Publication | Open Access
Recent progress in microstructural hydrogen mapping in steels: Quantification, kinetic analysis, and multi-scale characterisation
214
Citations
73
References
2017
Year
Hydrogen Energy TechnologyEngineeringMicroscopyMechanical EngineeringHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelChemistryMicrostructural Hydrogen MappingMulti-scale CharacterisationChemical EngineeringCorrosionRecent ProgressMaterials ScienceMicroanalysisHydrogenMicrostructureMetallographyHydrogen TransitionNatural SciencesSpectroscopySurface ScienceScanning Probe MicroscopyHigh Spatial ResolutionHydrogen Embrittlement
This paper gives an overview of recent progress in microstructure-specific hydrogen mapping techniques. The challenging nature of mapping hydrogen with high spatial resolution, i.e. at the scale of finest microstructural features, led to the development of various methodologies: thermal desorption spectrometry, silver decoration, the hydrogen microprint technique, secondary ion mass spectroscopy, atom probe tomography, neutron radiography, and the scanning Kelvin probe. These techniques have different characteristics regarding spatial and temporal resolution associated with microstructure-sensitive hydrogen detection. Employing these techniques in a site-specific manner together with other microstructure probing methods enables multi-scale, quantitative, three-dimensional, high spatial, and kinetic resolution hydrogen mapping, depending on the specific multi-probe approaches used. Here, we present a brief overview of the specific characteristics of each method and the progress resulting from their combined application to the field of hydrogen embrittlement. This paper is part of a thematic issue on Hydrogen in Metallic Alloys
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