Abstract

We develop decision support and automation for the task of ultrasonic non-destructive evaluation data analysis. First, we develop a probabilistic model for the task and then implement the model as a series of neural networks based on Conditional Score-Based Diffusion and Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model architectures. We use the neural networks to generate estimates for peak amplitude response time of flight and perform a series of tests probing their behavior, capacity, and characteristics in terms of the probabilistic model. We train the neural networks on a series of datasets constructed from ultrasonic non-destructive evaluation data acquired during an inspection at a nuclear power generation facility. We modulate the partition classifying nominal and anomalous data in the dataset and observe that the probabilistic model predicts trends in neural network model performance, thereby demonstrating a principled basis for explainability. We improve on previous related work as our methods are self-supervised and require no data annotation or pre-processing, and we train on a per-dataset basis, meaning we do not rely on out-of-distribution generalization. The capacity of the probabilistic model to predict trends in neural network performance, as well as the quality of the estimates sampled from the neural networks, support the development of a technical justification for usage of the method in safety-critical contexts such as nuclear applications. The method may provide a basis or template for extension into similar non-destructive evaluation tasks in other industrial contexts.

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