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  5. Grain-boundary engineering markedly reduces susceptibility to intergranular hydrogen embrittlement in metallic materials

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Article
English
2009

Grain-boundary engineering markedly reduces susceptibility to intergranular hydrogen embrittlement in metallic materials

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English
2009
Acta Materialia
Vol 57 (14)
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2009.05.012

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Robert O. Ritchie
Robert O. Ritchie

University of California, Berkeley

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Sabine Bechtle
Mukul Kumar
Brian P. Somerday
+2 more

Abstract

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.

How to cite this publication

Sabine Bechtle, Mukul Kumar, Brian P. Somerday, Maximilien E. Launey, Robert O. Ritchie (2009). Grain-boundary engineering markedly reduces susceptibility to intergranular hydrogen embrittlement in metallic materials. Acta Materialia, 57(14), pp. 4148-4157, DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2009.05.012.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2009

Authors

5

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Acta Materialia

DOI

10.1016/j.actamat.2009.05.012

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