Electromagnetic testing
Electromagnetic testing (ET), as a form
of nondestructive testing, is the process of inducing electric
currents or magnetic fields or both inside a test object and
observing the electromagnetic response. If the test is set up properly,
a defect inside the test object creates a measurable response.
The term "electromagnetic testing" is often
intended to mean simply eddy-current testing (ECT). However, with an
expanding number of electromagnetic and magnetic test methods, "electromagnetic
testing" is more often used to mean the whole class of electromagnetic
test methods, of which eddy-current testing is just one. also useful for the
testing of drill pipes.
Common methods
- Eddy-current
testing (ECT) is used to detect near-surface cracks and corrosion in
metallic objects such as tubes and aircraft fuselage and structures. ECT
is more commonly applied to nonferromagnetic materials, since
in ferromagnetic materials the depth of penetration is
relatively small.
- Remote
field testing (RFT) is used for nondestructive testing (NDT) of steel
tubes and pipes.
- Magnetic
flux leakage testing (MFL) is also used for nondestructive testing
(NDT) of steel tubes and pipes. At present RFT is more commonly used in
small diameter tubes and MFL in larger diameter pipes over long travel
distances.
- Wire
rope testing is MFL applied to steel cables, to detect broken strands
of wire.
- Magnetic
particle inspection (MT or MPI) is a form of MFL where small magnetic
particles in the form of a powder or liquid are sprayed on the magnetized
steel test object and gather at surface-breaking cracks.
- Alternating
current field measurement (ACFM) is similar to eddy current applied
to steel. Its most common application is to detect and size cracks in
welds. from the company that developed it.
- Pulsed
eddy current enables the detection of large-volume metal loss in
steel objects from a considerable stand-off, allowing steel pipes to be
tested without removing insulation.
See also
- Electromagnetic
compatibility
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