ⁇ 6 dB according to the inspection code.
- overlap verification module 24 It is the function of overlap verification module 24 (see FIG. 1 ) to verify that the measured overlap X % at ⁇ 6 dB is greater than the code specified overlap Y % for all adjacent beam pairs within relevant area 38 . If the measured overlap X % at ⁇ 6 dB is less than the code specified overlap Y % for some or all of the relevant beam pairs, then overlap optimization module 25 may optionally communicate with scan plan module 2 to increase the angular density of beams generated by probe 6 .
- overlap optimization module 25 may optionally communicate with scan plan module 2 to reduce the angular density of beams generated by probe 6 , thereby reducing the total number of beams N so that the overall testing time is reduced while still satisfying the code overlap criterion.
- an important novel aspect of the present disclosure is to utilize the unique relationship between beam overlap and the intersection amplitudes of two adjacent beams. Using the intersection amplitudes to determine the beam overlap eliminates the requirement for a position scanner, which improves the productivity and efficiency of operation.
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Abstract
Description
- The present disclosure generally relates to a method and a system for conducting non-destructive testing/inspection (NDT/NDI) by phased array ultrasonic testing (PAUT), and more particularly to a system and method of creating a scan plan with validation of the overlap of ultrasonic beams of a PAUT configuration.
- Phased array ultrasonic testing (PAUT) is an advanced method of ultrasonic testing that has applications in industrial non-destructive testing (NDT). Common applications are to find flaws in manufactured materials such as welds.
- Single-element (non-phased array) probes, known technically as monolithic probes, emit a beam in a fixed direction. To test a large volume of material, a conventional probe must be physically moved or turned to sweep the ultrasonic beam through the area of interest.
- In contrast, the beam from a PAUT probe can be moved electronically, without moving the probe, and can be swept through a wide volume of material at high speed. The beam is controllable because a PAUT probe is made up of multiple small elements, each of which can be pulsed individually at a computer-calculated timing, forming incidence angles. The term phased refers to the timing, and the term array refers to the multiple elements. The element that contributes to a beam formation is defined as the aperture of the beam; the aperture can include a portion or all of the elements of the PAUT probe.
- During typical inspections of welds, multiple ultrasound beams are generated from a single or multiple apertures at various incidence angles. These generate an image showing reflections (or diffractions) of the ultrasonic waves that are associated to defects within the scanned area in the test object. For weld inspection, the area of interest, or the scanned area, is usually the weld and its surrounding area. For cases where the aperture is fixed and only the angles are changed, the images are called a sectorial scan or S-scan. For cases where the angle is fixed and only the aperture is moved, the images are called a linear scan or E-scan.
- One of the requirements for having appropriate coverage of the weld area in a PAUT inspection is that there should be sufficient overlap between adjacent ultrasound beams which are generated by the PAUT probe at various incidence angles. According to an international code “2010 ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code”, 2010 Edition, Article #4, Mandatory Appendices V—Nondestructive Examination, paragraph V-471.1, (hereinafter referred to as “the code”) there is a required minimum overlap between adjacent beams in order for the PAUT inspection to have valid coverage.
- As described in co-pending patent application Ser. No. 14/621,906, generation of the multiple ultrasound beams may be designed according to a scan plan which defines the combination of:
-
- a. instrumentation configuration including the probe, wedge, and acquisition unit;
- b. acoustic settings, including the aperture size and position, the focalization setting, the beam angles and the gating parameters;
- c. guidelines for mechanical scanning of the probe, including probe to weld distance and maximum scan speed.
- application Ser. No. 14/621,906 states that the scan plan must define a beam configuration that always meets or exceeds the overlap requirement within a relevant depth range. However, there is no mention of any method to validate experimentally that the overlap requirement is met by all adjacent beams. There is therefore no way to verify that the requirements of the code for beam overlap are actually being met during any given inspection.
- A general purpose of the invention is to provide a method of validating the overlap of all relevant adjacent beams in a PAUT configuration.
- The method takes advantage of the fact that prior to any inspection, the PAUT configuration must be calibrated by scanning the probe and wedge on a calibration block having side-drilled holes (SDH) at depths appropriate to the expected depth of inspection in an actual test object. The purpose of the calibration is generally to set up the angle corrected gain (ACG) and/or time corrected gain (TCG) parameters for the particular configuration. However, the data obtained may also be used to provide verification of the actual overlap of all relevant adjacent beams, rather than relying on a calculated overlap from the scan plan. An advantage of the present invention is that the same data acquired for the TCG/ACG calibration may be used for verification of the overlap according to the present disclosure.
- During calibration, the beam response is usually acquired without an encoder system, and in a relatively chaotic way. The user typically moves the probe back and forth until the amplitude envelope is smooth—for a sector scan, this means that there is a relatively continuous amplitude response between consecutive angles. Because the data is acquired in such a manner, any method used to extract useful overlap information from the data must be independent of the particular sequence of data acquisition.
- The overlap verification apparatus and method of the present disclosure is based on predetermined relationships between the overlap percentage of adjacent beams and intersection amplitudes of adjacent plots of response amplitude vs probe scan position. These predetermined relationships are used to verify that the overlap percentage of the adjacent beams at a code specified amplitude drop (usually −6 dB) is greater than a predetermined threshold as specified by the relevant code.
-
FIG. 1 is a schematic flow chart of an overlap verification system and method according to the present disclosure. -
FIG. 2A is a schematic view of ultrasonic beams intersecting with a weld. -
FIG. 2B shows the same schematic view as inFIG. 2A , but with multiple reflections illustrated through mirror images. -
FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of a probe and wedge scanning on a calibration block, showing two ultrasonic beams and their respective beam response amplitudes vs scan position. -
FIG. 4 is a diagram illustrating intersection amplitudes and overlap percentages determined according to the present disclosure. -
FIG. 5 is a graph of amplitude drop vs beam overlap according to the present disclosure. -
FIG. 1 shows a schematic flow chart of the overlap verification process during a calibration, which is to be carried out with prior knowledge of the actual geometry for a subsequent measurement on a test object 28. In order to provide suitable ultrasonic beams, ascan plan module 2, having information about a weld geometry 4, is used to generate abeam definition 12, which comprises a definition of N ultrasonic beams having M pairs of adjacent beams.Scan plan module 2 further defines asuitable probe 6, awedge 8 and acalibration block 10. Whileprobe 6 is generating ultrasonic beams according toscan plan module 2,probe 6 andwedge 8 are manually scanned on the surface ofcalibration block 10. Acoustic response signals received byprobe 6 are directed to adata acquisition unit 14 where the signals are digitized. ACG and TCG calibrations are applied to the digital data by an ACG/TCG application unit 15, and the calibrated data is passed to abeam relevance module 18.Calibration block 10 includes a number I of side drilled holes, designated SDH(1), SDH(2) . . . SDH(I).Beam relevance module 18 receives information viascan plan module 2 about each side drilled hole SDH(i) 16, where i=1,2 . . . I, wherein each side drilledhole 16 is at a different depth below the surface ofcalibration block 10. - Based on information about weld geometry 4,
beam definition 12 and side drilled hole SDH(i) 16,beam relevance module 18 makes a determination as to whether a particular response fromprobe 6 is or is not relevant. During calibration, a relevant response is defined as one which emanates from arelevant area 38 ofcalibration block 10 as described below in relation toFIG. 2B .Relevant area 38 as shown inFIG. 2B is directly related to weld geometry 4 to be used in a subsequent measurement on test object 28.Beam relevance module 18 directs probe response signals which are not relevant to a rejectedbeam location 20, and such beams receive no further consideration. Relevant beams are directed to anintersection amplitude unit 22, which determines intersection amplitudes between each adjacent pair of relevant beams. - Relevant beam pairs are designated BeamPair(1), BeamPair(2) . . . BeamPair(M), where M is the total number of relevant beam pairs with respect to the ith side drilled hole, SDH(i). For each relevant beam pair,
intersection amplitude unit 22 determines amplitudes of a set of intersection points as described below in connection withFIG. 4 . The intersection amplitudes for each beam pair are designated Intersections for BeamPair(1), Intersections for BeamPair(2) . . . Intersections for BeamPair(M). InFIG. 1 , a set of Intersections for BeamPair(m) 220 is shown inintersection amplitude unit 22, together with intersection amplitudes from neighboring beam pairs, namely Intersections for BeamPair(m−1) 219 and Intersections for BeamPair(m+1) 221. It is to be understood that intersection amplitudes for all M relevant beam pairs are determined byintersection amplitude unit 22, andintersections intersection amplitude unit 22. - Intersection amplitudes for all relevant beam pairs are directed from
intersection amplitude unit 22 to anoverlap verification module 24, which performs an overlap verification of each of the beam pairs, with respect to side drilled hole SDH(i) 16. Overlap verification is performed by measuring the overlap of each relevant beam pair according to the methods which are described below in connection withFIGS. 3-5 , and then comparing each measurement with a minimum overlap specified in the relevant code. Having completed verification for all M beam pairs with respect to the ith side drilled hole, SDH(i) 16, the value of i is incremented, a new set of relevant beams is obtained frombeam relevance module 18, new sets of intersection points are derived for each beam pair byintersection amplitude unit 22, and overlapverification module 24 repeats verification of all new relevant beam pairs for a different side drilled hole. - In this way, overlap is verified for the entire set of beams relevant to the measurement, for different depths corresponding to the different depths of the side drilled holes, SDH(i) 16, in the calibration block.
- It should be noted that the notion of “BeamPair(m)” refers to the pairing of any beam (n), where n=1 to N, with at least one adjacent beam, namely beam(n−1) or beam(n+1). Consequently, the parameter “maximum amplitude” corresponds to a specific beam(n). Similarly “intersection amplitude” corresponds to an amplitude acquired where there is a known relationship between adjacent beams that provides a known beam overlap between a specific beam(n) reflected from the selected defect and reflections of the at least one adjacent beam(n−1) and/or beam(n+1).
- If the overlap measured by
overlap verification module 24 is greater than the minimum overlap specified in the code for all beam pairs and for all depths of the side drilled holes, then the verification is complete and the code is satisfied. If, however, the overlap measured byoverlap verification module 24 is less than the minimum overlap specified in the code for some or all of the relevant beam pairs, then anoverlap optimization module 25 may optionally communicate withscan plan module 2 to increase the angular density of beams generated byprobe 6. On the other hand, if the overlap measured byoverlap verification module 24 is much greater than the minimum overlap specified in the code for some or all of the relevant beam pairs, then overlapoptimization module 25 may optionally communicate withscan plan module 2 to reduce the angular density of beams generated byprobe 6, thereby reducing the total number of beams N so that the overall testing time is reduced while still satisfying the code overlap criterion. -
FIG. 2A shows a schematic view of ultrasonic beams intersecting with aweld 31 in test object 28 having anupper surface 27 and alower surface 29.Weld 31 has weld bevel interfaces 30 and 30′, and heat affected zone (HAZ)boundaries weld 31 are represented by afirst line 34 which intersectsHAZ boundary 32 at its intersection point withlower surface 29, and asecond line 36 which reflects fromlower surface 29 and then intersectsHAZ boundary 32′ at its intersection point withupper surface 27. -
FIG. 2B shows the same geometry asFIG. 2A , but, for simplicity of viewing, reflections fromlower surface 29 are illustrated by mirror images ofweld 31,line 36 andupper surface 27. Use of such mirror images is common practice in PAUT NDT.FIG. 2B illustrates the definition ofrelevant area 38 which is shown shaded and is bounded byfirst line 34 and mirror images ofsecond line 36,upper surface 27 andHAZ boundaries relevant area 38. These are the depths of three side drilled holes in acalibration block 10 a which is suitable for calibration prior to NDT inspection ofweld 31, and which is illustrated inFIG. 3 . -
FIG. 3 showscalibration block 10 a having three side drilledholes probe 6 andwedge 8.Beams beam boundaries beam boundaries beam 42 at its center, andbeam boundaries beam 44 at its center. -
Probe 6 andwedge 8 are manually scanned along anupper surface 9 ofcalibration block 10 a in the direction illustrated byarrow 54. During scanning, beams 42 and 44 intersect side drilledhole 40 b with varying intensity, and therefore there is a varying amplitude of the response signal as a function of the probe position. A firstbeam amplitude plot 142 is a plot of probe response amplitude vs scanning position forbeam 42 reflected fromSDH 40 b. A secondbeam amplitude plot 144 is a plot of response amplitude vs scanning position forbeam 44 reflected fromSDH 40 b. At the particular scanning position shown inFIG. 3 ,beam 42 intersectsSDH 40 b near to its maximum amplitude, and this is shown by the intersection of aline 52 withbeam amplitude plot 142. On the other hand,beam 44 intersectsSDH 40 b close toboundary 44 a, where the amplitude ofbeam 44 is considerably below its maximum amplitude, and this is shown by the intersection ofline 52 withbeam amplitude plot 144. - It should be noted that beam amplitude
plots acquisition unit 14 becauseacquisition unit 14 can only measure response amplitudes while, in the absence of a position encoder, probe positions are unknown. Therefore,beam amplitude plots - It should also be noted that data similar to
beam amplitude plots probe 6 andwedge 8. - Note also that the data in beam amplitude plots such as 142 and 144 are acquired after the application of an ACG/TCG post processing algorithm, in which amplitude of response from a SDH is calibrated to be the same for all beam angles and all SDH depths.
-
FIG. 4 showsbeam amplitude plots adjacent beams FIG. 3 . Sincebeams plots plots acquisition unit 14. However, for each pair of adjacent beams,intersection amplitude unit 22 has access to the response amplitudes at a set of intersection points, namely intersection points 62, 63, 63′, 64 and 64′. During the scanning operation ofprobe 6, the amplitudes atpoints probe 6 which give the maximum response amplitudes forbeams calibration defect 40 b. The amplitude atintersection point 64 may then be measured as the response amplitude forbeam 144 whileprobe 6 is in the position at which the response amplitude forbeam 142 is at its maximum value. Similarly, the amplitude atintersection point 64′ may be measured as the response amplitude forbeam 142 whileprobe 6 is in the position at which the response amplitude forbeam 144 is at its maximum value. The reduction in response amplitude atintersection point 64 relative to the maximum amplitude atintersection point 63 is represented by an amplitude reduction B, and the reduction in response amplitude atintersection point 64′ relative to the maximum amplitude atintersection point 63′ is represented by an amplitude reduction B′. Amplitude reductions B and B′ are conventionally measured in dB, but any other form of relative measurement may be used. - The amplitude at
intersection point 62 may be measured by finding a location ofprobe 6 at which the response amplitudes ofbeams intersection point 62 relative to the maximum amplitude atintersection point 63 is represented by an amplitude reduction A, and the reduction in response amplitude atintersection point 62 relative to the maximum amplitude atintersection point 63′ is represented by an amplitude reduction A′. Amplitude reductions A and A′ are conventionally measured in dB, but any other form of relative measurement may be used. - Note that, if the assumption that amplitude plots 142 and 144 have the same amplitude and shape holds strictly true, then amplitude reductions A and A′ would be equal, and amplitude reductions B and B′ would also be equal. However, taking into account discrepancies in the assumption of equal amplitude and shape, the most conservative strategy is to measure both amplitude reductions and to use the maximum amplitude reductions A0 and B0 for further calculations, wherein:
-
A 0=max (A, A′) (1) -
B 0=max (B, B′) (2) - It should be noted that the measured amplitudes at intersection points 62, 63, 63′, 64 and 64′ are stored in
intersection amplitude unit 22. For example, ifbeams FIG. 1 . The amplitudes at intersection points for all relevant beam pairs are passed to overlapverification module 24, which calculates amplitude reductions A0 and B0 and then verifies the overlap ofbeams - Continuing to refer to
FIG. 4 , it can be seen that at the amplitude ofintersection point 64 the width ofamplitude plot 142 is WB. Similarly, at the amplitude ofintersection point 64′ the width ofamplitude plot 144 is WB′. Amplitude plots 142 and 144 overlap by an amount OB, and the overlap percentage betweenbeams -
Overlaps=O B /W B =O B /W B′ (3) - Note that, under the assumption that amplitude plots 142 and 144 have the same amplitude and shape, it may also be assumed that WB=WB′ and moreover, by symmetry, it can be seen that:
-
Overlaps=50% (4) - Still referring to
FIG. 4 , it can be seen that at the amplitude ofintersection point 62 the width ofamplitude plot 142 is WA, and at the amplitude ofintersection point 62′ the width ofamplitude plot 144 is WA′. However, there is zero overlap betweenamplitude plots -
OverlapA=0% (5) - Thus it may be seen that amplitude reduction A0 corresponds to an overlap percentage of 0% and amplitude reduction B0 corresponds to an overlap percentage of 50%. Also shown in
FIG. 4 is aline 66 corresponding to an amplitude drop of −6 dB which may be specified by the relevant inspection code. At the −6 dB amplitude drop, the beam width is WC, the overlap amount is OC and the overlap percentage is OverlapC=OC/WC. In general, the minimum value of OverlapC is specified in the relevant inspection code, and it is a purpose of the present disclosure to determine the overlap percentage betweenbeams - Note that an amplitude drop of −6 dB in the relevant inspection code is used only by way of example. Any specified amplitude drop in the code may be used, and all specified amplitude drops in the code are within the scope of the present disclosure.
- Note also that in
FIG. 4 the −6 dB amplitude drop is shown to be less than amplitude drop B0 but greater than amplitude drop A0. This is commonly the case, but is not a requirement. The −6 dB amplitude drop may be greater than amplitude drop B0 or less than amplitude drop A0. -
FIG. 5 is a graph of amplitude drop plotted against beam overlap percentage. In accordance with the measurements described in connection withFIG. 4 , apoint 72 on the graph represents measurement of amplitude drop A0 at a beam overlap of 0%, and apoint 74 on the graph represents measurement of amplitude drop B0 at a beam overlap of 50%. Aninterpolation line 76 represents an interpolation betweenpoints FIG. 5 is linear, but any functional interpolation is within the scope of the present invention. For example,interpolation line 76 may be a non-linear interpolation based on computer modeling ofbeams horizontal line 77 is drawn at the level of −6 dB amplitude drop according to the code and intersectsinterpolation line 76 at apoint 78. Avertical line 79 is drawn frompoint 78 and intersects the beam overlap axis at a beam overlap value of X %, which is the value of overlap at −6 dB betweenbeams FIG. 5 is anarrow 80 representing a beam overlap value of Y %, which is the minimum overlap value at −6 dB according to the inspection code. - It is the function of overlap verification module 24 (see
FIG. 1 ) to verify that the measured overlap X % at −6 dB is greater than the code specified overlap Y % for all adjacent beam pairs withinrelevant area 38. If the measured overlap X % at −6 dB is less than the code specified overlap Y % for some or all of the relevant beam pairs, then overlapoptimization module 25 may optionally communicate withscan plan module 2 to increase the angular density of beams generated byprobe 6. If, on the other hand, the measured overlap X % at −6 dB is much greater than the code specified overlap Y % for some or all of the relevant beam pairs, then overlapoptimization module 25 may optionally communicate withscan plan module 2 to reduce the angular density of beams generated byprobe 6, thereby reducing the total number of beams N so that the overall testing time is reduced while still satisfying the code overlap criterion. - It should be noted that an important novel aspect of the present disclosure is to utilize the unique relationship between beam overlap and the intersection amplitudes of two adjacent beams. Using the intersection amplitudes to determine the beam overlap eliminates the requirement for a position scanner, which improves the productivity and efficiency of operation.
- Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments thereof, it can be appreciated that various designs can be conceived based on the teachings of the present disclosure, and all are within the scope of the present disclosure.
Claims (27)
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CN111356146A (en) * | 2018-12-21 | 2020-06-30 | 大唐移动通信设备有限公司 | Beam scanning method and base station |
CN113240636A (en) * | 2021-05-08 | 2021-08-10 | 苏州天准科技股份有限公司 | Surface navigation intelligent detection method, system, storage medium and terminal equipment |
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US20150168355A1 (en) * | 2013-12-16 | 2015-06-18 | Jason HABERMEHL | Automatic calibration for phased array inspection of girth weld |
US20150377840A1 (en) * | 2014-06-27 | 2015-12-31 | Olympus Scientific Solutions Americas Inc. | Phased array system capable of computing gains for non-measured calibration points |
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US11249053B2 (en) | 2017-02-10 | 2022-02-15 | Olympus America Inc. | Ultrasonic inspection configuration with beam overlap verification |
US10473626B2 (en) * | 2017-04-05 | 2019-11-12 | Loenbro Inspection, LLC. | Method for the graphical representation and data presentation of weld inspection results |
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CN111356146A (en) * | 2018-12-21 | 2020-06-30 | 大唐移动通信设备有限公司 | Beam scanning method and base station |
EP4067895A1 (en) * | 2021-04-01 | 2022-10-05 | Airbus Operations (S.A.S.) | Method for verifying an ultrasonic probe in the context of a structural inspection of a part |
FR3121512A1 (en) * | 2021-04-01 | 2022-10-07 | Airbus Operations | PROCEDURE FOR VERIFYING AN ULTRASOUND PROBE AS PART OF A STRUCTURAL INSPECTION OF A PART |
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CN113240636A (en) * | 2021-05-08 | 2021-08-10 | 苏州天准科技股份有限公司 | Surface navigation intelligent detection method, system, storage medium and terminal equipment |
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