Inspection, Testing & Certification

Inspection, Testing & Certification

Engineering-Based Quality Assurance for Titanium Materials

Inspection, testing, and certification are essential to ensure that titanium materials meet specification requirements and perform reliably in service.
However, quality assurance is often misunderstood as a paperwork exercise. In reality, inspection and testing are engineering tools used to verify material integrity, consistency, and suitability for critical applications.

This page explains what each inspection method verifies, when it should be applied, and how certification should be interpreted in real projects.

1. Purpose of Inspection and Testing in Titanium Engineering

The objective of inspection and testing is to:

  • Confirm compliance with material standards

  • Detect defects that could compromise service life

  • Verify consistency across heats and batches

  • Support traceability and accountability

Inspection does not improve material quality—it confirms it.

2. Chemical Composition Verification

What It Confirms

  • Titanium grade compliance

  • Impurity control (O, Fe, N, C, H)

Typical Methods

  • Spectrometric analysis

  • PMI (Positive Material Identification)

Engineering Importance

Chemical composition defines baseline corrosion resistance and mechanical behavior.

3. Mechanical Testing

Common Mechanical Tests

  • Tensile testing (yield strength, tensile strength, elongation)

  • Hardness testing (as specified)

Engineering Interpretation

  • Confirms compliance with ASTM / ASME minimums

  • Does not predict fatigue life or service durability

Mechanical tests verify compliance, not long-term performance.

4. Non-Destructive Testing (NDT)

NDT methods are selected based on product form and application risk.

Eddy Current Testing (ET)

  • Commonly applied to tubes

  • Detects surface and near-surface defects

Ultrasonic Testing (UT)

  • Used for plates, pipes, thick sections

  • Detects internal discontinuities

Radiographic Testing (RT)

  • Used for weld inspection

  • Detects volumetric weld defects

Liquid Penetrant Testing (PT)

  • Detects surface-breaking defects

  • Common for welds and machined surfaces

Engineering Rule

NDT selection must match the defect risk—not habit.

5. Dimensional and Visual Inspection

What Is Verified

  • OD, ID, wall thickness

  • Straightness and roundness

  • Surface condition and finish

Engineering Importance

Dimensional accuracy directly affects:

  • Fit-up and assembly

  • Tube expansion quality

  • Sealing performance

6. Inspection Scope by Product Form

ProductTypical Inspection Focus
TubesET, dimensional, visual
PipesUT / RT, dimensional
Plates & SheetsUT (thick), surface
Tube SheetsUT, machining accuracy
Welded ComponentsRT / PT, visual

Inspection requirements should be risk-driven, not uniform.

7. Certification Types and Their Meaning

Titanium materials are commonly supplied with certificates per EN 10204.

EN 10204 3.1

  • Manufacturer-issued

  • Based on actual test results

  • Most commonly accepted

EN 10204 3.2

  • Witnessed or endorsed by a third party

  • Required for critical or regulated projects

Engineering Reality

A higher certificate level does not compensate for poor inspection scope.

8. Traceability and Heat Identification

Traceability links:

  • Raw material

  • Manufacturing process

  • Test results

  • Final product

Typical traceability elements:

  • Heat number

  • Batch or lot number

  • Product marking

Traceability enables root-cause analysis when problems occur.

9. Third-Party Inspection (TPI)

TPI may be required to:

  • Witness testing

  • Verify compliance independently

  • Reduce project risk

Engineering perspective:

  • TPI validates execution, not design

  • Effectiveness depends on defined scope and hold points

10. Common Misunderstandings in Titanium QA

  • Assuming more tests always mean better quality

  • Treating certificates as substitutes for inspection

  • Applying the same inspection scope to all products

  • Ignoring fabrication and welding inspection

Understanding these limits avoids false confidence.

11. Integrating Inspection with Design and Fabrication

Effective QA integrates:

  • Correct grade selection

  • Appropriate product standards

  • Qualified fabrication procedures

  • Targeted inspection and testing

Quality is engineered first, inspected second.

12. How This Page Fits the Standards & Quality System

This page supports:

  • ASTM Standards for Titanium – material requirements

  • ASME & Pressure Equipment Standards – code compliance

  • Products – form-specific inspection needs

  • Design Rules – risk-based inspection logic

It represents the execution layer of titanium quality assurance.