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Hydrogen-assisted fatigue crack propagation in a commercially pure BCC iron

Abstract

Hydrogen effect on fatigue performance of commercially pure BCC iron has been studied with a combination of various electron microscopy techniques. The fatigue crack growth (FCG) in gaseous hydrogen was found to consist of two regimes corresponding to a slightly accelerated regime at relatively low stress intensity factor range, ΔK, (Stage I) and the highly accelerated regime at relatively high ΔK (Stage II). These regimes were manifested by the intergranular and quasicleavage types of fractures respectively. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) observations demonstrated an increase in plastic deformation around the crack wake in the Stage I, but considerably lower amount of plasticity around the crack path in the Stage II. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results identified dislocation cell structure immediately beneath the fracture surface of the Stage I sample, and dislocation tangles in the Stage II sample corresponding to fracture at high and low plastic strain amplitudes respectively.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Domas Birenis
  • Yuhei Ogawa
  • Hisao Matsunaga
  • Osamu Takakuwa
  • Øystein Prytz
  • Junichiro Yamabe
  • Annett Thøgersen

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Sustainable Energy Technology
  • University of Oslo
  • Kyushu University

Year

2018

Published in

PVP - American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Pressure Vessels and Piping Division

ISSN

0277-027X

Volume

6B-2018

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository