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Electrical Conductivity and Resistivity for Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys

Eddy current inspection

 is often used to detect corrosion

erosion

, cracking and other changes in tubing. Heat exchangers and steam generators, which are used in power plants, have thousands of tubes that must be prevented from leaking. This is especially important in nuclear power plants where reused, contaminated water must be prevented from mixing with fresh water that will be returned to the environment. The contaminated water flows on one side of the tube (inside or outside) and the fresh water flows on the other side. The heat is transferred from the contaminated water to the fresh water and the fresh water is then returned back to is source, which is usually a lake or river. It is very important to keep the two water sources from mixing, so power plants are periodically shutdown so the tubes and other equipment can be inspected and repaired. The eddy current

 test method and the related remote field testing method provide high-speed inspection techniques for these applications.

standards are used to understand what differnt defects' signals look like.A technique that is often used involves feeding a differential bobbin probe

 into the individual tube of the heat exchanger. With the differential probe

, no signal

 will be seen on the eddy current

 instrument as long as no metal

 thinning is present. When metal

 thinning is present, a loop

 will be seen on the impedance plane

 as one coil

 of the differential probe

 passes over the flawed area and a second loop

 will be produced when the second coil

 passes over the damage. When the corrosion

 is on the outside surface of the tube, the depth of corrosion

 is indicated by a shift in the phase lag

. The size of the indication

 provides an indication

 of the total extent of the corrosion

 damage.

A tube inspection using a bobbin probe

 is simulated below. Click the “null” button and then drag either the absolute

 or the differential probe

 through the tube. Note the different signal

 responses provided by the two probes. Also note that the absolute

 probe

 is much more sensitive to dings and the build up of magnetite on the outside of the tube than the differential probe

 is.

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