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1.
Effects of internal hydrogen and surface-absorbed hydrogen on hydrogen embrittlement (HE) of X80 pipeline steel were investigated by using different strain rate tensile test, annealing and hydrogen permeation tests. HE of X80 pipeline steel is affected by internal hydrogen and surface-absorbed hydrogen, and the latter plays a major role due to its higher effective hydrogen concentration. The HE susceptibility decreases with increasing the strain rate because it is more difficult for hydrogen to be captured by dislocations at the high strain rate. Annealing at 200 °C can weakened HE caused by internal hydrogen, while it has little effect on HE caused by surface-absorbed hydrogen. HE of X80 pipeline steel is mainly determined by the behavior of dislocation trapping hydrogen, which can be attributed to the interaction between hydrogen and dislocation.  相似文献   

2.
The slow strain rate tensile experiments are carried out to investigate the tensile properties of X80 pipeline steel in hydrogen blended natural gas environments with different H2/CH4/CO contents. Mechanical properties and fracture morphologies are further analyzed. The results show that the hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility of X80 steel can be inhibited by the presence of CH4/CO, and the inhibition mechanisms are discussed. When the CH4 contents increase above 20 vol%, the inhibition on hydrogen embrittlement of X80 steel is stabilized. By comparison, the inhibitory effect of CO is more significant.  相似文献   

3.
We are reporting in this study the hydrogen permeation in the lattice structure of a steel pipeline designed for natural gas transportation by investigating the influence of blending gaseous hydrogen into natural gas flow and resulted internal pressure values on the structural integrity of cracked pipes. The presence of cracks may provoke pipeline failure and hydrogen leakage. The auto-ignition of hydrogen leaks, although been small, leads to a flame difficult to be seen. The latter makes such a phenomenon extremely dangerous as explosions became very likely to happen. In this paper, a reliable method is presented that can be used to predict the acceptable defect in order to reduce risks caused by pipe failure due to hydrogen embrittlement. The presented model takes into account the synergistic effects of transient gas flow conditions in pipelines and hydrogen embrittlement of steel material due to pressurized hydrogen gas permeation. It is found that blending hydrogen gas into natural gas pipelines increases the internal load on the pipeline walls due to overpressure values that may be reached in a transient gas flow regime. Also, the interaction between transient hydrogen gas flow and embrittlement of API 5L X52 steel pipeline was investigated using Failure Assessment Diagram (FAD) and the results have shown that transient flow enhances pipeline failure due to hydrogen permeation. It was shown that hydrogen embrittlement of steel pipelines in contact with the hydrogen environment, together with the transient gas flow and significantly increased transient pressure values, also increases the probability of failure of a cracked pipeline. Such a situation threatens the integrity of high stress pipelines, especially under the real working conditions of hydrogen gas transportation.  相似文献   

4.
Hydrogen embrittlement (HE) of high-grade pipeline welded joint is a threat to hydrogen gas transport. In this research, slow strain rate tension (SSRT) tests in high-pressure hydrogen gas, combined with hydrogen permeation tests and microstructure analysis were conducted on X80 steel, intercritical heated-affected zone (ICHAZ), fine-grained heat-affected zone (FGHAZ) and coarse-grained heat-affected zone (CGHAZ). The change of HE susceptibility from high to low was CGHAZ, FGHAZ, ICHAZ, and base metal. Microstructure was the important factor influencing hydrogen permeation and susceptibility to HE. Susceptibility to HE was increased in the order of “fine-grained massive ferrite (MF) and acicular ferrite (AF)”, “fine-grained granular bainite (GB) and MF”, “coarse-grained GB and bainite ferrite (BF) embedded with martensite-austenite (M-A) constitute”. The fine-grained MF and AF in base metal with lower hydrogen diffusivity can impede the embrittlement behaviour, while the coarse-grained GB and BF with higher hydrogen diffusivity in CGHAZ increased its susceptibility to HE.  相似文献   

5.
Hydrogen embrittlement (HE) induced by hydrogen permeation is a serious threat to the hydrogen transmission pipeline. In this study, oxide films were prepared on X80 steel by applying high-temperature oxidation, blackening treatment and passivation in concentrated H2SO4, and their effects on hydrogen permeation and HE susceptibility of X80 substrate were studied by conducting hydrogen permeation tests and slow strain rate tension (SSRT) tests. A numerical diffusion model was established to quantitatively determine the resistance of these oxide films to hydrogen permeation. Results showed that the oxide film prepared by high-temperature oxidation presented the highest resistance to hydrogen permeation with the ?m/?f value of 3828, and the corresponding HE index decreased from 38.07% for bare X80 steel to only 4.00% for that covered with oxide film. The characteristic of the corresponding fracture surfaces changed from brittle features such as quasi cleavage facets and secondary cracks to typical ductile dimple feature.  相似文献   

6.
In a near future, with an increasing use of hydrogen as an energy vector, gaseous hydrogen transport as well as high capacity storage may imply the use of high strength steel pipelines for economical reasons. However, such materials are well known to be sensitive to hydrogen embrittlement (HE). For safety reasons, it is thus necessary to improve and clarify the means of quantifying embrittlement. The present paper exposes the changes in mechanical properties of a grade API X80 steel through numerous mechanical tests, i.e. tensile tests, disk pressure test, fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth measurements, WOL tests, performed either in neutral atmosphere or in high-pressure of hydrogen gas. The observed results are then discussed in front of safety considerations for the redaction of standards for the qualification of materials dedicating to hydrogen transport.  相似文献   

7.
The present work aims to investigate the role of hydrogen induced blisters cracking on degradation of tensile and fatigue properties of X65 pipeline steel. Both tensile and fatigue specimens were electrochemically charged with hydrogen at 20 mA/cm2 for a period of 4 h. Hydrogen charging resulted in hydrogen induced cracking (HIC) and blister formation throughout the specimen surface. Nearly all the blisters formed during hydrogen charging showed blister wall cracking (BWC). Inclusions mixed in Al-Si-O were found to be the potential sites for HIC and BWC. Slow strain rate tensile (SSRT) test followed by fractographic analysis confirmed significant hydrogen embrittlement (HE) susceptibility of X65 steel. Short fatigue crack growth framework, on the other hand, specifically highlighted the role of BWC on accelerated crack growth in the investigated material. Coalescence of propagating short fatigue crack with BWC resulted in rapid increase in the crack length and reduced the number of cycles for crack propagation to the equivalent crack length.  相似文献   

8.
By limiting the pipes thickness necessary to sustain high pressure, high-strength steels could prove economically relevant for transmitting large gas quantities in pipelines on long distance. Up to now, the existing hydrogen pipelines have used lower-strength steels to avoid any hydrogen embrittlement. The CATHY-GDF project, funded by the French National Agency for Research, explored the ability of an industrial X80 grade for the transmission of pressurized hydrogen gas in large diameter pipelines. This project has developed experimental facilities to test the material under hydrogen gas pressure. Indeed, tensile, toughness, crack propagation and disc rupture tests have been performed. From these results, the effect of hydrogen pressure on the size of some critical defects has been analyzed allowing proposing some recommendations on the design of X80 pipe for hydrogen transport. Cost of Hydrogen transport could be several times higher than natural gas one for a given energy amount. Moreover, building hydrogen pipeline using high grade steels could induce a 10 to 40% cost benefit instead of using low grade steels, despite their lower hydrogen susceptibility.  相似文献   

9.
Although hydrogen embrittlement (HE) has been the subject of extensive research over the past century, a systematic study on the HE susceptibility of steels under different electrochemical charging conditions has been lacking. This study specifically targets this knowledge gap by evaluating the HE behaviour of a typical pipeline steel X65 after hydrogen-charging in acidic, neutral, and alkaline electrolytes that simulate various industrial environments. Results from a series of experiments show that the HE susceptibility of X65 steel varied significantly with hydrogen-charging electrolytes and, to a smaller extent, with electrochemical charging variables. The highest and lowest HE susceptibilities were found from specimens charged in acidic and alkaline electrolytes, respectively. An increase in yield strength was observed for almost all hydrogen-charged specimens, regardless of the charging conditions. Under severe electrochemical charging conditions, blistering was detected and mechanical properties were substantially decreased. Discussion has been made in comprehending these relationships.  相似文献   

10.
Blending hydrogen into high-strength pipeline steels for high-pressure transmission may cause materials' hydrogen embrittlement (HE) failure. Although the hydrogen-induced failure of metallic materials has been studied for a long time, the process of hydrogen into the materials, hydrogen-induced delayed failure, and dynamic mechanisms of high-strength pipeline steels under high pressure have not been fully understood. This paper aims to provide a detailed review of the latest research on the hydrogen-induced failure of high-strength pipeline steels in hydrogen-blended natural gas transmission. First, introduced the typical hydrogen blending natural gas pipeline transmission projects and their associated research conclusions. Then, described the physical process of the HE in high-strength pipeline steels and the principle, development, and latest research progress of typical hydrogen embrittlement mechanisms in detail. Third, reviewed the research methods and progress of experimental and theoretical simulations for the HE in steels, including hydrogen permeation (HP) experiments, hydrogen content measurements, hydrogen distribution detection, mechanical property tests, and molecular dynamics simulations. The shortcomings of existing experimental and theoretical simulation methods in the hydrogen-induced analysis of high-strength natural gas pipeline steels under high pressure are discussed. Finally, the future research directions and challenges of this problem are proposed from three aspects: the multimechanism synergy mechanism, the improvement of experimental methods, and the establishment of a new interatomic multiscale model.  相似文献   

11.
Environmental hydrogen embrittlement has become a non-negligible problem in the hydrogen blended natural gas transportation. To qualitatively study the degradation mechanism of X80 steel used in the natural gas pipelines, the slow strain tensile experiments are carried out in this work. The nitrogen and hydrogen are adopted to simulate the hydrogen blended natural gas to explore the tensile properties of X80 steel. According to the volume proportion of hydrogen, the test atmospheres are divided into the reference atmosphere and the hydrogen-contained atmospheres of 1%, 2.2% and 5%. The tensile experiments of the smooth and notched specimens are conducted in the above gas atmospheres. Mechanical properties and fracture morphologies after stretching are further analyzed. The results show that the hydrogen blended natural gas has little effect on the tensile and yield strengths. Distinguished from the hydrogen volume proportion of 1% and 2.2%, with the increase of hydrogen proportion, the effect of hydrogen on mechanical properties of specimens increases significantly. Moreover, the deteriorated mechanical properties of notched specimens are more seriously than those of smooth specimens. This work provides the basis for safe hydrogen proportion for X80 pipeline steel when transporting hydrogen blended natural gas.  相似文献   

12.
To support our increasing energy demand, steel pipelines are deployed in transporting oil and natural gas resources for long distances. However, numerous steel structures experience catastrophic failures due to the evolution of hydrogen from their service environments initiated by corrosion reactions and/or cathodic protection. This process results in deleterious effect on the mechanical strength of these ferrous steel structures and their principal components. The major sources of hydrogen in offshore/subsea pipeline installations are moisture as well as molecular water reduction resulting from cathodic protection. Hydrogen induced cracking comes into effect as a synergy of hydrogen concentration and stress level on susceptible steel materials, leading to severe hydrogen embrittlement (HE) scenarios. This usually manifests in the form of induced-crack episodes, e.g., hydrogen induced cracking (HIC), stress-oriented hydrogen induced cracking (SOHIC) and sulfide stress corrosion cracking (SSCC). In this work, we have outlined sources of hydrogen attack as well as their induced failure mechanisms. Several past and recent studies supporting them have also been highlighted in line with understanding of the effect of hydrogen on pipeline steel failure. Different experimental techniques such as Devanathan–Stachurski method, thermal desorption spectrometry, hydrogen microprint technique, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and electrochemical noise have proven to be useful in investigating hydrogen damage in pipeline steels. This has also necessitated our coverage of relatively comprehensive assessments of the effect of hydrogen on contemporary high-strength pipeline steel processed by thermomechanical controlled rolling. The effect of HE on cleavage planes and/or grain boundaries has prompted in depth crystallographic texture analysis within this work as a very important parameter influencing the corrosion behavior of pipeline steels. More information regarding microstructure and grain boundary interaction effects have been presented as well as the mechanisms of crack interaction with microstructure. Since hydrogen degradation is accompanied by other corrosion-related causes, this review also addresses key corrosion causes affecting offshore pipeline structures fabricated from steel. We have enlisted and extensively discussed several recent corrosion mitigation trials and performance tests in various media at different thermal and pressure conditions.  相似文献   

13.
This study aims to investigate the mechanical properties of X70 pipeline steel under the synergistic influence of hydrogen and stress concentration. Slow strain rate tensile tests and low-cycle fatigue tests were performed on the specimens with different stress concentration factors (Kt) in 10 MPa nitrogen/hydrogen mixtures. Results show that the degradation degree of the ductility and fatigue life of X70 steel induced by hydrogen increases with the increase of Kt, and as the hydrogen partial pressure in mixtures increases, the influence of Kt on hydrogen-induced degradation increases as well. In addition, finite element analysis was performed via a modified hydrogen diffusion/plasticity coupled model to study the effect of Kt on hydrogen distribution in the specimens, which can influence the mechanical properties of X70. The maximum hydrogen concentration consistently appears at the notch tip of the specimen and increases with the increase of Kt, which is proposed to be one of the reasons for the severe hydrogen embrittlement of the specimens with large Kt. As the axial tensile force on the specimen increases, the maximum hydrogen concentration at the notch tip begins to be dominated by hydrogen in the normal interstitial lattice sites and, subsequently, in the trapping sites.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of fatigue damage on the hydrogen embrittlement (HE) sensitivity of X80 steel welded joints, obtained using flux-cored arc welding method, were investigated in the study. Results show that both the yield and tensile strength increased for all the hydrogen-charged welded joints and decreased with the accumulation of fatigue damage. The fracture surface is the mixture of local quasi-cleavage (QC) surrounded by shallow dimples ductile fracture for hydrogen-charged welded joints, whilst that of hydrogen-free welded joint is typical dimple ductile fracture. The presence of fisheye morphology might be related to the hydrogen, local strain accumulation in the vicinity of inclusions and dislocations evolution caused by the cyclic load. The mechanism is the synergistic action of hydrogen-enhanced decohesion (HEDE) and hydrogen enhanced localized plasticity (HELP). However, the pinning effect of hydrogen on the dislocation motion is the dominant role.  相似文献   

15.
Fatigue initiation resistance has been determined on API 5L X52 gas pipe steel. Tests have been performed on Roman Tile (RT) specimen and fatigue initiation was detected by acoustic emission. A comparison between specimens electrolytically charged with hydrogen and specimens without hydrogen absorption were made and it has been noted that fatigue initiation time is reduced of about 3 times when hydrogen embrittlement occurs. It has been proposed to use the concept of Notch Stress Intensity Factor as parameter to describe the fatigue initiation process. Due to the fact that hydrogen is localised in area with high hydrostatic pressure, definitions of local effective stress and distance have been modified when hydrogen is absorbed. This modification can be explained by existence of a ductile–brittle transition with hydrogen concentration. The fatigue initiation resistance curve allows that to determine a threshold for large number of cycles of fatigue non initiation. This parameter introduced in a Failure Assessment Diagram (FAD) provides supplementary information about defect nocivity in gas pipes: a non-critical defect can be detected as dormant or not dormant defect i.e., as non propagating defect.  相似文献   

16.
The low-cycle fatigue and fatigue crack growth (FCG) properties of X80 pipeline steel in hydrogen atmosphere were determined to investigate the variation of hydrogen pressure and its influence on fatigue life. The test environment was switched to a hydrogen atmosphere after 1000, 3000, or 5000 cycles of pre-fatigue testing in a nitrogen atmosphere. Notch tensile tests were conducted in nitrogen and hydrogen atmospheres after the specimens were pre-fatigued for 3000 or 5000 cycles. The results showed that the cycles to failure of X80 decreased exponentially with increasing hydrogen pressure. When the displacement amplitude (DA) values remained steady (below 3000 cycles), the X80 steels showed no noticeable deterioration in the fatigue properties with or without hydrogen. When the DA values increased (above 5000 cycles), cracks propagated slowly and fatigue properties were strongly reduced in the hydrogen atmosphere, but not in nitrogen. Hydrogen-accelerated crack growth dominates the reduction of fatigue life below 0.6 MPa of hydrogen pressure. Hydrogen-accelerated crack initiation plays a more important role than FCG in the reduction of fatigue life with increasing hydrogen pressure.  相似文献   

17.
The fatigue life estimation of metals operating in hydrogen-rich environments such as hydrogen pipelines, hydrogen-burning internal combustion engines, etc. is important. Studies in the past 40 years have shown that the diffusion of hydrogen into steel and other metals causes various chemical reactions, hydrogen-material interactions, and microstructural changes. That leads to hydrogen embrittlement (HE) and other types of hydrogen damage mechanisms including hydrogen environmentally assisted cracking (HEAC). Hydrogen embrittlement mechanisms, such as hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity (HELP) and hydrogen-enhanced decohesion (HEDE) can have synergetic effects in steel depending on the hydrogen concentration level. At concentrations above and below the critical hydrogen concentration, HEDE and HELP dominate the embrittlement process, respectively. Different HE mechanisms result in distinctly different fracture modes, both ductile and fully brittle. The ultrasonic vibration fatigue life of bcc steel with a ferrite-pearlite microstructure pre-charged with hydrogen at different concentrations is studied. Modeling is based on the unified mechanics theory (UMT), which does not need any empirical dissipation/degradation potential function or an empirical void evolution function. However, the UMT does require analytical derivation of the thermodynamic fundamental equation of the material, which is used to calculate the thermodynamic state index (TSI) of the material. The UMT is ab-initio unification of the second law of thermodynamics and the universal laws of motion of Newton [1]. Dissipation/degradation evolution is governed by Boltzmann's second law of thermodynamics entropy formulation. The original contribution of this paper is the derivation of the thermodynamic fundamental equation of pre-hydrogen embrittled bcc steel subjected to ultrasonic very high cycle fatigue and the numerical simulations of fatigue life estimation using the proposed novel model. The synergetic interaction of hydrogen embrittlement mechanisms in steel and other metallic materials, i.e., HELP and HEDE at different hydrogen concentrations (HELP + HEDE model) is also studied, reviewed, and applied. The synergetic effects between ultrasonic vibration fatigue life and synergistically active hydrogen embrittlement mechanisms in low carbon bcc steel (S355J2+N, equivalent to ASTM A656), according to the HELP + HEDE model for HE, is modeled for the first time using UMT and also thoroughly discussed.  相似文献   

18.
There is no common standard for blended hydrogen use in the natural gas grid; hydrogen content is generally based on delivery systems and end-use applications. The need for a quantitative evaluation of hydrogen-natural gas mixtures related to the mechanical performance of materials is becoming increasingly evident to obtain long lifetime, safe, and reliable pipeline structures. This study attempts to provide experimental data on the effect of H2 concentration in a methane/hydrogen (CH4/H2) gas mixture used in hydrogen transportation. The mechanical performance under various blended hydrogen concentrations was compared for three pipeline steels, API X42, X65, and X70. X65 exhibited the highest risk of hydrogen-assisted crack initiation in the CH4/H2 gas mixture in which brittle fractures were observed even at 1% H2. The X42 and X70 samples exhibited a significant change in their fracture mechanism in a 30% H2 gas mixture condition; however, their ductility remained unchanged. There was an insignificant difference in the hydrogen embrittlement indices of the three steels under 10 MPa of hydrogen gas. The coexistence of delamination along with the ferrite/pearlite interface, heterogeneous deformation in the radial direction, and abundance of nonmetallic MnS inclusions in the X65 sample may induce a high stress triaxiality at the gauge length at the beginning of the slow strain rate tensile process, thereby facilitating efficient hydrogen diffusion.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Fatigue property of CrMo steel is significantly degraded by hydrogen embrittlement (HE), which probably influences the fatigue life of hydrogen storage vessels made of CrMo steel. In this study, tests of fatigue crack growth rate (FCGR) for specimens extracted from the cylinder, juncture and shoulder of a seamless storage vessel made of 4130X for hydrogen refueling station were performed in 45 MPa hydrogen gas. Based on the test results, a finite element method (FEM) based on adaptive grid technique was applied to calculate fatigue life of the vessel with an initial crack at different positions. 3D laser scanning technology was used to build the model which can well conform to the actual vessel. Results indicate that the FCGR of 4130X in 45 MPa hydrogen is approximately 10–15 times of the FCGR in air. The FCGR of specimens from the shoulder is approximately 1.2–1.5 times of that from the cylinder and juncture. However, as the influence of stress distribution, the fatigue life of a vessel with a crack in the middle of the cylinder is lower than that of the vessel which exists crack with the same size at the juncture and shoulder.  相似文献   

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