Grain-boundary engineering markedly reduces susceptibility to intergranular hydrogen embrittlement in metallic materials
Acta Materialia 57(14): 4148-4157
Article 2009 English
Authors
SB
Sabine Bechtle
MK
Mukul Kumar
BS
Brian P. Somerday
Abstract
1 min read
The feasibility of using “grain-boundary engineering” techniques to reduce the susceptibility of a metallic material to intergranular embrittlement in the presence of hydrogen is examined. Using thermomechanical processing, the fraction of “special” grain boundaries was increased from 46% to 75% (by length) in commercially pure nickel samples. In the presence of hydrogen concentrations between 1200 and 3400appm, the high special fraction microstructure showed almost double the tensile ductility; also, the proportion of intergranular fracture was significantly lower and the Jc
fracture toughness values were some 20–30% higher in comparison with the low special fraction microstructure. We attribute the reduction in the severity of hydrogen-induced intergranular embrittlement to the higher fraction of special grain boundaries, where the degree of hydrogen segregation at these boundaries is reduced.
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