The effect of hydrogen content and yield strength on the distribution of hydrogen in steel

a diffusion coupled micromechanical FEM study

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

A.H.A. Hussein (TU Delft - Ship Hydromechanics and Structures)

Alfons H.M. Krom (Nederlandse Gasunie)

P. Dey (TU Delft - Team Poulumi Dey)

G.K. Sunnardianto (TU Delft - (OLD) MSE-7, Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI))

Othonas A. Moultos (TU Delft - Engineering Thermodynamics)

Carey L. Walters (TU Delft - Ship Hydromechanics and Structures)

Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics and Structures
Copyright
© 2021 A.H.A. Hussein, Alfons H.M. Krom, P. Dey, G.K. Sunnardianto, O. Moultos, C.L. Walters
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2021.116799
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 A.H.A. Hussein, Alfons H.M. Krom, P. Dey, G.K. Sunnardianto, O. Moultos, C.L. Walters
Research Group
Ship Hydromechanics and Structures
Volume number
209
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Abstract

In this study, we investigate the effect of the heterogeneous micromechanical stress fields resulting from the grain-scale anisotropy on the redistribution of hydrogen using a diffusion coupled crystal plasticity model. A representative volume element with periodic boundary conditions was used to model a synthetic microstructure. The effect of tensile loading, initial hydrogen content and yield strength on the redistribution of lattice (CL) and dislocation trapped (Cx) hydrogen was studied. It was found that the heterogeneous micromechanical stress fields resulted in the accumulation of both populations primarily at the grain boundaries. This shows that in addition to the well-known grain boundary trapping, the interplay of the heterogeneous micromechanical hydrostatic stresses and plastic strains contribute to the accumulation of hydrogen at the grain boundaries. Higher yield strength reduced the amount of Cx due to the resulting lower plastic deformation levels. On the other side, the resulting higher hydrostatic stresses increased the depletion of CL from the compressive regions and its diffusion toward the tensile ones. These regions with increased CL are expected to be potential damage initiation zones. This aligns with the observations that high-strength steels are more susceptible to hydrogen embrittlement than those with lower-strength.