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E-Book of Abstracts 42nd Annual Review of Progress in Quantitative Nondestructive Evaluation Conference Hyatt Regency Downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota July 26-31, 2015 Organized by Center for Nondestructive Evaluation Iowa State University Updated: 25 July 2015 In cooperation with American Society for Nondestructive Testing National Science Foundation Industry/University Cooperative Research Centers 1 2015 QNDE 2015 Review of Progress in Quantitative NDE Program Summary Hyatt Regency Minneapolis (Minneapolis, Minnesota) 8:30 am 9:00 10:10 11:00 12:10 pm 1:00 2:00 3:10 4:00 5:00 6:00 7:00 8:00 9:00 Break Break Two Day Short Course “Damage Prognosis for Materials” Saturday Sponsored by World Federation of NDE Centers July 25 Organizer: Pradeep Ramuhalli, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lakeshore A EAW/BAM Tutorial: “Introduction to the Evaluation of NDT Sunday Continuation of WFNDEC Short Systems Through the Calculation of the POD” ~ Daniel Kanzler. Course Lakeshore A Welcome Reception July 26 Lakeshore A Northstar Ballroom Conference check-in and registration NOTE: Posters will Plenary 1: Dr. Joon H. Lee 3. Guided Waves I - Nicollet D1 By Invitation Monday be on display Plenary 2: Dr. Eric Lindgren 4. Thermography and Thermosonics – Nicollet D2 World Federation of NDE Centers from 3:10 pm. 5. Eddy Current Fundamentals - Nicollet D3 Board Meeting/Dinner and Marija Bertovic L th July 27 Monday-5:00 6. 6 EAW – Lakeshore A pm Thursday Nicollet BC 12. NDE in the Railway Branch – U 11. Student Poster - Nicollet D1 7. Guided Waves II - Nicollet D1 13. Microwave, Terahertz, Infrared NDE Tuesday 8. Additive Manufacturing & Material Characterization - Nicollet D2 Session QNDE Conference Dinner - Nicollet AB - Lakeshore C 9. UT Fundamentals and Composites - Nicollet D3 14. Eddy Current I - Nicollet D3 July 28 th Northstar Ballroom 10. 6 EAW – Lakeshore A N 15. 6th EAW – Lakeshore A 16. Composites I - Nicollet D2 17. Ultrasonic Arrays I - Nicollet D1 22. Ultrasonic Arrays II and Nonlinear – Nicollet D1 Visit Opportunity to U. of Minnesota Wednesday 18. NDE of Composites II (Experimental) - Nicollet D2 C 23. NDE Modeling of Composites - Nicollet D2 19. NDE and NDT Systems & Civil Eng. Materials - Nicollet D3 24. One-Sided Access for Civil Infrastructure Characterization - Nicollet D3 Earthquake Simulation Lab July 29 20. Signal Processing & New Techniques – Lakeshore C 25. Sensors – Lakeshore C By Invitation 21. 6th EAW – Lakeshore A H 26. 6th EAW – Lakeshore A I/U CRC Reception and Dinner 32. X-Ray, CT and Radiographic Methods II 27. X-Ray, CT, and Radiographic Methods I – Lakeshore A - Lakeshore A Bruce Thompson Thursday 28. NDE of Characterization - Nicollet D2 31. Professional Posters 33. Pipelines and Automation - Nicollet D1 Memorial 5K FUN RUN 29. Nonlinear Ultrasonics - Nicollet D3 - Nicollet AB 34. UT Microstructural Scattering - Nicollet D2 Loring Park July 30 30. Nuclear - Nicollet D1 35. Benchmarks - Nicollet D3 36. Non-Contact and Laser Ultrasonics - Nicollet D1 Friday 37. Characterization - Nicollet D2 July 31 38. Eddy Current II - Nicollet D3 39. Structural Health Monitoring – Lakeshore A 2 2015 QNDE MONDAY Plenary Session 1.............................................................. 5 Plenary Session 2 ............................................................. 5 Session 3 – Guided Waves I ............................................ 11 Session 4 – Thermography and Thermosconics .............. 24 Session 5 – Eddy Current Fundamentals ........................ 37 Session 6 – 6th EAW....................................................... 50 3 2015 QNDE Plenary Sessions 1 and 2 4 2015 QNDE Hyatt Regency Minneapolis Minneapolis, Minnesota July 26 – 31, 2015 PROGRAM Updated13 July 2015 Monday, July 27, 2015 PLENARY SESSION 1 Leonard J. Bond, Chairperson Nicollet BC 9:00 AM Opening Remarks ---Leonard J. Bond, Iowa State University, Center for NDE, Applied Sciences Complex II, 1915 Scholl Road, Ames, IA 50011 The Sixth European-American Workshop on Reliability --Christina Müller, BAM Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing, Berlin, Germany --Ralf Holstein, DGZfP, Max-Planck-Str. 6, 12489 Berlin, Germany 9:15 AM Status and Prospect of NDT Technology for Nuclear Energy Industry in Korea ---Joon H. Lee, Pusan National University, Pusan 609-735, Korea 10:15 AM Break PLENARY SESSION 2 Dale Chimenti, Chairperson Nicollet BC 10:30 AM US Air Force Perspectives on Validated/Reliable NDE – Past, Present, and Future ---Eric Lindgren, USAF AFRL-RXLP-NDE Branch, 2230 10th Street, Bldg. 655, Room 172, WPAFB, OH 45433-7816 11:20 AM Can Automation Automatically Solve “The Human Factors Problem”?...And Other Illusions ---Marija Bertovic, BAM Bundesanstalt fur, Materialforschung und-prufung, VIII.33, Unter den Eichen 87, Berlin, Germany 12:10 PM Lunch 5 2015 QNDE 9:15 AM Status and Prospect of NDT Technology for Nuclear Energy Industry in Korea Joon Hyun Lee, Pusan National University, School of Mechanical Engineering, Pusan, Korea 609-735 ---Innovative energy technology is considered to be one of the key solutions for meeting the challenges of climate change and energy security, which is why global leaders are focusing on enhancing energy technology R&D. In accordance with the global movements to accelerate energy R&D, the Korean government has made significant investments in a broad spectrum of energy R&D programs, including energy efficiency, resources, CCS, new and renewable energy, power generation and electricity delivery, nuclear power and nuclear waste management. In order to manage government sponsored energy R&D programs in an efficient and effective way, the government established the Korea Institute of Energy technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) in 2009. Main activities of KETEP include developing energy technology roadmaps, planning, evaluating, and managing R&D programs, fostering experts in the field of energy, promoting international cooperation programs, gathering and analyzing energy statistics, and supporting infrastructure and commercialization. KETEP assists the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy in developing national R&D strategies while also working with researchers, universities, national institutes and the private sector for their successful energy technology and deployment. This presentation consists of three parts. First, I will introduce the characteristics of energy trends and mix in Korea. Then, I’ll speak about the related national R&D strategies of energy technology. Finally, I’ll finish up with the status and prospect of NDT technology for nuclear energy industry in Korea. The development of the on-line structural integrity monitoring systems and the related techniques in Korean nuclear power plant for the purpose of condition based maintenance is introduced. The needs of NDT techniques for inspection and condition monitoring for GEN IV including SFR, small module reactor etc., are also discussed. 6 2015 QNDE 10:30 AM US Air Force Perspectives on Validated/Reliable NDE – Past, Present, and Future ---Eric Lindgren, US Air Force Research Laboratory, Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, Structural Materials Division, Materials State Awareness and Supportability Branch, Wright- Patterson AFB, OH 45433-7816 ---The concept of inspection has accompanied aviation since the work of the Wright Brothers. Inspection for both initial quality/materials acceptance and readiness for flight have been coupled with US Air Force (USAF) since its inception as the US Army Signal Corps. Initial nondestructive evaluation work expanded beyond visual inspection to include radiography and magnetic particle in the 1920’s and 1930’s as air frames transitioned to metal and engines used higher strength steels. Within the USAF Research and Development community, a Nondestructive Test Section was stood up in 1952 and the Nondestructive Evaluation Branch (NDE) was established in 1974. In 2012 the name was changed to the Materials State Awareness and Supportability Branch. This name change reflects the evolution from a primary focus on inspections for damage and defects in materials to the characterization of the underlying materials structure that governs properties of the materials of interest for Air Force applications. This presentation describes the historical developments within the US Air Force that led to current processes to validate the capability of NDE techniques to detect desired flaw sizes and how these inspections are integrated into techniques to ensure USAF structures and propulsion system meet required safety metrics. This includes how NDE techniques are validated, how common classes of capabilities are assessed, and available information and publications addressing common capability throughout the USAF enterprise. In addition, the presentation describes the expansion of required and desired attributes for NDE methods. Materials State Awareness is defined as “digitally-enabled reliable nondestructive quantitative materials and/or damage characterization regardless of scale.” This definition addresses a broad range of features of interest from micro-scale, such as tailored microstructures, to macro-scale, such as the dimensions and location of fatigue cracks or corrosion. Continued developments in materials and processes, including additive manufacturing, combined with initiatives, such as the Materials Genome, highlight the evolving need for materials characterization at an ever finer scale. Extended use of USAF aircraft beyond their original design life highlights the need for damage characterization