Publication | Open Access
Hydrogen embrittlement through the formation of low-energy dislocation nanostructures in nanoprecipitation-strengthened steels
74
Citations
44
References
2020
Year
EngineeringSevere Plastic DeformationMechanical EngineeringHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelMechanics Of MaterialsFish EyeWork HardeningLow-energy Dislocation NanostructuresMicrostructure-strength RelationshipMaterials ScienceStrain PartitioningNanoprecipitation-strengthened SteelsSolid MechanicsDefect FormationHydrogenPlasticityMicrostructureDislocation InteractionApplied PhysicsHydrogen Embrittlement
Hydrogen embrittlement is shown to proceed through a previously unidentified mechanism. Upon ingress to the microstructure, hydrogen promotes the formation of low-energy dislocation nanostructures. These are characterized by cell patterns whose misorientation increases with strain, which concomitantly attracts further hydrogen up to a critical amount inducing failure. The appearance of the failure zone resembles the "fish eye" associated to inclusions as stress concentrators, a commonly accepted cause for failure. It is shown that the actual crack initiation is the dislocation nanostructure and its associated strain partitioning.
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