Application of ultrasonic wave propagation imaging method to automatic damage visualization of nuclear power plant pipeline (original) (raw)

2010, Nuclear Engineering and Design

Hundreds of kilometers of pipeline, especially the elbows and welded joints in nuclear power plants (NPPs), are susceptible to aging and other types of damage. Therefore, the condition of a piping system requires regular inspection. We propose an automatic damage visualization technique using a laser ultrasonic scanning system and an ultrasonic wave propagation imaging (UWPI) method for the regular inspection process. Ultrasonic wave propagation movies (UWPMs) in thick and complex NPP pipes could be successfully visualized in a straight pipe with a crack, a welded pipe with multiple open and inner cracks at the welds, and an elbow pipe with wall thinning. A UWPM with ultrasonic time information could enable the discrimination of damage-induced wavefields from the wavefield not related to damage by providing the appearance time, source location, wavefront curvature, and propagation direction of the damage-induced wavefield. For the specimens tested, a 1 mm long crack in a 9 mm thick pipe could be localized regardless of the relative orientation of a sensor to the crack direction; 4 mm long 1.5 mm deep inner crack in a 4 mm thick welding bead could be detected despite the presence of the welding bead; wall thinning with gradual property variations could also be detected. In addition, since this method did not require laser focusing or reference data from the undamaged condition, and allows a large laser beam incident angle, it was very advantageous for the automatic scanning of the curved pipe surfaces. This study demonstrated that the proposed laser ultrasonic system equipped with the UWPI method is a useful inspection tool for NPP piping system management.

Sign up for access to the world's latest research.

checkGet notified about relevant papers

checkSave papers to use in your research

checkJoin the discussion with peers

checkTrack your impact