Publication | Closed Access
Ultrasonic inspection of austenitic welds
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References
1976
Year
Unknown Venue
Materials ScienceFriction WeldingEngineeringUltrasonicsCorrosionFibre TextureMechanical EngineeringWelding ProcessX-ray DiffractionHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelUltrasoundUltrasonic InspectionCompression WavesMicrostructureMetallography
Optical and X-ray metallography combined with ultrasonic testing by compression waves was used for inspection of stainless steel weld metal produced by three different welding techniques. X-ray diffraction showed that each weld possessed a characteristic fibre textured structure which was shown by optical microscopy to be parallel to columnar grain boundaries. Metallographic evidence suggested that the development of fibre texture is due to the mechanism of competitive growth. From observations made as a result of optical metallographic examination the orientation of the fibre axis could be predicted if the weld geometry and welding procedure were known. Ultrasonic velocity and attenuation measurements as a continuous function of grain orientation, made on cylinders machined from weld samples, showed that attenuation was strongly orientation dependent. It was concluded that the sensitivity of ultrasonic inspection to small defects is unlikely to be as high for austenitic welds as for ferritic even when transmission is improved by modifying the welding procedure to improve the ultrasonic transmission.