SES - Field Metallurgical Replication
SES - Field Metallurgical Replication
SES - Field Metallurgical Replication
Field Metallurgical Replication (FMR) is often the least disruptive and most cost-effective option for metallurgical examination when making important run, repair or replace decisions.
FMR is a non destructive metallurgical inspection technique that is used for evaluating plant equipment such as heaters, boilers, piping and reactors. By comparison, cutting samples for laboratory testing is often more expensive, takes the equipment out of service and can be difficult to repair. FMR is a simple process. Using portable equipment, the metal surface is ground and polished to a mirror finish. The polished surface is subesquently etched to reveal the microstructure. A replica of the etched surface is then made with a thin piece of acetate film. The replica can then be examined back in the field using a portable optical microscope or in the laboratory. This process gives our metallurgical engineers the ability to examine microstructural features such as grain size, cracks, carbides, creep and other damage mechanisms. It can confirm observations made by other nondestructive methods such as acoustic emission tests, penetrant examination and ultrasonic flaw detection and take it a step further to identify the nature of the flaw. For example, whether a crack is intergranular corrosion or transgranular fatigue can be determined.
FMR showing cracked nozzle adjacent to weld and through base metal.
FMR should be considered if a component is in high temperature service or requires the use of a non destructive technique. One major advantage is that you dont have to cut any samples for analysis and the equipment may not need to be taken out of service for this inspection. When evaluating plant equipment, field metallurgical replication can be an important tool for making run, repair or replace type decisions. All questions of service life involve materials. SES has a permanent full-time staff of 16 metallurgists and materials engineers in strategically located offices throughout the United States (Houston, Texas, Cincinnati, Ohio, New Orleans & Baton Rouge, Louisiana), all devoted to diagnosing the materials suitability for continued service. SES can provide teams of metallurgists and technicians to conduct the in-situ FMR assessments or, if needed leverage resources back at one of our three laboratories. This approach enables us to quickly assess degradation mechanisms that impact the service life of your equipment.
Microstructure of carbon steel, showing ferrite and pearlite matrix on a field replica.
Replication site across a weld joining a large diameter tree and pipe.
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