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Tutorial: NDT Method Selection for Weld Inspection — A Decision Framework

📅 March 25, 2026 ⏱ 45 min read 👤 metallurgyzone 🏷 defect detection   NDT selection   PAUT  
March 25, 2026 · 14 min read · Tutorials

Tutorial: NDT Method Selection for Weld Inspection — UT, RT, MT, PT, PAUT, TOFD Decision Framework

Selecting the correct non-destructive testing (NDT) method for a weld inspection is one of the most consequential engineering decisions in quality assurance. The wrong choice can leave critical defects undetected — missed lack-of-fusion flaws that radiography routinely fails to detect, or surface-breaking stress corrosion cracks invisible to a volumetric ultrasonic scan. Every NDT method has a distinct physical basis, a characteristic set of detectable defect types, a required access geometry, material constraints, applicable code requirements, and a specific sensitivity threshold below which defects become undetectable. This tutorial provides the systematic decision framework needed to match the right method — or combination of methods — to the inspection requirement, from the first principles of each technique through to code-specific acceptance criteria and personnel certification requirements.

Key Takeaways
  • No single NDT method detects all defect types: the fundamental physics of each method determines what it can and cannot find. UT and PAUT detect planar defects reliably; RT detects volumetric defects reliably; MT and PT detect surface-breaking defects only.
  • Defect orientation is critical for UT: a planar crack parallel to the sound beam (lack of fusion in a T-joint) may produce zero reflection; angling the beam perpendicular to the crack plane is essential for reliable detection.
  • PAUT (Phased Array UT) has largely replaced conventional manual UT and RT for structural weld inspection in pressure equipment under ASME Section V, as it provides faster scanning, better coverage documentation, and direct through-wall sizing of defects.
  • TOFD provides the most accurate through-wall height sizing of defects (±1–2 mm) and is mandated or preferred for fracture-mechanics fitness-for-service assessments where the initial defect size must be tightly bounded.
  • Magnetic particle inspection (MT) is mandatory for ferritic welds in most pressure vessel and structural codes for detecting surface and near-surface defects; it is inapplicable to austenitic stainless steels, aluminium, and copper alloys.
  • NDT personnel certification level (I, II, or III per SNT-TC-1A, ASME CP-189, or EN ISO 9712) governs who can perform, interpret, and accept examinations under code-qualified inspection procedures.
NDT Method Selection Decision Tool
Answer 6 questions • Get prioritised method recommendations • Code guidance included
Q1. What type of defect are you primarily trying to detect?
Q2. What is the base material?
Q3. What is the material / weld thickness?
Q4. What is the inspection access situation?
Q5. What is the governing inspection code / standard?
Q6. Is radiation use acceptable on site?
NDT Method Schematic — Weld Inspection Cross-Sections UT Conventional UT Angle beam, pulse-echo ASME Sec V Art. 4 X Film / DR panel RT / DR Radiographic testing ASME Sec V Art. 2 MT Magnetic particle ASME Sec V Art. 7 Penetrant PT Dye penetrant ASME Sec V Art. 6 S-scan PAUT Phased Array UT — S-scan ASME Sec V Art. 4 App VI Tx Rx Lateral wave TOFD Time-of-Flight Diffraction ASME Sec V Art. 4 App III Schematic cross-sections showing probe/source placement, beam path, defect interaction, and detection principle for each NDT method. © metallurgyzone.com
Fig. 1 — Schematic comparison of six NDT methods applied to a butt weld cross-section. Top row, left to right: UT angle beam (blue) detecting subsurface planar defect by reflection; RT/DR (orange) with X-ray source detecting volumetric defects by differential attenuation; MT (green yoke) with surface crack detected by flux leakage (amber indication); PT (purple) with dye penetrant bleeding from surface-breaking crack. Bottom row: PAUT (red array probe) producing an S-scan image showing planar LOF defect; TOFD (blue Tx, green Rx) with lateral wave, diffracted tip signals from upper and lower defect tips, and backwall echo (amber). © metallurgyzone.com

The Six Principal NDT Methods: Physics and Capabilities

UT
Ultrasonic Testing
Subsurface cracks, LOF, LOP,
laminations, inclusions
ASME Sec V Art. 4 | AWS D1.1 Annex S | ISO 17640 | SNT-TC-1A Level II required
RT
Radiographic Testing
Porosity, slag, tungsten, burn-through;
crack only if oriented favourably
ASME Sec V Art. 2 | AWS D1.1 | API 1104 | RT Level II + radiation licence
MT
Magnetic Particle Testing
Surface & near-surface cracks;
ferritic materials only (<3 mm depth)
ASME Sec V Art. 7 | AWS D1.1 | ISO 17638 | SNT-TC-1A Level I/II
PT
Penetrant Testing
Surface-breaking defects only;
all non-porous materials
ASME Sec V Art. 6 | AWS D1.1 | ISO 3452 | SNT-TC-1A Level I/II
ET
Eddy Current Testing
Surface & near-surface cracks in conductive
materials; tubing, thin walls
ASME Sec V Art. 8 | ASTM E243 | ISO 17922 | SNT-TC-1A Level II
PAUT
/ TOFD
Phased Array UT / Time-of-Flight Diffraction
Full volumetric: planar, LOF, cracks;
TOFD gives accurate through-wall sizing
ASME Sec V Art. 4 App III & VI | ISO 13588 | AWS D1.1 Alt. Req. | Level III qualification

NDT Method Capability Matrix

Defect Type UT (angle) RT / DR MT PT PAUT TOFD ET
Surface-breaking cracks MMYYYM*Y
Near-surface cracks (<3 mm) YMYNYM*Y
Subsurface cracks / LOF YMNNYYN
Porosity (volumetric) MYNNYMN
Slag / tungsten inclusions MYNNYMN
Lack of fusion (planar) YMNNYYN
Laminations / delaminations YMYNYYY
Through-wall sizing MNNNYYN
Austenitic SS welds MYNYMMY
Coating / insulation through YNNNYYM

Y = Generally effective | M = Method-dependent / limited applicability | N = Not applicable | *TOFD has near-surface dead zone (lateral wave region) of typically 6–15 mm depth.

Detailed Method Physics and Selection Factors

Ultrasonic Testing (UT): Angle Beam and Straight Beam

Ultrasonic testing transmits high-frequency sound waves (typically 1–10 MHz for weld inspection) into the material through a piezoelectric transducer coupled to the work surface with a couplant gel. The fundamental detection mechanism is acoustic impedance mismatch: when a sound wave encounters a boundary between two materials with different acoustic impedance (Z = ρ × c, where ρ is density and c is sound velocity), a portion of the energy is reflected. Defects (cracks, voids, inclusions) present such boundaries and produce reflected signals detected by the same (pulse-echo) or a separate (pitch-catch) transducer.

Key UT physical relationships:

Acoustic impedance:
  Z = ρ × c   (kg/m²s = Rayls)
  Z_steel ≈ 46 MRayl,  Z_aluminium ≈ 17 MRayl,  Z_water ≈ 1.5 MRayl

Reflection coefficient (normal incidence):
  R = (Z₂ − Z₁)² / (Z₂ + Z₁)²
  R for steel/air = (46×10⁶ − 0)² / (46×10⁶ + 0)² ≈ 1.0  (total reflection)
  → Cracks (air-filled) reflect essentially 100% of incident energy

Wavelength (governs minimum detectable defect size):
  λ = c / f
  For 5 MHz in steel (c = 5920 m/s): λ = 5920/5×10⁶ = 1.18 mm
  Minimum detectable defect ≈ λ/2 = 0.6 mm at 5 MHz

Snell's law at wedge-material interface:
  sinθ₂ / sinθ₁ = c₂ / c₁
  → For plastic wedge (c₁≈2350 m/s) and steel (c₂≈5920 m/s):
     θ₁ = 24.3° → θ₂ = 45° shear wave in steel  (most common angle for welds)
     θ₁ = 30.9° → θ₂ = 60° shear wave
     θ₁ = 38.5° → θ₂ = 70° shear wave

Skip distance (S) for single-V path:
  S = 2T × tanθ   (T = material thickness, θ = refracted angle)
  → Scan position relative to weld centre must cover this geometry
The orientation problem for UT: A planar defect (crack, LOF) returns maximum signal when the sound beam is perpendicular to the defect plane. A defect parallel to the beam may return a signal reduced by 20–40 dB relative to a perpendicular target — potentially below the detection threshold. This is the fundamental reason that RT alone is inadequate for detecting vertical planar defects in T-joints (lack of side-wall fusion), and why multiple scanning angles are required for comprehensive UT coverage. PAUT resolves this by simultaneously insonifying the weld from multiple angles in a single sweep.

Radiographic Testing (RT) and Digital Radiography (DR)

RT uses ionising radiation (X-rays from an electrical source, or gamma rays from radioactive isotopes such as Ir-192, Se-75, or Co-60) to expose a film or digital detector positioned behind the component. Defects are detected because they attenuate the radiation differently from the surrounding sound metal: voids and cracks transmit more radiation (appear darker on film); inclusions and tungsten deposits may attenuate more (appear lighter). The fundamental limitation of RT is that it produces a two-dimensional projected image of a three-dimensional volume: a planar defect oriented parallel to the radiation beam may produce little or no image contrast and will be missed.

RT key parameters:

Linear attenuation coefficient μ:
  I = I₀ × exp(−μt)   (radiation intensity through thickness t)
  μ_steel ≈ 24 cm⁻¹ (for 200 kV X-rays)

Inherent sensitivity (minimum detectable defect):
  2% of wall thickness (minimum) per ASME Sec V Art. 2 / ASTM E94
  → 2% of 25 mm = 0.5 mm minimum detectable through-wall extent
  → Planar defects must be oriented within ±15° of beam direction to be detected

Image quality indicators (IQI/Penetrameters):
  Wire type (EN 462-1 / ASTM E747): wire diameters from W1 (0.032mm) to W19 (3.2mm)
  Essential wire = minimum visible wire defining radiographic sensitivity
  Hole type (ASME BPVC): 2% thickness penetrameter with 2T or 4T holes

Isotope selection vs. material thickness:
  Se-75 (300 keV):      4–40 mm steel
  Ir-192 (612 keV avg): 12–100 mm steel (most common pipeline/vessel work)
  Co-60 (1.25 MeV):     50–200 mm steel (heavy sections)

Magnetic Particle Inspection (MT)

MT is applicable only to ferromagnetic materials (carbon steel, low-alloy steel, some duplex stainless steels) and detects surface-breaking and near-surface defects by the principle of flux leakage. When a magnetic field is applied to a ferromagnetic component, a discontinuity at or near the surface disrupts the flux path and causes flux to leak from the component surface at the discontinuity. Magnetic particles (dry powder or fluorescent wet particles in suspension) are attracted to the flux leakage region, forming a visible indication of the defect location. The technique is highly sensitive for surface-breaking cracks — detectable even when the crack is tightly closed — provided the magnetic field direction is within 45–90° of the crack orientation. At least two magnetisation directions 90° apart are required for complete coverage.

Dye Penetrant Testing (PT)

PT exploits capillary action to detect surface-breaking defects in any non-porous material regardless of magnetic properties. The process sequence (ASME Sec V Art. 6) is: (1) surface cleaning; (2) penetrant application and dwell time (10–30 minutes for visible dye, 5–10 minutes for fluorescent); (3) excess penetrant removal; (4) developer application; (5) inspection under white light (visible) or UV light (fluorescent); (6) post-inspection cleaning. PT is quantitatively less sensitive than MT for near-surface defects but is universally applicable to all non-porous materials including austenitic stainless steels, aluminium, titanium, and ceramics, where MT cannot be used.

Phased Array Ultrasonic Testing (PAUT)

PAUT uses an array of piezoelectric elements (typically 16–128 elements) that can be individually activated with controlled time delays to electronically steer and focus the ultrasonic beam without moving the probe. This enables real-time generation of multiple beam angles (a sectorial or “S-scan” sweeping from e.g. 40°–70°) in a single probe position, providing simultaneous coverage of the full weld cross-section volume. Combined with encoder-controlled linear scanning, PAUT produces a full volumetric record of the weld that can be post-processed, analysed off-line, and archived for future comparison — replacing the subjective strip-chart record of conventional manual UT.

PAUT beam steering (phased array principle):

Time delay for steering angle θ in an array with element pitch d:
  Δt_n = n × d × sinθ / c   (n = element number from 1 to N)

Focal depth F (for focusing):
  F controls depth of maximum amplitude response
  F = N × d² / (4λ) (approx. for unfocused → focused in Fresnel zone)

Advantages over conventional UT:
  1. Single probe position covers multiple angles → faster scanning
  2. S-scan image provides defect sizing directly in 2D cross-section view
  3. Full encoded waveform data stored → reproducible, auditable record
  4. Beam focusing improves resolution at depth
  5. Eliminates need for multiple probe changeovers during manual UT

Required qualification (ASME):
  - Procedure qualification per Appendix VI to Article 4 (Section V)
  - PDI (Performance Demonstration Initiative) qualification for critical applications
  - Level II minimum for examination; Level III for procedure development

Time-of-Flight Diffraction (TOFD)

TOFD is a specialised UT technique using two probes straddling the weld: one transmitter (Tx) and one receiver (Rx), both inclined at an angle to maximise lateral-wave coverage and diffraction signal detection. Unlike pulse-echo UT, TOFD detects diffracted signals from defect tips rather than reflected signals from defect faces, making it essentially orientation-independent for linear defects. The through-wall height of a defect is measured directly from the time-of-flight difference between the upper and lower tip diffraction signals:

TOFD defect sizing:

Depth to upper tip:
  d_upper = √[(t_upper × c/2)² − (s/2)²]

Depth to lower tip:
  d_lower = √[(t_lower × c/2)² − (s/2)²]

Defect height:
  h = d_lower − d_upper

Where:
  t_upper = time of arrival of upper tip diffraction signal
  t_lower = time of arrival of lower tip diffraction signal
  c = longitudinal wave velocity ≈ 5920 m/s (steel)
  s = probe separation (Tx-Rx centre-to-centre distance)

Sizing accuracy:  ±1–2 mm through-wall height (vs. ±3–5 mm for conventional UT)

TOFD dead zones:
  Near-surface dead zone (lateral wave region): ~3–15 mm depth from surface
  → PAUT or MT/PT required for surface zone coverage
  Near-backwall dead zone: ~3–8 mm from backwall
  → Additional backwall scans or PAUT required

TOFD + PAUT combination is the standard practice for:
  - ASME Code Case 2235 (alternative to RT for fusion welds)
  - EN ISO 13588 (advanced UT of austenitic materials)
  - API 1104 Section 9 alternative examination

Code Requirements and Acceptance Criteria

Code / Standard Governing NDT Articles Acceptance Basis Key UT Acceptance Criteria RT Acceptance Criteria
ASME BPVC Section VIII Div.1Section V Arts. 2, 4, 6, 7; UW-11Flaw size vs. code limits (workmanship)UW-52: UT of welds — 6 dB drop from DAC for indications; length per UW-51 for rejectionUW-51: No cracks/LOF; porosity per ASME Appendix 4; rounded indications per Fig. UW-51
ASME B31.3 Process PipingChapter VI; refers to Sec VWorkmanship; E&P-based for critical345.4: Indications >3/4T or >19 mm rejected; depth per 344.6344.5: No linear indications; rounded per Table 341.3.2
AWS D1.1 Structural WeldingClause 6; Annex S (PAUT)Workmanship (UT) / Fracture mechanics (EWI)6.13: Reject if reflector dB level at sensitivity > rejection criteria per Table 6.2/6.3 (size + angle)6.12: No cracks; porosity per Fig. 6.1; undercut limits
API 1104 PipelinesSection 9 (RT, UT), 11 (alt.)Workmanship; ECA per Annex A9.5: Rejection based on signal response and indication length vs. wall thickness9.3: No cracks; porosity, slag per density and dimension limits; incomplete fusion rejected
EN 13480 Pressure PipingChapter 14; refs EN ISO 17640 (UT) 5817 (weld levels)Quality levels B, C, or D per EN ISO 5817Level B: highest quality; most stringent flaw size limitsEN ISO 10675: Acceptance levels per quality class
API 579 / BS 7910 (FFS)Level 1, 2, or 3 assessmentFracture mechanics (KI vs. Kmat, fatigue crack growth)TOFD or PAUT sizing required; input as initial flaw size a₀ in crack growth calculationRT generally insufficient for FFS — PAUT/TOFD required for planar defect sizing

ASME Code Case 2235: Alternative to RT Using UT

ASME Code Case 2235 (and its subsequent revisions) allows the use of ultrasonic examination as an alternative to radiographic examination for fusion welds in pressure vessels under Section VIII, provided: (1) the UT procedure is qualified by demonstrating detection of representative defects in a test block representative of the production weld geometry; (2) the examination uses encoded scanning (mechanised) with full data recording; (3) the procedure has been qualified by a PDI (Performance Demonstration Initiative) blind test demonstrating the required probability of detection. Code Case 2235 was a pivotal development that enabled the transition from RT to PAUT+TOFD in heavy-wall pressure vessel fabrication, where RT is impractical for thick sections and provides no sizing capability for planar defects.

PAUT vs. TOFD vs. RT: A Direct Comparison

Parameter PAUT (Phased Array UT) TOFD RT (Iridium-192)
Primary detection mechanismPulse-echo reflection from defectDiffraction from defect tipsX-ray/gamma attenuation differential
Best defect typePlanar defects (LOF, cracks), volumetricAny linear defect with identifiable tipsVolumetric defects (porosity, slag)
Worst defect typeNear-surface defects (dead zone)Near-surface (lateral wave); small scattered defectsPlanar defects parallel to beam; thin cracks
Through-wall sizing accuracy±1–3 mm (amplitude-based)±1–2 mm (time-based — most accurate)Not possible (2D projection only)
Surface access requirementOne surface onlyOne surface only (two probes straddling)Source one side, detector other side
Radiation hazardNoneNoneExclusion zone required; licence needed
Couplant requiredYes (gel)Yes (gel)No
Scanning speed (typical)0.3–1.0 m/min0.3–0.8 m/min5–30 min/shot setup + 2–5 min exposure per film
Data storage / retrievabilityFull encoded waveform (1–10 GB/m)Full A-scan data (1–5 GB/m)Film (deteriorates) or DR digital file
Applicable code (ASME)Sec V Art. 4 App VI (2011+)Sec V Art. 4 App IIISec V Art. 2
Austenitic SS weldsChallenging (coarse grain scattering)Challenging; 1–2 MHz requiredExcellent performance
Relative cost per m of weldHigh capital; low marginal cost (encoded)High capital; low marginal costMedium (film) to high (isotope logistics)
Worked Case Study — NDT Method Selection for a 600 mm OD / 40 mm Wall Carbon Steel Pressure Vessel Circumferential Seam

Scenario

A pressure vessel fabricated from SA-516 Grade 70 carbon steel, 600 mm OD, 40 mm wall thickness, operating at 120 bar steam service. The weld procedure (WPS) is GTAW root + SMAW fill/cap. The applicable code is ASME Section VIII Division 1. The client requests the most rigorous volumetric examination consistent with code requirements, and is specifically concerned about lack-of-sidewall-fusion (LOF) due to the narrow-gap joint design.

Step 1: Code Requirement

Under ASME Section VIII Div.1, UW-11(a), full radiographic examination is required for Category A (circumferential seam) welds in this service classification. The code nominally requires RT, but Code Case 2235 permits UT as an alternative if qualified. Given the client’s stated concern about LOF, the decision is made to qualify PAUT + TOFD under Code Case 2235.

Step 2: Defect Type Analysis

For GTAW root + SMAW fill, the critical defect types are: (1) LOF at sidewall (planar, vertical) — RT detection probability is low because the defect plane is nearly parallel to the radiation beam in a circumferential seam; PAUT with 45–70° beams is optimal; (2) porosity and slag (volumetric) — PAUT S-scan detects these; (3) root crack — TOFD lateral-wave dead zone may affect near-root sizing, supplemented by PAUT near-surface scan; (4) surface-breaking cracks after cap — MT applied to all accessible weld surfaces after PAUT/TOFD.

Step 3: Technique Design

PAUT configuration: 16-element probe at 5 MHz, 55°–70° S-scan covering the half-thickness (0–20 mm), and a separate 40°–60° S-scan for the lower half-thickness (20–40 mm), with calibration on SDHs at T/4, T/2, and 3T/4 depth in a calibration block of the same nominal SA-516 Gr.70 material and weld crown geometry. TOFD configuration: 2 MHz 70° probes with 120 mm separation, covering 5–35 mm depth (accepting lateral-wave dead zone 0–5 mm); PAUT covers the 0–8 mm zone. Linear encoding at 1 mm/pulse. MT examination (DC yoke, wet fluorescent) applied to all weld surfaces before and after post-weld heat treatment.

Step 4: Acceptance Criteria

PAUT: Any indication exceeding the DAC (distance-amplitude correction) by 6 dB or more is rejectable. Length of indication and through-wall extent are measured and compared to UW-51 limits (no cracks; length limits for other indications per Table). TOFD: Any defect with measured height >3 mm through-wall extent and length >12 mm at any depth is evaluated against fracture mechanics (API 579 Level 2) and rejected if KI exceeds Kmat at the design loading. MT: No linear indications; rounded indications per ASME Sec V Art. 7.

Outcome

During examination of 24 circumferential seams, PAUT detected three LOF indications in one seam, all in the upper third of the weld (20–28 mm from OD surface), ranging from 15–35 mm length. TOFD confirmed the through-wall extent as 3–5 mm. RT of the same seam showed no reportable indications — confirming the known weakness of RT for planar defects in this orientation. The LOF indications exceeded Code Case 2235 length acceptance criteria and were repaired by excavation and rewelding, with successful requalification by PAUT + TOFD.

NDT Personnel Certification and Quality System Requirements

NDT examination results are only as valid as the personnel performing and interpreting them. All major codes specify minimum certification levels for NDT personnel based on the SNT-TC-1A (ASNT) framework, ASME CP-189, or EN ISO 9712 depending on jurisdiction. The three levels define progressively increasing capability and authority:

NDT Certification Level Summary (SNT-TC-1A / ASME CP-189):

Level I:
  Qualified to perform specific calibrated NDT operations
  Must work under direct supervision of Level II or III
  Cannot independently interpret or accept results
  Training: 40 hours minimum (UT), examination, practical test
  Experience: 400 hours minimum on-the-job experience

Level II:
  Qualified to set up, calibrate, and perform examinations independently
  Interprets and evaluates indications against applicable acceptance criteria
  Prepares written examination reports
  Can train and supervise Level I
  Training: 80 hours minimum (UT); 40 hours additional for PAUT/TOFD specialty
  Experience: 800 hours minimum; medical vision acuity (Jaeger J1 near-vision)

Level III:
  Qualified to establish procedures, interpret codes, and designate methods
  Approves written examination procedures for use under ASME/API codes
  Qualifies procedures and personnel
  Can prepare and review NDT reports submitted to AIJ (Authorised Inspection Agency)
  Training: Level II experience + Level III general, specific, and practical exams
  No minimum hours specified by SNT-TC-1A, but typically 4+ years Level II experience

For ASME-stamped equipment:
  - NDT procedures must be approved by an ASME-certified Level III
  - AI (Authorised Inspector) from the AIA (Authorised Inspection Agency, typically
    an insurance company holding ASME Certificate of Authorisation) must witness
    or accept examination records
  - NDE manual must document procedure number, revision, and personnel qualification
PDI (Performance Demonstration Initiative) for ASME Section XI and Code Case 2235: For nuclear power plant in-service inspection (ASME Section XI) and for Code Case 2235 alternative UT, procedures and personnel must demonstrate performance by a blind test on a set of flawed specimens (the PDI programme). The PDI requirement goes significantly beyond paper qualification: it verifies that the actual combination of equipment, procedure, and personnel can detect the specified flaw population with the required probability of detection. Only laboratories accredited by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) NDE Centre can administer PDI qualifications. A PAUT+TOFD procedure passing PDI qualification gives regulators, clients, and code inspectors confidence that exceeds conventional personnel certification alone.
PAUT S-Scan Display and TOFD B-Scan: Defect Detection and Sizing PAUT S-Scan (Sectorial Scan) 40mm plate, 45°–70° sweep, 5 MHz 0 10 20 30 40mm Depth (mm) Cap surface (geometry echo) Backwall echo (40 mm) LOF 45° 70° PAUT LOF detected depth: 28–33 mm TOFD B-Scan 2 MHz, 120 mm separation Lateral wave Backwall echo Upper tip Lower tip h = 3.5 mm Depth / Time Scan position (mm) → 0 ~20 40mm
Fig. 2 — Left: PAUT S-scan (sectorial scan) display for a 40 mm thick carbon steel plate, showing the probe (red rectangle), scan fan from 45° to 70°, cap surface echo (amber band, 0 mm), backwall echo (blue band, 40 mm), and a lack-of-fusion (LOF) indication (red region) at 28–33 mm depth. The S-scan provides a direct cross-sectional view of the weld. Right: TOFD B-scan showing the characteristic signals: lateral wave (near-surface, top), backwall echo (bottom), and two hyperbolic arcs from the upper and lower tips of a planar defect at approximately 20 mm depth. The through-wall height h = 3.5 mm is measured directly from the time difference between the tip signals. © metallurgyzone.com

For the underlying weld metallurgy context that determines which defects are most likely in specific weld joints and procedures, see the HAZ Microstructure and Hydrogen-Induced Cracking articles. The Charpy Impact Test and Hardness Testing Methods describe the destructive testing methods that complement NDT in weld procedure and welder qualification. For the corrosion defects that in-service NDT must detect, see Corrosion Mechanisms and Pitting Corrosion.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most important factor in selecting an NDT method for weld inspection?
The most important factor is the defect type you need to detect and its orientation relative to the inspection surface and sound/radiation beam direction. Different defect types have fundamentally different detectability with each NDT method: linear planar defects (cracks, lack of fusion) are best detected by UT when the beam is perpendicular to the defect plane, or by MT/PT when they break the surface; volumetric defects (porosity, slag inclusions) are well detected by RT and UT but not by surface methods. After defect type, critical factors are: material type (magnetic or non-magnetic), surface condition and access, required sensitivity and probability of detection, applicable code requirements, and cost and schedule constraints.
When is phased array ultrasonic testing (PAUT) preferred over conventional RT for weld inspection?
PAUT is preferred over RT when: (1) Planar defect detection and sizing is critical — PAUT reliably detects lack of fusion and cracks that RT frequently misses because their thin planar geometry produces insufficient X-ray contrast; (2) Access is restricted to one side — PAUT works from one surface while RT requires source access on one side and film/detector on the other; (3) Radiation hazard is a concern — PAUT requires no exclusion zone or source licensing; (4) Defect sizing is needed — PAUT provides direct through-wall extent measurement; (5) Inspection speed matters for production. RT remains preferred for: casting porosity characterisation, austenitic stainless steel welds, and when the applicable code specifically mandates RT without alternative UT provisions.
What is TOFD (Time-of-Flight Diffraction) and how does it differ from pulse-echo UT?
TOFD uses two transducers straddling the weld: one transmitter and one receiver, both inclined to produce longitudinal waves covering the full thickness. Defect detection relies on diffracted signals from defect tips rather than reflected signals from defect faces, making it essentially orientation-independent. The time-of-flight of signals from the upper and lower defect tips gives the depth and through-wall height directly: h = d_lower − d_upper = √[(t_lower × c/2)² − (s/2)²] − √[(t_upper × c/2)² − (s/2)²]. TOFD provides through-wall height sizing accuracy of ±1–2 mm compared to ±3–5 mm for conventional pulse-echo UT and no through-wall sizing for RT. TOFD has a near-surface dead zone (lateral wave region) requiring supplementary PAUT or surface methods.
What are the ASME BPVC Section V requirements for UT of welds?
ASME BPVC Section V Article 4 specifies UT weld examination requirements including: calibration using side-drilled holes at T/4, T/2, 3T/4 depth in a representative calibration block; use of angle beam transducers (45°, 60°, 70°) appropriate to weld geometry; complete scanning coverage; and documentation of equipment settings. Acceptance criteria are in the applicable construction code (Section VIII UW-51/52; B31.3 Chapter VI). PAUT is addressed in Section V Article 4 Mandatory Appendix VI (since 2011) and must be qualified per Annex C for encoded PAUT. TOFD is in Section V Article 4 Mandatory Appendix III. Code Case 2235 permits PAUT+TOFD as an alternative to RT when the procedure is performance-demonstrated.
What is probability of detection (POD) and why is it important for NDT method selection?
Probability of Detection (POD) is the statistical probability that a given NDT method will detect a defect of a specified size under defined inspection conditions. It is expressed as a POD(a) curve, with the a90/95 value (defect size detected with 90% probability at 95% confidence) as the key figure of merit for safety-critical applications. POD depends on defect geometry and orientation, material and weld geometry, equipment configuration, operator skill, and scanning coverage. In fracture mechanics fitness-for-service assessments (API 579, BS 7910), the NDT method must demonstrate POD sufficient to justify the assumed maximum undetected defect size used in the crack growth calculation. Low POD forces more conservative assumptions about initial defect size, leading to shorter inspection intervals and higher whole-life inspection costs.
What NDT methods are suitable for austenitic stainless steel and nickel alloy welds?
Austenitic stainless steel and nickel alloy welds are challenging for UT because coarse columnar weld grains scatter and attenuate ultrasonic signals, creating coherent noise. Suitable methods are: (1) RT — radiation is unaffected by grain structure; excellent performance and often the primary volumetric method for these materials. (2) PT — essential for detecting surface-breaking stress corrosion cracks; applicable to any accessible surface. (3) PAUT with low-frequency probes (1–2.25 MHz) and encoded scanning — reduces scattering noise; requires material-specific procedure qualification. (4) TOFD at 1–2 MHz — can be applied with careful frequency selection. (5) ET (eddy current) — effective for near-surface cracks in tubing and thin-wall components. MT is not applicable because austenitic steels are non-magnetic.
What are the ASME and AWS certification levels for NDT personnel?
Per SNT-TC-1A (ASNT) and ASME CP-189, three certification levels apply. Level I: performs specific NDT operations under direct supervision of Level II or III; cannot independently interpret or accept results; minimum 40 hours training + 400 hours experience for UT. Level II: sets up and calibrates equipment, performs examinations independently, interprets and evaluates results per applicable codes, prepares examination reports, can train Level I; minimum 80 hours training + 800 hours experience. Level III: establishes procedures, interprets codes, designates methods, approves procedures for ASME-stamped work, qualifies personnel; typically 4+ years Level II experience plus Level III examinations. Medical vision acuity (Jaeger J1 near-vision) is required at all levels. PAUT and TOFD require additional specialty training and examination beyond base UT certification.
How does surface condition affect NDT method selection and reliability?
Surface condition critically affects surface-based NDT methods. For MT and PT, the surface must be free of scale, heavy rust, paint, and coatings that would mask surface-breaking indications; PT requires a clean dry surface for effective capillary action. For UT and PAUT, the surface must allow effective transducer coupling (Ra <6.3 µm typically acceptable; coatings up to 3 mm can be inspected through if calibrated). For RT, surface condition has minimal effect but features (weld crown, backing bars) appear as density changes that must be documented. In all cases, the inspection surface must provide sufficient access for required scanning coverage. Inadequate surface preparation is a leading cause of missed defects in field NDT.

Recommended References

ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code Section V — Non-Destructive Examination
The primary code reference for NDT methods in pressure equipment fabrication, including UT, RT, MT, PT, ET, and PAUT/TOFD articles with procedural requirements.
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Ultrasonic Testing of Materials — Krautkrämer & Krautkrämer (4th Ed.)
The definitive technical reference for ultrasonic testing physics, transducer design, beam characterisation, PAUT, TOFD, and weld inspection applications.
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Phased Array Ultrasonic Technology — Olympus NDT (Zetec)
Practical guide to PAUT beam steering, S-scan and linear scan configuration, calibration, weld inspection applications, and TOFD complementary examination.
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Introduction to Nondestructive Testing — Shull (Wiley-IEEE)
Comprehensive graduate-level introduction to all major NDT methods: physical principles, equipment, sensitivity, detectability, and applications with worked examples.
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