Abstract

Abstract The Remote Field Eddy Current (RFEC) nondestructive inspection technique uses low frequency AC and through wall transmission to inspect pipes and tubes from the inside. In steel pipes, it has generally greater sensitivity to circumferential rather than axial slits because the perturbation of magnetic fields orthogonal to slits dominates. Circumferential AC magnetic fields, generated by passing AC axially along a steel pipe from an external supply, have therefore been tested in order to give greater sensitivity to axially aligned cracks characteristic of stress corrosion cracking in pipelines. Anomalous source missing magnetization defect models suggest that, as slit widths are reduced, the importance of magnetic interactions is reduced until eddy current interactions predominate. This suggests that, for very fine axial cracks, true RFEC geometry, which gives circumferential eddy currents, will give stronger signals than circumferential AC magnetic fields.

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