In cases where the test must be performed from the high impedance side of the joint, the ringdown technique described in this application note is often the best approach. This involves observing a series of multiple reflections from the boundary and looking for a difference in the rate at which the amplitude of successive echoes, or the ringdown envelope, changes between bond and disbond conditions. As the sound wave reverberates in the metal or other high impedance material,
the amplitude change is multiplied at each bounce, so for example a hard-to-see 5% amplitude drop between disbond and bond conditions at the first echo becomes a 25% drop at the fifth echo and a 50% drop at the tenth echo. While the change in a single echo may be small, the collective change across a series of multiple echoes will be much larger and easier to identify. In a typical joint, bond and disbond conditions will each produce their own distinctive ringdown pattern.
Set gain such that the first backwall echo is at full screen height. In the waveform below, the first peak is the delay line interface echo and the subsequent peaks are multiple echoes from a 0.1" (2.5 mm) unbonded steel standard. Because the metal is air-backed, the multiple echoes diminish at a relatively slow rate.
When using instruments that incorporate Distance Amplitude Correction (DAC) software, it will often be helpful to use the DAC function to draw the ringdown profile of a properly bonded part on the screen. That DAC curve may then be used to quickly identify absence of bonding, which will be indicated by a series of peaks that rise above the line as seen below. Additionally, instrument alarms may be set to trigger on echoes that rise above the curve to further identify suspect
bond conditions.
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The EPOCH 600 is mid-level, handheld ultrasonic flaw detector. Weighing only 1.68 kg (3.72 lb.), its horizontal case is built to withstand the rigors of very harsh environments. EN12668-1 plus features such as 400 V PerfectSquare tunable square wave pulser, digital filtering for enhanced signal-to-noise ratio.Copyright 2011 OLYMPUS CORPORATION, All rights reserved. Condizioni d'uso | Informativa sulla privacy