The influence of hydrogen on the fracture toughness and fatigue crack propagation rate of two structural steel grades, with and without vanadium, was evaluated by means of tests per-formed on thermally precharged samples in a hydrogen reactor at 195 bar and 450 °C for 21 h. The degradation of the mechanical properties was directly correlated with the interaction between hydrogen atoms and the steel microstructure. A LECO DH603 hydrogen analyzer was used to study the activation energies of the different microstructural trapping sites, and also to study the hydrogen eggresion kinetics at room temperature. The electrochemical hydrogen permeation technique was employed to estimate the apparent hydrogen diffusion coefficient. Under the mentioned hydrogen precharging conditions, a very high hydrogen concentration was introduced within the V-added steel (4.3 ppm). The V-added grade had stronger trapping sites and much lower apparent diffusion coefficient. Hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility increased significantly due to the presence of internal hydrogen in the V-free steel in comparison with tests carried out in the uncharged condi-tion. However, the V-added steel grade (+0.31%V) was less sensitive to hydrogen embrittlement. This fact was ascribed to the positive effect of the precipitated nanometric (Mo,V)C to alleviate hydrogen embrittlement. Mixed nanometric (Mo,V)C might be considered to be nondiffusible hydro-gen-trapping sites, in view of their strong hydrogen-trapping capability (~35 kJ/mol). Hence, mechanical behavior of the V-added grade in the presence of internal hydrogen was notably improved.
The positive role of nanometric molybdenum–vanadium carbides in mitigating hydrogen embrittlement in structural steels
Colombo C.;
2021-01-01
Abstract
The influence of hydrogen on the fracture toughness and fatigue crack propagation rate of two structural steel grades, with and without vanadium, was evaluated by means of tests per-formed on thermally precharged samples in a hydrogen reactor at 195 bar and 450 °C for 21 h. The degradation of the mechanical properties was directly correlated with the interaction between hydrogen atoms and the steel microstructure. A LECO DH603 hydrogen analyzer was used to study the activation energies of the different microstructural trapping sites, and also to study the hydrogen eggresion kinetics at room temperature. The electrochemical hydrogen permeation technique was employed to estimate the apparent hydrogen diffusion coefficient. Under the mentioned hydrogen precharging conditions, a very high hydrogen concentration was introduced within the V-added steel (4.3 ppm). The V-added grade had stronger trapping sites and much lower apparent diffusion coefficient. Hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility increased significantly due to the presence of internal hydrogen in the V-free steel in comparison with tests carried out in the uncharged condi-tion. However, the V-added steel grade (+0.31%V) was less sensitive to hydrogen embrittlement. This fact was ascribed to the positive effect of the precipitated nanometric (Mo,V)C to alleviate hydrogen embrittlement. Mixed nanometric (Mo,V)C might be considered to be nondiffusible hydro-gen-trapping sites, in view of their strong hydrogen-trapping capability (~35 kJ/mol). Hence, mechanical behavior of the V-added grade in the presence of internal hydrogen was notably improved.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
materials-14-07269-v2.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: Free full text online
:
Publisher’s version
Dimensione
4.07 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
4.07 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.