Reliable ultrasonic inspection of welded structures requires a quantitative understanding of how defect morphology and depth influence detectability. In this study, a simulation-based signal-response Probability of Detection (POD) framework is developed to investigate ultrasonic wave interaction with representative planar and volumetric weld defects. Two-dimensional finite-element shear-wave simulations were conducted to model wave propagation and scattering from planar flaws (toe and root cracks) and volumetric flaws (porosity) across defined inspection depth zones. Peak terminal voltage was used as a continuous response metric for regression-based POD analysis. The results demonstrate that defect morphology dominates the influence on ultrasonic detectability. Planar defects produced systematically higher signal responses than volumetric defects of comparable size, resulting in lower characteristic detection limits. The estimated a90 value for planar flaws was 2.96 mm, compared to 5.64 mm for volumetric flaws under identical threshold conditions. Depth-dependent analyses further revealed morphology-specific behavior: planar defects exhibited consistently high detection probabilities across depth zones (POD > 0.98), whereas volumetric defects showed a reduction in detectability with depth, with POD decreasing from approximately 0.32 in shallow zones to 0.16 in deeper regions. The resulting POD trends are interpreted as comparative, trend-based indicators of morphology and depth-dependent ultrasonic detectability under idealized inspection conditions. These findings quantitatively demonstrate how ultrasonic detectability is governed by wave-defect interaction mechanisms associated with defect morphology and inspection depth.
Irtiza et al. (Mon,) studied this question.