Principles of Nondestructive Testing
时间:2019-12-09 16:12 来源:未知 作者:admin 点击:次
![]() 1. General principles 1.1 Non-destructive testing methods that can only detect defects on the surface opening include penetration testing and visual inspection. Penetrant testing is mainly used for non-porous materials; visual inspection is mainly used for the detection of macroscopic visible defects. 1.2 Nondestructive testing methods that can detect surface opening defects and near-surface defects include magnetic particle testing and eddy current testing. Magnetic particle detection is mainly used for ferromagnetic materials; eddy current detection is mainly used for conductive metal materials. 1.3 Nondestructive testing methods that can detect any positional defects in the material include radiographic testing, ultrasonic testing, ultrasonic time difference diffraction testing, and X-ray digital imaging testing. 1.4 In order to determine the intensity and approximate location of active defects existing inside or on pressure equipment, acoustic emission testing may be used. Acoustic emission testing requires pressurization tests on pressure-bearing equipment. When active defects are found, other inspection methods should be used for re-inspection. 1.5 Non-destructive testing methods that can only detect penetrating defects or overall compactness of pressure equipment are leak detection. 1.6 For ferromagnetic materials, in order to detect surface or near-surface defects, the magnetic particle detection method should be preferentially used, and other non-destructive testing methods can be used when magnetic particle detection cannot be used due to structural shapes and other reasons. 1.7 When a non-destructive testing method is used for testing in accordance with different testing processes, if the test results are inconsistent, the evaluation level with a higher risk shall prevail. 1.8 When two or more testing methods are used to test the same part of pressure-bearing equipment, the rating shall be assessed according to their respective methods. 2. Radiographic inspection 2.2 Limitations |
