SBIR-STTR Award

NDT of Fracture Toughness for Pipeline Steels
Award last edited on: 2/26/2019

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOT
Total Award Amount
$1,143,468
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
180-PH1
Principal Investigator
Cody Borigo

Company Information

GuidedWave (AKA: Guided Wave~FBS Inc)

450 East Rolling Ridge Drive
Bellafonte, PA 16823
   (814) 234-3437
   N/A
   www.gwultrasonics.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 15
County: Centre

Phase I

Contract Number: 6913G618P800122
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase I year
2018
Phase I Amount
$149,909
NDT of Fracture Toughness for Pipeline Steels 3/16/2018 Ultrasound-based technology to nondestructively determine fracture toughness of pipeline steels will be developed. Fracture toughness is the material parameter that, along with applied loading and flaw geometry, dictates the critical crack size, and therefore controls the flaw size that must be detected during inspections. A major challenge facing pipeline operators is that many pipelines are old, making their structural integrity uncertain, and that material pedigree of the pipeline steel is unknown. Therefore, operations must be based on minimum values of the material parameters. The probability that actual fracture toughness is higher than the minimum is reasonably high, which means that pipelines are operating below capacity. Nondestructive determination of fracture toughness by ball indentation has not sufficiently solved the problem. Nonlinear features of ultrasonic wave propagation are sensitive to material nonlinearities, associated with microstructure (based on composition and processing), that dictate fracture toughness. Prior results indicate that ultrasonic nonlinearity is related to fracture appearance transition temperature, which in turn is related to fracture toughness. Herein, wave interaction of two circumferential guided waves will be used to generate nonlinear features (in a completely nondestructive way) that will be related to the fracture appearance transition temperature obtained from Charpy V-notch impact tests.

Phase II

Contract Number: 6913G620C100001
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
2020
Phase II Amount
$993,559
Fracture toughness is the material parameter that, along with applied loading and flaw geometry, dictates the critical crack size, and therefore controls the flaw size that must be detected during inspections. A major challenge facing pipeline operators is that many pipelines are old, making their structural integrity uncertain, and that material pedigree of the pipeline steel is unknown. Therefore, operations must be based on minimum values of the material parameters. The probability that actual fracture toughness is higher than the minimum is reasonably high, which means that pipelines are operating below capacity. Nondestructive determination of fracture toughness by ball indentation has not sufficiently solved the problem. Nonlinear features of ultrasonic wave propagation are sensitive to material nonlinearities associated with microstructure (based on composition and processing) that dictate fracture toughness. Nonlinear ultrasound-based technology to nondestructively determine fracture toughness of pipeline steels was demonstrated in Phase I. Building upon the Phase I work, the primary goal of the Phase II project is to develop, verify, and deliver a nonlinear guided wave system for nondestructive evaluation of fracture toughness in pipeline steels.