What Is Magnetic Particle Inspection?
Magnetic Particle Inspection (MPI) — also called Magnetic Particle Testing (MT) — is a non-destructive testing method for detecting surface and near-surface discontinuities in ferromagnetic materials (iron, nickel, cobalt, and their alloys). It works by magnetising the component and applying fine magnetic particles (iron oxide powder) to the surface. Magnetic flux leakage at surface-breaking or near-surface discontinuities attracts the particles, forming visible indications that reveal the location and extent of the defect.
MPI is one of the most widely used NDT methods in the aerospace, automotive, power generation, and heavy manufacturing industries — prized for its sensitivity, speed, and ability to inspect large areas rapidly.
Principle of MPI
When a ferromagnetic material is magnetised, magnetic flux flows through the material along field lines. A surface or near-surface discontinuity (crack, seam, lap, void) interrupts the continuous flux path, causing the magnetic field to “leak” out of the surface above and around the discontinuity. These flux leakage fields attract and hold the fine iron particles applied to the surface, creating a visible particle accumulation (indication) that reveals the discontinuity.
For maximum detection sensitivity, the magnetic field must be oriented perpendicular to the discontinuity orientation — flux leakage is maximised when the crack is perpendicular to the field lines. Cracks parallel to the field produce minimal leakage and may be missed. This is why multi-directional magnetisation techniques (circular + longitudinal magnetisation) are used to detect defects in all orientations.
Magnetisation Methods
Circular Magnetisation
Current is passed directly through the part or through a conductor threading the part, creating a magnetic field encircling the component longitudinally. Detects longitudinal cracks (parallel to the component axis).
Longitudinal Magnetisation
Magnetisation along the component’s long axis using a coil, yoke, or electromagnetic head — creating field lines running lengthwise through the part. Detects transverse cracks (perpendicular to the component axis).
Yoke Magnetisation
A horseshoe-shaped electromagnet (AC or DC) is placed against the surface, creating a localised magnetic field between the yoke poles. Portable, safe, and widely used for in-field inspection of welds, structural members, and large components.
Prod Magnetisation
Direct contact electrodes (prods) are placed on the surface; current flows between them, creating circular magnetic fields between the prods. High sensitivity for surface cracks; requires careful use to prevent arc burns at contact points.
Particle Types and Application Methods
Dry Particles
Coloured iron powder (grey, red, yellow) applied by blowing, spraying, or shaking — used with an AC or DC yoke for in-field inspections. Sensitive to broad, shallow surface defects.
Wet Fluorescent Particles (Most Sensitive)
Fine iron oxide particles coated with fluorescent dye suspended in water or oil carrier — applied as a bath or spray while the part is magnetised. Examined under UV (blacklight) illumination — fluorescent indications glow brightly against the dark background, providing the highest detection sensitivity for fine cracks. Standard for aerospace, automotive, and precision-machined component inspection.
MPI Detection Capability
MPI detects:
- Surface-breaking cracks, seams, laps, and cold shuts
- Near-surface subsurface cracks (typically to ~3–6 mm depth below the surface)
- Inclusions and segregations near the surface in steel forgings and castings
MPI cannot detect:
- Defects in non-ferromagnetic materials
- Deep subsurface defects (requires UT or RT)
- Porosity or inclusions deeper than the near-surface zone
Industrial Applications
In aerospace, wet fluorescent MPI is applied to every safety-critical steel forging — landing gear, engine mounts, and structural fittings — after machining to detect any surface cracks from the forging or machining operations. In automotive, MPI inspects crankshafts, connecting rods, and wheel hubs after heat treatment and machining.
Conclusion
Magnetic Particle Inspection (MPI) is a fast, highly sensitive non-destructive testing method used to detect surface and near-surface discontinuities in ferromagnetic materials. By combining controlled magnetisation with dry or wet magnetic particles, MPI provides clear visual indications of cracks, seams, laps, and other defects that may compromise component integrity.
Its speed, reliability, and suitability for inspecting steel forgings, welds, automotive parts, and aerospace safety-critical components make it one of the most widely used NDT methods in industry.
Why Choose Infinita Lab for Magnetic Particle Inspection Services?
Infinita Lab provides wet fluorescent, dry powder, and yoke MPI per ASTM E709, ISO 9934, and ASME Section V through our nationwide accredited NDT inspection laboratory network with Level II/III certified personnel.
Looking for a trusted partner to achieve your research goals? Schedule a meeting with us, send us a request, or call us at (888) 878-3090 to learn more about our services and how we can support you.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)