Hydrogen Damage of Metallic Materials
Hydrogen Damage of Metallic Materials
Hydrogen Damage of Metallic Materials
METALLIC MATERIALS
T.K. G. NAMBOODHIRI
PROFESSOR OF METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING
(Retired)
BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY
VARANASI
Introduction
• Hydrogen-most ubiquitous element
• Minute amounts can damage metals
• Can be easily picked up by metals during
melting, casting, working, fabrication and
use
• Many forms of hydrogen damage
Classification of hydrogen damage
DEGRADATION OF
LOSS IN TENSILE
HYDROGEN HYDROGEN STRESS OTHER MECHANICAL
ENVIRONMENT
EMBRITTLEMENT CRACKING PROPERTIES DUCTILITY
HYDROGEN
SLOW STRAIN RATE EMBRITTLEMENT
EMBRITTLEMENT
HYDRIDE SOLID SOLUTION
HYDROGEN
HARDENING
EMBRITTLEMENT DAMAGE
HYDROGEN EMBRITTLEMENT
• HYDROGEN EMBRITTLEMENT
• HYDROGEN INDUCED BLISTER
CRACKING
• HYDROGEN ATTACK
Characteristics of Hydrogen
Embrittlement
• Strain rate and temperature sensitivity
• Delayed failure
• Sub critical cracking and threshold
stress intensity
• Effects on tensile properties
• Fracture mechanisms
Strain rate and temperature
sensitivity of H.E.
• Most pronounced at
slow strain rates and
ambient temperatures
• Decreases
monotonically with
increasing strain rate
• Minimum at around
room temperature
Delayed failure in H.E.
• Incubation period
independent of stress
• Time to failure increases
with decreasing stress
• Discontinuous crack
propagation
• Lower critical stress below
which no failure
• H causes delayed failure in
many materials
• Parameters strongly
dependent on H content
Effects of H on tensile
properties
• Increased/decreased/unaffected Y.S.
• Strain localization/Luders band/serrated
yielding
• Increased/decreased flow stress and work
hardening rate
• Increased screw dislocation velocity and
dislocation multiplication
• Loss in tensile ductility
Fracture mechanisms in H.E.
• H promotes all fracture mechanisms
• MVC in low strength steels
• Ductile, quasi-cleavage or I.G. fractures in high
strength steels
• I.G.failure in Ni
• I.G. or Transgranular cleavage(fluted
morphology) in Ti alloys.
• I.G., cleavage or M.V.C. in Al alloys.
H induced fracture morphology
Hydrogen Induced Blister Cracking
(HIBC)
• Metallurgical parameters: Non-metallic
inclusions, Sulfur content, alloy segregation
and microstructure. Very low S levels and
inclusion shape control to eliminate HIBC
nucleation. Reduction in hardness of
segregated zones to prevent HIBC
propagation.
• Environmental parameters: Hydrogen fugacity.
A threshold fugacity below which HIBC does
not occur.
HYDROGEN INDUCED BLISTERS