Advanced NDT solutions from Advacam

Custom x-ray camera solutions for non-destructive testing.

Description

Tough, light and reliable materials such as carbon composites are becoming increasingly common in advanced engineering. Identification of defects, impurities or cracks in modern ultralight materials demands modern, state-of-the-art technology. Standard imaging technology has been used for many years for detecting defects in traditional materials such as metals, but traditional X-ray imaging systems fail when being used with modern light materials such as composites. These new materials therefore call for novel inspection technologies and photon counting detectors are ideal for this purpose.

Advacam brings to the market a new range of X-ray imaging cameras that are optimised for composite material testing. As for biological applications, Advacam’s approach to non-destructive testing (NDT) is highly sensitive to low energies. In this way, light materials such as carbon fibres, epoxies, etc. are easily revealed in great detail. Hence, even challenging defects such as deep laminate wrinkles, kissing-bonds, delaminations, porosity, foreign objects and micro-cracks in the soft materials can be detected with a spatial resolution of 55 µm or better. Combining the sensitivity to low X-ray energy photons with the very high dynamic range of photon counting detectors creates a powerful tool for NDT in the aerospace industry and elsewhere.

Models Available:

Custom Solutions:

Contrary to classical X-ray imaging setups, the robotic system produced by Radalytica gives nearly absolute flexibility of viewing angles. Therefore, robots are able to inspect using X-rays from different angles, allowing them to accurately determine the positions of defects. Moreover, robots further open the possibility of using 3D imaging techniques such as computed tomography and tomosynthesis. These are methods commonly used in X-ray imaging, but with limited applicability to large complicated shapes. Robots overcome this limit. The robotic systems could be used in quality control labs or built into production lines.

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