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Hydrogen-assisted fatigue crack propagation in a pure BCC iron. Part II: Accelerated regime manifested by quasi-cleavage fracture at relatively high stress intensity range values

Abstract

Hydrogen effect on fatigue performance at relatively high values of stress intensity factor range, ΔK, of pure BCC iron has been studied with a combination of various electron microscopy techniques. Hydrogen-assisted fatigue crack growth rate is manifested by a change of fracture features at the fracture surface from ductile transgranular in air to quasi-cleavage in hydrogen gas. Grain reference orientation deviation (GROD) analysis has shown a dramatic suppression of plastic deformation around the crack wake in samples fatigued in hydrogen. These results were verified by preparing site-specific specimens from different fracture features by using Focused Ion Beam (FIB) technique and observing them with Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM). The FIB lamella taken from the sample fatigued in air was decorated with dislocation cell structure indicating high amount of plasticity, while the lamella taken from the quasi-cleavage surface of the sample fatigued in hydrogen revealed a distribution of dislocation tangles which corresponds to smaller plastic strain amplitude involved at the point of fracture. These results show that a combination of critical hydrogen concentration and critical stress during fatigue crack growth at high ΔK values triggers cleavage-like fracture due to reduction of cohesive force between matrix atoms.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

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

Affiliation

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

Year

2018

Published in

MATEC Web of Conferences

Volume

165

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository