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应用细节
应用细节页
Defect Sizing in Pipeline Welds – What Can We Really Achieve?
Proceedings of ASME PVP Conference:
Insert Conference Name
July 2004, San Diego, California
PVP2004-2811 |
Abstract |
Pipelines are now using Fitness-For-Service (FFS) for accept/reject of weld defects. FFS requires accurate
measurement of defect height for Fracture Mechanics assessments. The standard pipeline weld inspection technique of
radiography is incapable of such measurements. However, the newer technique of ultrasonics can measure defect height,
in principle. Initially ultrasonic amplitude methods were used for height measurement, but these proved unreliable.
Now diffraction methods, especially Time-Of-Flight- Diffraction (TOFD), are being used in conjunction. This paper
reviews previous work – mainly large nuclear studies like PISC II – and published pipeline sizing studies. The best
nuclear sizing was within a few millimetres, using diffraction. In contrast to nuclear, pipeline AUT uses zone
discrimination, focused transducers, much thinner material and simpler analysis techniques. Current accuracies are
typically + 1 mm (terminology undefined), which correlates with the beam spot size and typical weld pass. Requests
for accuracies of + 0.3 mm are probably unachievable, though future R&D should significantly improve pipeline
sizing. |
Introduction |
Defects invariably occur from welding, even with the most stringent procedures. In practice it is not practical to
remove all defects by repair, so some acceptance criteria must be used to determine which defects should be removed
and which left in place. This situation has become even more important with the advent of high strength steels, where
grinding and rewelding typically destroy the controlled microstructure; repair may create more damage than leaving
the defect in.
In the last decades, there has been a move away from “workmanship” criteria, where defects were accepted or rejected
primarily on what the inspection system could detect, to “Fitness-For-Service” (FFS) criteria, which are based on
Fracture Mechanics (also called Engineering Critical Assessment, or ECA). FFS uses the material toughness, crack
growth data and the component duty cycle to estimate the service life, and hence acceptable initial defect size.
Conservatism is built into the calculations by giving error margins to the inputs: toughness, growth rates and defect
measurements. Typically, FFS permits much larger defects than workmanship criteria, which reduces reject rates and
costs. However for FFS, it is essential to accurately and reliably measure the key defect parameter: defect
height.
In the 1980s, nuclear was the leading industry investigating defect sizing, with FFS starting in this industry. Since
the arrival of automated ultrasonics in the gas pipeline industry [1], AUT is becoming the inspection method of
choice due to FFS. The use of AUT and FFS in the pipeline industry has significantly lowered reject rates (though
this is partially due to the ability of AUT to perform process control).
For several decades, the prime pipeline weld inspection technique was radiography, based on workmanship criteria.
Besides the obvious safety hazards, one major deficiency of radiography is its inability to measure defect height,
thereby eliminating FFS as an option. In the last couple of decades, ultrasonics has become more prevalent;
ultrasonics does offer the potential of measuring defect height, but this is a difficult measurement in practice, and
fraught with errors. There are two main approaches: amplitude-based and diffraction-based. These are discussed
below. |
Amplitude vs. Diffraction |
Amplitude Techniques
Early defect sizing approaches were based on the amplitude of the returned signal, and correlating it with an
equivalent machined reflector such as a notch or side-drilled hole. However, correlation between defect size and
amplitude has been poor [2]; this is not a surprise, given the number of variables from the material, equipment and
defect itself. The material has potential velocity and microstructural variations, especially steels; the equipment
has potential amplitude variations due to the type of pulser, frequency band, cabling, and other inherent electrical
parameters.
Perhaps the biggest variable is the defect itself. Ultrasonics is highly sensitive to defect orientation; also,
transparency, roughness, curvature, location play a role. Conventional ultrasonics is particularly unreliable for
vertical defects, though using appropriate inspection angles seems to improve amplitude criteria [3]. The German DGS
technique compares defect amplitudes with those from a known reflector [4]; this gives a defect “not smaller than a
machined reflector”, which is not useful for FFS. All in all, amplitude-based sizing techniques are generally not
reliable, certainly by the standards required by FFS.
Since the vast majority of defects are still sized by amplitude-based techniques, whether 6 dB drop-off, 10 dB or 20
dB [5], a couple of general comments from field experts are appropriate. First, “any defect smaller than the beam
tends to be sized as the beam width”. This occurs because small defects tend to be omni-directional emitters, so
small defects tend to emit anywhere inside the beam. However, small defects tend not to be structurally important in
most cases, so the background data on small defect sizing is limited [6]. Second, “small defects tend to be
oversized, and large defects undersized” [7]. The “small defects-oversizing situation” is easily understood from
omni-directional emitting and beam spread. However, the “large defects-undersizing” is of more concern. This
situation can easily occur if the defect is curved, for example, so a fixed angle transducer beam will roll off the
edges, giving lower amplitude and size measurement. Undersizing large defects is potentially a major concern for
structural integrity.
Diffraction Approaches
In the late 1970’s, Silk at Harwell [8] developed a sizing (and detection) technique called Time-Of-Flight
Diffraction (TOFD). This technique used low-amplitude diffracted waves from defect tips to size defects, and proved
to be significantlymore accurate than amplitude criteria. The basic principle of TOFD is shown in Figure 1.
The diffraction phenomenon is quite general in ultrasonics, and a number of alternative diffraction techniques have
been developed with their own advantages and disadvantages. The standard TOFD technique uses a separate pulser and
receiver on either side of the weld or component, plus encoded position and computer data recording. TOFD has
significant dead zones at the OD and ID,

Figure 1: Principles of TOFD
plus interpretation issues. TOFD is also limited on the smallest defect that it can size, typically by beam ringdown
(about 3 mm for pipelines). Nonetheless, TOFD sizing results have been impressive. Figure 2 shows a comparison
between amplitude-based sizing and TOFD from the UK Defect Detection Trials [9].

Figure 2: Amplitude vs. diffraction from DDT plate 1 (top: all sizing techniques, bottom: TOFD only).
Various alternative diffraction approaches have been developed, including back diffraction and mixed mode
transducers. As well, other techniques based on amplitude and signals have been tried: frequency analysis [10],
pattern recognition, HOLOSAFT [11]. In general, none of these latter techniques have become commercial, though back
diffraction is frequently used.
Back diffraction uses a single transducer to pulse and detect diffracted signals. This makes the system much simpler,
and permits manual operation. However, the physics of back diffraction is weaker than forward diffraction, and
identifying the diffracted tip signals can be difficult. Nonetheless, back diffraction offers similar accuracies to
TOFD [12], and has advantages for sizing small defects (down to 0.5 mm in pipelines) with smaller dead zones [13].
The basic approach is shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3: Back diffraction for defect
sizing.
Nuclear Sizing Studies
While many industries have been interested in defect sizing capabilities [14], the nuclear industry performed major
studies to determine defect detection and sizing capabilities. Two major round robins were PISC II and DDT. The PISC
II trial in particular was global, with around fifty teams inspecting four components with about two hundred defects
[7]. The size and scope of this study permitted good statistical analysis of the results, sizing accuracy and defect
analysis. Not surprisingly, the most difficult defect to find was a smooth crack. However, sizing showed some
breakthroughs since a variety of novel techniques were tested. PISC II was the first public trial for TOFD, and the
results were encouraging [15]. Overall sizing accuracy for the UKAEA Risley team was a few millimeters on plate
hundreds of mm thick (i.e., ~ 1%).
There are significant differences between these nuclear studies and current pipeline sizing studies:
• First, the PISC II trial was enormous, permitting substantial parametric studies.
• Second, nuclear pressure vessels are an order of magnitude thicker than pipelines, though it is not
possible to increase the ultrasonic frequency in pipelines in ratio due to attenuation in the steel.
• Third, the nuclear industry uses raster TOFD and Synthetic Aperture Focusing (SAFT), which gives
somewhat improved accuracies over the petrochemical industry’s linear TOFD.
• Fourth, new technology has arrived, including better data handling, processing and display, and phased
arrays. While phased arrays do not alter the physics, they do permit multi-angle and optimized inspections.
• Fifth, pipelines routinely use highly focused transducers, which reduces the beam size, improves
signal-to-noise ratio, and minimizes spurious geometric reflections.
• Sixth, pipeline defects (d) are typically of the same height as the ultrasound wavelength (λ), which
complicates theoretical analysis.
• Seventh, PISC used ground flush surfaces, while pipelines generally have geometric reflectors from the
root and cap.
• Last, the quality required (i.e., time and money spent)is generally significantly higher for nuclear
than for pipelines. Offshore risers and tendons may be an exception.
Nonetheless, the general conclusions from the nuclear studies apply to pipelines. Pulse-echo detection and sizing
have limitations; TOFD is good for sizing (and detection) under most circumstances, but ideally both TOFD and
pulse-echo should be used [15]; sizing accuracies of a few millimeters (better with pipelines) are possible.
Pipeline Sizing Procedures and Terminology
Unlike the enormously expensive PISC II trials, the pipeline studies tend to be smaller and more fragmented. The
details on the methodology tend to be sparse, and the amount of data limited. Unfortunately, many of the pipeline
approvals and sizing studies are proprietary, and cannot be published. The list below contains some of the public
results.
For analysis procedures, pipeline operators often salami-slice the pipes to get an approximate defect size or
freeze-break the welds, unlike the meticulous metallography in PISC II. This inherently leads to some errors in
sizing and detection; no hard data is available, but metallurgical errors appear to be of the same order as claimed
sizing accuracies. Alternative techniques are freeze-breaking and sectioning at the maximum ultrasonic amplitude
(which may not be the maximum depth). Pipeline scans are usually performed once (as in the real world), and detailed
scans are not used (unlike nuclear). Pipeline sizing is often based solely on zone size as per the ASTM E-1961 code
[16], or a modified version of amplitude sizing [17]. Zone sizing is quick and approximate, not detailed like
nuclear.
Pipeline defect sizing terminology is fuzzy. Normally defect sizing accuracy is quoted as ± Y mm accuracy. The
scientific basis for the ± Y mm is not always specified, but could be:
1. The maximum error (maybe two standard deviations (σ) or 95% of the results)
2. The standard deviation σ,
3. ASME RMS value, or
4. A general error band, i.e. an “eyeball range”. Some authors specifically quote σ or RMS; in other cases, the
procedure seems to be to draw a general error band, often + 1 mm. Few published results support the maximum error
since many points lie outside the error band, though texts often imply this is the case. Unfortunately, the number of
data points in pipeline studies is generally too limited to produce meaningful statistics.
ASME RMS
ASME has a procedure for measuring sizing accuracy [18]. The formula for RMS is almost identical to the standard
deviation and sums the measurement errors (squared), divides by the number of points, then takes the square root.
The RMS error of the flaw depths should not exceed 3.2 mm.
What Do People Really Mean by Sizing Error?
Many defect error sizing plots show an error band of approximately ± 1 mm drawn on. It is the author’s opinion that
this ± 1 mm “eyeball range” is typically quoted because:
1. It is a convenient number to chose;
2. The 2 mm range roughly corresponds with the focal spot size of a focused pipeline AUT transducer, so sizing more
accurately than this is problematic;
3. The 2 mm range also corresponds to typical pipeline zone sizes and GMAW passes;
4. There may be too few data points for meaningful statistics; and
5. Most data points lie within this range, especiallyundersizing.
Physics Limitations
As the size of the defect approaches the wavelength (0.4-0.5 mm for 7.5 MHz shear waves), physics becomes an issue
for modeling defects in pipelines. (Typical pipeline defects are of the order of one weld pass, i.e., 1-3 mm.)
There are two approaches for analysis: analytical and numerical.
Analytical
Analytical approaches, typically using idealized cracks, have used Green’s theorem, Kirchoff approximations, Born
approximations and the General Theorem of Diffraction [19]. Unfortunately, all these analytical approaches use
approximations to make the equations soluble, and these approximations are not valid when the defect size is
similar to the wavelength, as for pipelines. Thus analytical theory cannot solve this problem, though obviously
ultrasonics is reflected in practice from defects with d~λ.
Numerical
Of the various methods of performing numerical assessments, ray tracing will be essentially useless with d~λ.
Finite Element Methods and Finite Difference Methods should be successful,though there are still approximations
involved. Unfortunately, both FEM and FDM are very time-consuming and expensive [20] and little work has been done
in this area.
Focal Spot Size
Another major consideration is the minimum focal spot size achievable, especially as the minimum defect size
measurable may be limited by focal spot size [6]. The theoretical focal spot size depends on aperture size,
frequency (i.e. wavelength)and focal distance. If one assumes a 16 mm aperture, 7.5 MHz and focal distance of 20 mm
in water (i.e., a very short focus),the 6 dB half-width approaches 2λ, or 1 mm. This suggests that defects cannot
be sized below + 0.5 mm [20]. This correlates with current sizing accuracies from techniques like back diffraction
[13], and optimized laboratory results [21].
In contrast, there is a school of thought on pipelines that too small a focal spot is detrimental [4, 17],
especially using amplitude approaches. However, these results indicate looser sizing accuracy compared with zone
discrimination and other approaches (see below). There are also significant limitations on amplitude techniques,
e.g., the defect must be centered in the beam, and must be smaller than the beam. The correlation between signal
amplitude and defect size is very poor (see Figure 4 for example).

Figure 4: Sample pipeline data comparing amplitude and measured defect sizing [22]
Pipeline Sizing Studies
Battelle PNL Study
In 1981, Battelle performed a nuclear pipeline detection and sizing round robin for the NRC [23] using seven
teams. This study investigated several nuclear-type materials including clad ferritic, cast and wrought
austenitics; they also investigated real defects, e.g. stress corrosion cracking. While the application,
procedures and technology are dated, and the materials different, the results did show that pipeline defect
sizing was poor, with major sizing errors.
University of Ghent Studies
In 1997, Iploca (International Pipeline and Offshore Contractors Association) funded a detection and sizing study
at the University of Ghent [4, 24]. While detection was good by both AUT crews, sizing (by one team only)
produced a standard deviation of defect sizing to within + 1.5-2 mm for surface breaking defects. This level of
sizing accuracy was later confirmed by similar privately sponsored validation projects [24]. The work done by
Ghent University also demonstrated that the sizing error of buried defects can be quite significant.
Transco Trials:
Recently, Advantica analyzed an internal study using GTI funding with seven inspection companies [25].
Approximately ninety typical defects were implanted: porosity, lack of fusion and both copper cracking and
transverse defects. While the main thrust of the trial was defect detection (which was good),the defect sizing was
not impressive. σ varied from 1.1 to 1.8 mm [26]. Errors of up to 6 mm were found, while TOFD onlyworked for
larger, buried flaws.
Shell Results
Kopp et al [27] published an internal study including defect sizing (see Figure 5). This is some of the more
comprehensive data available, and shows that there is considerable scatter within the ± 1 mm eyeball range,
plus several outlier points. There is also little undersizing, as expected. These results are typical of pipeline
data, and it is possible to superimpose several proprietary studies on this plot. The Shell data is a collection
from several programs, which complicates analysis. The paper refers to sizing accuracies of ± 0.3 mm, which is
impossible to conclude from the published data. This accuracy is predicated on a percentage of the zone size, which
is not supported by any published or known proprietary studies. Furthermore, it ignores the problems of focal spot
size, amplitude-defect correlation, and d~λ. Eyeballing the data gives a typical range of ± 1 mm accuracy.
Figure 5: Sizing data from Kopp et al.
[27]
Saipem Study
Cataldo and Legori [28] published a limited data set for DNV approval, which shows a good correlation with defect
size (see Figure 6). As with the Shell results, there is little undersizing, though some oversizing. An eyeball
range of ± 1 mm would probably not be “out of line”. The Saipem results could be easily superimposed on the Shell
results above.
One of the more interesting observations is the comparison of conventional multiprobe and phased array AUT
systems. When using the same set-up (and nominally the same calibration blocks), the differences are negligible, as
predicted by physics. Shell/Shaw [27] used multiprobe; Saipem phased array. Two other comparisons showed no
significant detection differences using the same set-ups [25, 29].
Oceaneering OIS
Oceaneering performed a DNV qualification in early 2003, which produced noticeably lower σ than Shell, Saipem or
others – σ ~ 0.6 mm. This data set contained mostly sidewall LoF, though the pipe walls were slightly thinner than
for Saipem. The actual inspection and sizing procedures were not outlined in the internal document [30]. The
results are shown in Figure 7

Figure 7 : Comparison of measured and actual defects heights from Oceaneering.
At the time of writing, it is not clear why the Oceaneering results are significantly better than others.
Oceaneering did use TOFD extensively to minimize significant oversizing (as seen in Figure 5), but otherwise used
standard procedures. Phased arrays offer significant sizing advantages (extra beams, controlled focus), and maybe
experience with phased systems has helped as much as improved procedures.
Edison Welding Institute Round Robin
Under GTI auspices, EWI performed a round robin with two pipes containing effectively twenty four LoF defects
with several inspection companies [21]. The results showed considerable variability between inspection companies,
even when using nominally identical procedures. Specifically, in the best case 45% of the defects were sized within
+ 0.5 mm, and the majority within + 2 mm (see Table 1 below).
As with the Advantica results, only about half the EWI defects could be properly analyzed with TOFD, either because
the defects were too small or too close to the surface.
Using multiple techniques and lots of time, EWI measured defects to an accuracy of + 0.6 mm (Category A6-open). The
implication is that the more techniques and effort, the better the results. This observation was supported in the
PISC II round robin for nuclear pressure vessels [7].
Acronym | Approach Description | Height sizing accuracy, average error “a” in
mm and % of detected flaws | | | a<± 0.5 mm | ±0.5>a<±2.0 mm | ±2.0>a <±4.0 mm | A1 | Focused multiprobe, amplitude linearization | 35% | 35% | 30% | A2 | Focused multiprobe, proprietary sizing algorithm | 45% | 45% | 10% | A3 | Non-focused multiprobe, zone and ampl. Rules | 30% | 45% | 25% | A4 | Focused PA, 48 el., ampl. linearization | 40% | 20% | 40% | A5 | Focused PA, 64 el., ampl. linearization | 15% | 35% | 50% | A6 | Focused PA, 64 el., sectorial scanning | 25% | 25% | 50% | A6
open | Focused PA, 32 el., raster and sectorial | 75% | 25% | n/a |
Table 1: EWI table 2, “Achieved Sizing Accuracy” [21]
Det Norske Veritas
Studies by DNV on defect sizing using one amplitude-based and one TOFD-based data set showed an atypically low σ
[22]. Undersizing was minimal, and the systematic error was small in both cases, ~ 0.1 mm, as with other studies.
The standard deviation was ±0.41 for one data set and ± 0.62 for the other set. These results showed a
significantly lower error than most, approximately one third of some other values, though comparable with the
Oceaneering results. However, Oceaneering only supplied 88 points, while DNV uses 204. Figure 8 is an
agglomeration of a number of studies, and no details are available, so conclusions on optimum techniques and
procedures are difficult [31]. This difference may be due to analysis, process or statistical treatment. Another
low σ obtained from laboratory results from EWI above is due to multiple techniques and considerable time and
effort [21]. Improved results can be expected from such a detailed inspection [6]. Perhaps the most impressive
results come from the Oceaneering data using standard equipment [30].
Figure 8: DNV sizing results [22]
R/D Tech Data
R/D Tech has some early proprietary sizing data that could be overlaid on Figures 5-8 without significant
distortion. The features are similar: some scatter (within an eyeball range of ± 1 mm), limited undersizing and
some significant oversizing,low mean sizing error. In practice, an RMS analysis of the sizing accuracy using the
ASME approach gave a value of over ± 1.1 to 1.7 mm, depending on the actual data set used (ASTM zones, modified
zones, TOFD and combinations). The combined techniques gave better results (smaller σ) than simple zones. This data
set also showed that TOFD for pipelines was limited, and typically only half the defect sizes could be directly
measured by standard TOFD.
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Discussion |
In practice, with the exception of the Oceaneering and EWI results, the available data seems to be fairly
self-consistent, with the RMS and σ typically over 1 mm. Much of the data can be overlaid without serious distortion,
suggesting that the key issue is technology limits, not operator experience or equipment. Mean error is typically
well below 1 mm, with limited undersizing. At this point in time, most evidence suggests that sizing accuracies
greater than σ ± 1 mm are not realistic. The proprietary R/D Tech data set suggests that an “eyeball range” of ± 1 mm
is really an RMS or standard deviation of <± 1 mm. However, the data is not strictlycomparable since test
conditions vary, AUT procedures are not identical, sectioning varies, etc. Generally, mean sizing error is small,
typically close to zero mm.
Diffraction techniques offer a lot more potential than amplitude techniques, though TOFD in particular has
limitations with the smaller defects (and the near surface defects). Relying on amplitude techniques alone will
typicallylimit sizing accuracy to the focal spot diameter (~2 mm, or the eyeball range of ± 1 mm as found in recent
studies), with frequent outliers. Apportioning amplitudes does not improve σ values much. Undersizing is generally
not a major issue. In principle, TOFD should minimize the number of gross overcalls.
Current requests for defect sizing to ± 0.3 mm accuracy in plant (again, terminology undefined) seem unrealistic from
these published results. There is no evidence that unpublished (or proprietary) results show any significant
improvement. On nuclear materials using much shorter λ and perfect geometry, repeatable accuracies of ± 0.1 mm have
been achieved [32]. However, such ultrasonic frequencies are impossible in ferritic steels, which are more
microstructurally-limited. Though some work has been done on the limits of ultrasonics in steels [33], more should be
done specifically on pipeline materials and AUT conditions.
From an FFS perspective, the best solution with current technology is to add ± 1 mm to ±1.5 mm to all sizing
estimates for conservatism; this should cover any undersizing. For larger defects, the best solution is to use more
than one technique to avoid the gross oversizing (5 mm or more) that can occur [22]; typically use zone
discrimination, TOFD, back diffraction, and multiple angles [6] if time permits (especiallyfor risers and
tendons).
Unfortunately, in-service inspections are probably significantly worse than laboratory round-robins. The good news is
that more recent results (Oceaneering and EWI) are notably better than earlier results (Shell and Advantica).
Fortunately, work is underway on alternative and improved sizing techniques. R/D Tech is working on a number of
fruitful areas:
1. Back Diffraction [13]: This technique offers potential for measuring defects down to ± 0.5 mm, though it has not
been proved in trials. The main problems are correct signal identification and ring-time resolution.
2. TOFD Signal Processing [34]: This technique deconvolves the TOFD signals to permit smaller defects to be sized.
Initial results are encouraging, but like all DSP techniques, misfiring is possible.
3. Improved Focusing [35]: An increased number of elements and matrix array should decrease the focal spot size, and
produce improved sizing accuracy.
There are doubtless other developments going on elsewhere in the world. |
Conclusions |
1. Pipeline AUT defect sizing is becoming more critical with the increasing use of
Fitness-For-Purpose, especially for offshore risers and tendons.
2. Generally, TOFD gives better sizing than amplitude methods, though TOFD is severely limited for small
and near-surface defects.
3. The few pipeline studies available show fairly consistent results, despite differences in processes.
With one or two exceptions, there is a consistent range of accuracies, though better knowledge of the processes may
explain some of this.
4. Studies consistently show a trend to oversizing, not undersizing, which is understandable for small
defects.
5. The pipeline industry does not use rigorous data analysis or terminology, as done in the nuclear
industry, so quoted accuracies are often undefined as an eyeball range, standard deviation, RMS, approximation or
whatever.
6. Mean sizing error is small, typically well below 1 mm, with a random sizing error.
7. Most studies show sizing errors falling within an eyeball range of ± 1 mm or so; σ varies up to ± 2
mm, with several outliers, depending on defects, conditions etc.
8. There is no published evidence that accuracies of ± 0.3 mm in the field are achievable today.
9. Fortunately, there are a number of improved techniques on the agenda, which should improve sizing
significantly.
|
Acknowledgements |
Mr. Ed Ginzel of Materials Research Institute, Waterloo, Ontario provided valuable advice and assistance.
Oceaneering OIS provided proprietary data submitted to DNV. |
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[35] GTI, 2003, Gas Technology Institute Project “Control of Horizontal Beam Width with Phased Array Transducers
RPTG-0334”, by R/D Tech. |
Products used for this application
PipeWIZARD | R/D Tech PipeWIZARD system is the most advanced and powerful mechanized ultrasonic test system available to the pipeline deployment industry. |   |
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