Non-Destructive testing - Eddy Current testing Flashcards
What is the definition of Eddy currents?
Electrical currents which are generated in conductive materials by inducing an alternating magnetic field
How do changes in the material effect the Eddy current?
Interrupt the flow of the Eddy current
What type of material can Eddy Current testing be carried out on?
On all electrically conducting materials with a reasonably smooth surface
What 3 components make up the equipment for Eddy current testing?
the test equipment consists of a generator (AC supply), a test coil and recording equipment
What is detected using Eddy current testing?
- Crack detection
- Material thickness
- Corrosion detection
- Sorting materials
- Coating thickness measurements
- Metal detection
Where are Eddy currents concentrated at in a material?
Near the surface adjacent to the excitation coil
Eddy current density decrease exponentially with depth. What is the effect called?
Skin effect
The STANDARD DEPTH OF PENETRATION is the depth when the Eddy current density has decreased to what percentage of the surface density
37%
Name the 3 major probe types
- Surface probe
- Internal bobbin probe
- Encircling probe
Name 4 advantages of Eddy Current testing (there are 8)
- Sensitive to small cracks and other defects
- Detects surface and near surface defects
- Inspection surface and near surface defects
- Inspection gives immediate results
- Equipment is portable
- Method can be used for more than flaw detection
- Minimum part preparation is required
- Test probes does not need to contact the part
- Inspects complex shapes and sizes of conductive materials
Name 4 limitations of Eddy current testing (there are 7)
- Only conductive materials can be inspected
- Surface must be accessible to the probe
- Skill and training required is more extensive than other techniques
- Surface finish and roughness may interfere
- Reference standards need setup
- Depth of penetration is limited
- Flaws such as delaminations that lie parallel to the probe coil winding and probe scan direction are undetectable
Describe the principle of Eddy current testing
- When a AC passes through a test coil, a primary magnetic field is set up around the coil.
- The AC primary field includes Eddy current in the test object held below the test coil
- A secondary magnetic field arises due the the Eddy current
- The strength of the second field depends on the electrical and magnetic properties and structural integrity of the test object
- If cracks or other defects are present, the Eddy current and second field are both effected
- The changes in the secondary field will be ‘fed back’ to the primary coil and affect the primary current
- The variations of the primary current can be easily detected by a simple circuit which is zeroed properly beforehand