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1.
While Fe–Ni–Cr austenitic stainless steels exhibit relatively good resistance to hydrogen embrittlement, they still suffer from significant degradation of ductility, fatigue and fracture properties in gaseous hydrogen environments. Experimental studies in the literature suggest that hydrogen reduces stacking fault energy in austenitic stainless steels. This phenomenon causes a large separation of partial dislocations and lower propensity for cross-slip. Whereas lower stacking fault energy does not correlate well with loss of ductility in the absence of hydrogen, lower stacking fault energy trends toward greater loss of ductility when hydrogen is present. Calculations of stacking fault energy are challenging for austenitic stainless steels. One main issue is that in alloys, stacking fault energy is not a single value but rather varies depending on local composition. Herein, we first report an Fe–Ni–Cr–H quaternary interatomic potential and then use this potential to perform time-averaged molecular dynamics simulations to calculate stacking fault energies for tens of thousands of realizations of local compositions for selected stainless steels alloys with and without internal hydrogen. From statistical analyses, our results suggest that hydrogen reduces stacking fault energy, which likely impacts deformation mechanisms of Fe–Ni–Cr austenitic stainless steels when exposed to hydrogen environments. We then perform validation MD simulation tests to show that hydrogen indeed statistically increases the stacking fault widths due to statistically reduced stacking fault energies.  相似文献   

2.
Seventeen metastable austenitic stainless steels (type 304 and 316 alloys) were tested in tension both with internal hydrogen and in external hydrogen. Hydrogen-assisted fracture in both environments is a competition between hydrogen-affected ductile overload and hydrogen-assisted crack propagation. In general, hydrogen localizes the fracture process, which results in crack propagation of particularly susceptible materials at an apparent engineering stress that is less than the tensile strength of the material. Hydrogen-assisted crack propagation in this class of alloys becomes more prevalent at lower nickel content and lower temperature. In addition, for the tests in this study, external hydrogen reduces tensile ductility more than internal hydrogen. External hydrogen promotes crack initiation and propagation at the surface, while with internal hydrogen surface cracking is largely absent, thus preempting hydrogen-assisted crack propagation from the surface. This is not a general result, however, because the reduction of ductility with internal and external hydrogen depends on the specifics of the testing conditions that are compared (e.g., hydrogen gas pressure); in addition, internal hydrogen can promote the formation of internal cracks, which can propagate similar to surface cracks.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrogen embrittlement of Cr-Mn-N-austenitic stainless steels   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cr-Mn-N austenitic steels show a unique combination of properties, i.e. high strength, high ductility, non magnetic and good corrosion resistance at costs being much lower compared to Cr-Ni austenitic steels. Hydrogen environment embrittlement (HEE) was investigated by slow displacement tensile testing in hydrogen atmosphere at 10 MPa and −50 °C. The fracture appearance of stable Cr-Mn-N austenitic steels with lower Mn contents (12Mn-0.7N) was transgranular whereas higher Mn contents (18Mn-0.7N) resulted in twin boundary fracture. This change in fracture morphology was related to a modest change in macroscopic ductility. Such fracture behaviour is similar to what is known from metastable Cr-Ni austenitic steels, therefore, Mn and/or N cannot be used to replace Ni in stable austenitic high HEE resistant steels.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of external and internal hydrogen on the slow-strain-rate tensile (SSRT) properties at room temperature were studied for ten types of solution-treated austenitic stainless steels containing a small amount of additive elements. The hydrogen diffusivity and solubility of the steels were measured with high-pressure hydrogen gas. The remarkable tensile-ductility loss observed in the SSRT tests was attributed to hydrogen-induced successive crack growth (HISCG) and was successfully quantified according to the nickel-equivalent content (Nieq), which represents the stability of the austenitic phase. The relative reduction in area (RRA) of the steels with a larger Nieq was influenced by the hydrogen distribution, whereas that of the steels with a smaller Nieq was not. This unique trend was interpreted with regard to the hydrogen distribution and fracture morphology (HISCG or microvoid coalescence).  相似文献   

5.
The effect of high-pressure gaseous H2 on the fracture behavior of pipeline steel X70 and austenitic stainless steel type 304L and 316L was investigated by means of notched-tensile tests at 10 MPa H2 gas and various test speed. The notch tensile strength of pipeline X70 steel and austenitic stainless steels were degraded by gaseous H2, and the deterioration was accompanied by noticeable changes in fracture morphology. The loss of notch tensile strength of type 316L and X70 steels was comparable, but type 304L was more susceptible to hydrogen embrittlement than the others. In the X70 steel, hydrogen embrittlement increased as test speed decreased until the test speed reached 1.2 × 10?3 mm/s, but the effect of test speed was not significant in 304L and 316L steels.  相似文献   

6.
No loss in tensile ductility was found for Invar 36 alloy tested in a gaseous hydrogen atmosphere (1 MPa, −50 °C). Fractography revealed no indication of hydrogen assisted damage. Deformation mechanisms of Invar 36 are published in the open literature. Comparing the tensile test results as well as the deformation mechanisms with those of other iron based stable austenitic alloys indicate that the inherent deformation mechanism of Invar 36 comprising of a high portion of dislocation cross slip is an important reason for the negligible loss in tensile ductility under the presence of hydrogen.  相似文献   

7.
Seven stable austenitic steels (stable with respect to γ → α′ transformation at room temperature) of different alloy compositions (18Cr–12.5Ni, 18Cr–35Ni, 18Cr–8Ni–6Mn–0.25N, 0.6C–23Mn, 1.3C–12Mn, 1C–31Mn–9Al, 18Cr–19Mn–0.8N) were tensile tested in high-pressure hydrogen atmosphere to assess the role of austenite stability on hydrogen environment embrittlement (HEE). The influence of hydrogen on tensile ductility was small in steels that are believed to have a high initial portion of dislocation cross slip (18Cr–12.5Ni, 18Cr–35Ni, 18Cr–8Ni–6Mn–0.25N), while the effects of hydrogen were significantly greater in steels with other primary deformation modes (planar slip in 18Cr–19Mn–0.8N and 1C–31Mn–9Al or mechanical twinning in 0.6C–23Mn and 1.3C–12Mn) despite comparable austenite stability at the given test conditions. It appears that initial deformation mode is one important parameter controlling susceptibility to HEE and that martensitic transformation is not a sufficient explanation for HEE of austenitic steels.  相似文献   

8.
A correlation between the proof stress ratio and ductility ratio is observed at different microstructural conditions in austenitic stainless steels. A general decrease in ductility ratio with increase in proof stress ratio is observed. In this short communication, earlier work is extended to the region of proof stress ratio less than one and ductility ratio greater than one by thermal ageing of a cold worked material and then by testing at elevated temperatures. The significance of this correlation is that the degradation in the tensile strength and ductility of the real structures can be carried out by simple and inexpensive tests such as uniaxial tensile tests.  相似文献   

9.
A novel high-aluminum austenitic stainless steel has been produced in the laboratory with the aim of developing a lean-alloyed material with a high resistance to hydrogen environment embrittlement. The susceptibility to hydrogen environment embrittlement was evaluated by means of tensile tests at a slow strain rate in pure hydrogen gas at a pressure of 40 MPa and a temperature of −50 °C. Under these conditions, the yield strength, tensile strength and elongation to rupture are not affected by hydrogen in comparison to companion tests carried out in air. Moreover, a very high ductility in hydrogen is evidenced by a reduction of area of 70% in the high-pressure and low-temperature hydrogen environment. The lean degree of alloying is reflected in the molybdenum-free character of the material and a nickel content of 8.0 wt.%. With regard to the alloy concept, a combination of high-carbon, high-manganese, and high-aluminum contents confer an extremely high stability against the formation of strain-induced martensite. This aspect was investigated by means of in-situ magnetic measurements and ex-situ X-ray diffraction. The overall performance of the novel alloy was compared with two reference materials, 304L and 316L austenitic stainless steels, both industrially produced. Its capability of maintaining a fully austenitic structure during tensile testing has been identified as a key aspect to avoid hydrogen environment embrittlement.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of cold rolling on hydrogen embrittlement in stable 18Cr–1Mn–11Ni-0.15 N austenitic stainless steels was investigated. Alloy plates were cold-rolled to 15% or 30% reduction, then pre-charged with hydrogen and subjected to tensile testing with slow strain rate. Hydrogen-induced degradation of tensile elongation became increasingly severe with the increase in the degree of cold rolling. During cold rolling, deformation twins with various orientations were actively generated, and twins with specific orientations were vulnerable to hydrogen-induced cracking. Cold rolling also increased the density of defects, and thereby facilitated penetration of hydrogen into the steels. The combination of cracks generated at the twin boundaries, and the promoted hydrogen diffusion caused severe hydrogen embrittlement in the cold-rolled steels.  相似文献   

11.
A Cu alloyed (18Cr–10Ni–3Cu) and a Cu free (18Cr–12.7Ni) austenitic stainless steel were tensile tested in gaseous hydrogen atmosphere at 20 °C and −50 °C. Depending on the test temperature, the Cu alloyed steel was extremely embrittled whereas the Cu free steel was only slightly embrittled. Austenite stability and inherent deformation mode are two main criteria for the resistance of austenitic stainless steels against hydrogen environment embrittlement. Based on the well known austenite stability criteria, the austenite stability of both steels should be very similar. Interrupted tensile tests show that martensite formation upon plastic deformation was much more severe in the Cu alloyed steel proving that the influence of Cu on austenite stability is overestimated in the empirical stability equations. When tested in high pressure H2, replacing Ni by Cu resulted in a fundamental change in fracture mode atmosphere, i.e. Ni cannot be replaced by Cu to reduce the costs of SS without compromising the resistance to hydrogen environment embrittlement.  相似文献   

12.
In order to develop safer and more energy-efficient, hydrogen pre-cooling systems for use in hydrogen refueling stations, it is necessary to identify a high-strength metallic material with greater thermal conductivity and lower susceptibility to hydrogen embrittlement, as compared with ordinary, stable austenitic stainless steels. To accomplish this task, the hydrogen compatibility of a precipitation-hardened, high-strength, copper-based alloy was investigated by slow-strain-rate tensile (SSRT), fatigue-life, fatigue-crack-growth (FCG) and fracture toughness tests in 115-MPa hydrogen gas at room temperature. The hydrogen solubility and diffusivity of the alloy were also determined. The hydrogen solubility of the alloy was two or three orders of magnitude lower than that of austenitic stainless steels. The alloy also demonstrated absolutely no hydrogen-induced degradation of its strength properties, a factor which could contribute to the reduction of costs related to the construction and maintenance of hydrogen refueling stations, owing to the downsizing and improved cooling performance of the pre-cooling systems.  相似文献   

13.
In this study, the hydrogen embrittlement (HE) behavior confined to focusing the weld microstructure of austenitic stainless steels (ER308 and ER316) was investigated. To investigate the microstructural influence on HE, microstructural changes were induced by different heat-treatment times at 1050 °C. These changes were prepared from microstructures containing δ-ferrite and microstructures where δ-ferrite was removed at welded parts. The results of the slow strain rate test (SSRT) indicated that the HE index, calculated from relative reduction width (RRW), was greatly reduced due to microstructure changes. To demonstrate the correlation between the deformation mechanism and HE index, deformation behavior was analyzed and verified through chemical composition, microstructure, fracture morphology, and modified Curssard–Jaoul (C–J) analysis. In all heat-treatment conditions, more mechanical twinning and a more drastic change in the HE index were observed for ER 308 compared to that of ER 316. The longest heat-treatment time conditions in a greatest decrease in HE index for ER308 and ER316. Hydrogen decohesion effects due to accumulation with dislocation were verified observing a parallel twin plane or microvoid along the twin plane in a transgranular fracture. In additional, as the heat-treatment time increased, the removal of δ-ferrite decreased the HE index for both stainless steels. Because, δ-ferrite was assisted in hindering mechanical twinning by misostrain concentrated at δ-ferrite sites in the early state of SSRT, it was enhanced to the resistance of HE.  相似文献   

14.
This work investigates the susceptibility of high-interstitial CrMn austenitic stainless steel CN0.96 to hydrogen environment embrittlement. In this context, an N-free model alloy of CN0.96 steel was designed, produced, and characterized. Both steels were subjected to tensile tests in air and in a high-pressure hydrogen gas atmosphere.Both steels undergo severe hydrogen embrittlement. The CN0.96 steel shows trans- and intergranular failure in hydrogen, whereas the N-free model alloy shows exclusively intergranular failure. The different failure modes could be related to different deformation modes that are induced by the presence or absence of N, respectively. In the CN0.96 steel, N promotes planar dislocation slip. Due to the absence of N in the model alloy, localized slip is less pronounced and mechanical twinning is a more preferred deformation mechanism. The embrittlement of the model alloy could therefore be related to mechanisms that are known from hydrogen embrittlement of twinning-induced plasticity steels.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrogen solubility and diffusion in Type 304, 316L and 310S austenitic stainless steels exposed to high-pressure hydrogen gas has been investigated. The effects of absorbed hydrogen and strain-induced martensite on fatigue crack growth behaviour of the former two steels have also been measured. In the pressure range 10–84 MPa, the hydrogen permeation of the stainless steels could be successfully quantified using Sieverts' law modified by using hydrogen fugacity and Fick's law. For the austenitic stainless steels, hydrogen diffusivity was enhanced with an increase in strain-induced martensite. The introduction of dislocation and other lattice defects by pre-straining increased the hydrogen concentration of the austenite, without affecting diffusivity. It has been shown that the coupled effect of strain-induced martensite and exposure to hydrogen increased the growth rate of fatigue cracks.  相似文献   

16.
The objective of this work is to identify microstructural variables that lead to the large scatter of the relative resistance of 316 grade stainless steels to hydrogen environment embrittlement. In slow displacement rate tensile testing, two almost identical (by nominal chemical composition) heats of SUS 316L austenitic stainless steel showed significantly different susceptibilities to HEE cracking. Upon straining, drawn bar showed a string-like duplex microstructure consisting of α′-martensite and γ-austenite, whereas rolled plate exhibited a highly regular layered α′-γ structure caused by measured gradients in local Ni content (9.5–13 wt%). Both martensite and austenite are intrinsically susceptible to HEE. However, due to Ni macro segregation and microstructural heterogeneity, fast H-diffusion in martensite layers supported a 10 times faster H-enhanced crack growth rate and thus reduced tensile reduction in area. Nickel segregation is thus a primary cause of the high degree of variability in H2 cracking resistance for different product forms of 316 stainless steel.  相似文献   

17.
Hydrogen and fuels derived from it will serve as the energy carriers of the future. The associated rapidly growing demand for hydrogen energy-related infrastructure materials has stimulated multiple engineering and scientific studies on the hydrogen embrittlement resistance of various groups of high performance alloys. Among these, high-Mn steels have received special attention owing to their excellent strength – ductility – cost relationship. However, hydrogen-induced delayed fracture has been reported to occur in deep-drawn cup specimens of some of these alloys. Driven by this challenge we present here an overview of the hydrogen embrittlement research carried out on high-Mn steels. The hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility of high-Mn steels is particularly sensitive to their chemical composition since the various alloying elements simultaneously affect the material's stacking fault energy, phase stability, hydrogen uptake behavior, surface oxide scales and interstitial diffusivity, all of which affect the hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility. Here, we discuss the contribution of each of these factors to the hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility of these steels and discuss pathways how certain embrittlement mechanisms can be hampered or even inhibited. Examples of positive effects of hydrogen on the tensile ductility are also introduced.  相似文献   

18.
The susceptibility to hydrogen embrittlement behavior was investigated in an interstitial Mn–N austenitic steel HR183 and stainless steel 316L. Hydrogen was introduced by cathodic hydrogen charging at 363 K. HR183 has stronger austenite stability than 316L despite its lower nickel content, the addition of manganese and nitrogen inhibited martensitic transformation during the slow strain rate tensile deformation. Due to the diffusion of hydrogen being delayed by the interstitial solution of nitrogen atoms and the uniform dislocation slips, hydrogen permeates more slowly in HR183 than 316L, contributing to an 84.79 μm thinner brittle fracture layer in HR183 steel. Hydrogen charging caused elongation losses in both 316L and HR183 steels associated with the hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity (HELP) and hydrogen-enhanced decohesion (HEDE) mechanism. However, the hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility of HR183 is 3.4 times lower than that of 316L according to the difference in elongation loss between the two steel after hydrogen charging. Deformation twins trapped a lot amount of hydrogen leading to brittle intergranular fracture in 316L. The multiple directions of slip in HR183 steel suppressed the strain localization inside grains and delayed the adverse effects conducted by HELP and HEDE mechanism, eventually inhibiting server hydrogen embrittlement in the HR183 steel. This study is assisting in the development of low-cost stainless steel with excellent hydrogen embrittlement resistance that can be used in harsh hydrogen-containing environments.  相似文献   

19.
Eight commercial austenitic stainless steels were tensile tested in reference atmosphere, in gaseous high-pressure hydrogen and in gaseous hydrogen precharged condition using conventional (CS) and tubular specimens (TS). For all configurations, 0.2 yield strength and ultimate tensile strength were comparable. In reference atmosphere, reduction of area of CS was higher compared to TS, whereas in gaseous high pressure hydrogen reduction of area of CS was lower compared to TS. In gaseous hydrogen precharged condition reduction of area of CS and TS were comparable for the severely affected grades. The differences in necking behavior between CS and TS are explained by different competitions between necking and hydrogen assisted crack initiation and growth especially for the tests in high pressure hydrogen gas.  相似文献   

20.
The susceptibility of low nickel content type 316L austenitic stainless steel to hydrogen was quantified using low strain rate tensile tests and strain-controlled low-cycle fatigue life measurements. Both tests were performed under air condition after charging with high-pressure 10-MPa hydrogen gas at 300 °C for eight days. No significant influence of hydrogen was recognized in 0.2% proof stress, but the strain at fracture and reduction area was decreased significantly in both hydrogen pre-charged and in gaseous hydrogen conditions compared to companion tests conducted in air. The decrease of fatigue life in the high strain amplitude region was related to a significant decrease in the plastic component while the effect of hydrogen on the elastic component was negligible. Highly localized deformation and a pronounced martensite transformation occurred near the site of the fracture surface in the high strain amplitude regime, resulting in the early formation of abundant micro-surface cracks in this regime of the hydrogen pre-charged samples.  相似文献   

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