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Journal ArticleDOI

Fracture Mechanics and Surface Chemistry Studies of Subcritical Crack Growth in AISI 4340 Steel.

TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated the role of hydrogen in the embrittling process of crack growth in high strength steels, and found that hydrogen is the hydrogen species responsible for embrittlement.
Abstract
Coordinated fracture mechanics and surface chemistry experiments were carried out to develop further understanding of environment enhanced subcritical crack growth in high strength steels. The kinetics of crack growth were determined for an AISI 4340 steel (tempered at 204°C) in hydrogen and in water, and the kinetics for the reactions of water with the same steel were also determined. A regime of rate limited (Stage II) crack growth was observed in each of the environments. Stage II crack growth was found to be thermally activated, with an apparent activation energy of 14.7 ±2.9 kJ/mole for crack growth in hydrogen, and 33.5 ± 5.0 kJ/mole in water. Fractographic evidence indicated that the fracture path through the microstructure was the same for these environments, and suggested hydrogen to be the embrittling species for environment enhanced crack growth in hydrogen and in water/water vapor. A slow step in the surface reaction of water vapor with steel was identified, and exhibited an activation energy of 36 ± 14 kJ/ mole. This reaction step was identified to be that for the nucleation and growth of oxide. The hydrogen responsible for embrittlement was presumed to be produced during this reaction. On the basis of a comparison of the activation energies, in conjunction with other supporting data, this slow step in the water/metal surface reaction was unambiguously identified as the rate controlling process for crack growth in water/water vapor. The inhibiting effect of oxygen and the influence of water vapor pressure on environment enhanced subcritical crack growth were considered. The influence of segregation of alloying and residual impurity elements on crack growth was also considered.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of hydrogen on the properties of iron and steel

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of hydrogen on the physical and mechanical properties of iron and steel are reviewed and a new mechanism for the cold work peak for hydrogen in iron is considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

A quantum-mechanically informed continuum model of hydrogen embrittlement

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of hydrogen embrittlement based on a cohesive law dependent on impurity coverage that is calculated from first principles was presented. But the model was not applied to the case of hydrogen-assisted cracking, where the authors considered the effect of the following parameters: yield strength, stress intensity factor, hydrogen concentration in the environment and temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crack tip shielding--an elastic theory of dislocations and dislocation arrays near a sharp crack

TL;DR: In this article, an elastic solution has been found for a screw dislocation near a crack in the absence of any external stresses, where the dislocation produces a stress intensity factor on the crack even without external stresses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Near-threshold fatigue-crack propagation in steels

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of various mechanical, microstructural, and environmental factors which influence fatigue-crack propagation in steels at growth rates less than 10-6 mm/cycle, where the alternating stress intensity approaches the so-called threshold stress intensity ∆K0 below which crack growth cannot be experimentally detected.

Hydrogen Assisted Cracking of High Strength Alloys

TL;DR: In this paper, a plot of plane strain fracture toughness vs. tensile yield strength for ultra-high strength steels (UHSS) and beta-Ti alloys precipitation hardened with a phase is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of Phase Change. I General Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the theory of phase change is developed with the experimentally supported assumptions that the new phase is nucleated by germ nuclei which already exist in the old phase, and whose number can be altered by previous treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of Phase Change. II Transformation‐Time Relations for Random Distribution of Nuclei

TL;DR: In this article, a relation between the actual transformed volume V and a related extended volume V1 ex is derived upon statistical considerations, and a rough approximation to this relation is shown to lead, under the proper conditions, to the empirical formula of Austin and Rickett.
Journal ArticleDOI

Granulation, Phase Change, and Microstructure Kinetics of Phase Change. III

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive description of the phenomena of phase change may be summarized in Phase Change, Grain Number and Microstructure Formulas or Diagrams, giving, respectively, the transformed volume, grain, and microstructure densities as a function of time, temperature, and other variables.
Book ChapterDOI

Stress Analysis of Cracks

TL;DR: Elastic stress analyses of cracked bodies represented by stress intensity factor method - fracture mechanics as discussed by the authors, and fracture mechanics are used for fracture mechanics. But they are not suitable for fracture analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sub-critical flaw growth.

TL;DR: The major evidence bearing upon sub-critical flaw growth in structural materials is reviewed and discussed in this paper, focusing on the growth of pre-existing flaws at operating stresses less than the net section yield strength, from both the separate and combined effects of fatigue and aggressive environments.
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