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Assessing fracture toughness of vintage and modern X65 pipeline steels under in situ electrochemical hydrogen charging using advanced testing methodology

Abstract

The susceptibility of pipeline steels to hydrogen embrittlement, which can significantly impair mechanical performance, especially fracture toughness, is a critical issue in infrastructure integrity. This study evaluates the fracture toughness of modern and vintage API X65 steels under cathodic polarization (CP) conditions, employing methods such as rising displacement testing, stepwise rising constant load testing, and constant load testing. Tearing crack growth was detected at crack tip opening displacements (CTODs) of 0.032 to 0.055 mm while subsequent crack arrest under constant force loading was observed with CTOD thresholds of 0.148 mm and 0.255 mm for modern and vintage X65, respectively. Electron channelling contrast imaging demonstrated that arrested cracks in both steels exhibited reduced plasticity and a higher propensity for crack branching compared to propagating cracks. These findings highlight the need for tailored strategies to mitigate the effects of hydrogen embrittlement in pipeline materials and underscore the differences in damage tolerance between steel generations.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Materials and Nanotechnology
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • Kumamoto University
  • Kyushu University
  • Beijing Institute of Technology

Year

2024

Published in

Engineering Fracture Mechanics

ISSN

0013-7944

Volume

301

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository