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Numerical analysis of hydrogen transport near a blunting crack tip

TLDR
In this paper, Oriani's equilibrium theory is used to relate the hydrogen in traps (micro-structural defects) to concentration in normal interstitial lattice sites (NILS), and the resulting non-linear transient hydrogen diffusion equations are integrated using a modified backward Euler method.
Abstract
T he hydrogen transport problem is studied in conjunction with large deformation elastic—plastic behavior of a material. Oriani's equilibrium theory is used to relate the hydrogen in traps (micro-structural defects) to concentration in normal interstitial lattice sites (NILS). The resulting non-linear transient hydrogen diffusion equations are integrated using a modified backward Euler method. Coupled diffusion and plastic straining is analysed with this numerical procedure in the area around a blunting crack tip. A uniform NILS concentration as dictated by Sievert's law at the pressure and temperature of interest is used as initial condition throughout the body. The crack is initially blunted by plane strain mode I (tensile) loading. The finite element results show that hydrogen residing at NILS is generally very small in comparison with the population that develops in trapping sites near the crack surface. That is, lattice diffusion delivers the hydrogen but it is predominantly the trapping that determines its distribution at temperatures of interest. The predominance of trapped hydrogen over lattice concentration prevails even in the case when hydrogen migrates under steady state conditions. Hence, the hydrostatic stress effect is less important than traps created by plastic straining as far as the creation of high total hydrogen concentration is concerned. The trapping site locations and the temperature determine the amounts and locations of high hydrogen concentrations. Consequently, ahead of a blunting crack tip, the total hydrogen concentration and plastic strain diminish with distance from the crack tip whereas the hydrostatic stress rises. This would seem to have significant consequences for fractures induced by the presence of hydrogen.

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Citations
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Load dynamics effects on hydrogen assisted cracking initiation

TL;DR: In this article, a finite element procedure is employed for coupled consideration of the large deformation elastoplastic stress-strain field and transient hydrogen diffusion near pre-fatigued crack in a strain-hardening material.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microscopic Damage Growth with Hydrogen-induced Longitudinal Cracks in Tensile-shear Test on Mechanical Clinching Joint of Mild Steel Sheet and Aluminum Alloy Sheet

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the evolution of mesoscopic and microscopic damages during tensile shear tests on clinched joints, with and without hydrogen charging, and found that hydrogen causes the damage to evolve from primarily void coalescence to longitudinal crack coalescence.

Simulation of Crack Growth due to Hydrogen-Induced Stress-Corrosion Cracking on a High-Strength Steel FeE690T

TL;DR: In this paper, the model of a pre-cracked C(T) specimen loaded in a hydrogen enriched environment is simulated by means of the cohesive zone model in order to investigate the crack growth behavior.

Numerical simulation of the crack tip elastic- plastic state

Hiroshi Kawai
TL;DR: In this article, a boundary layer approach is applied to determine the elastic-plastic state around a blunting crack tip without having to model a complete geometry, which is valid as long as small scale yielding conditions hold.
References
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Book

The finite element method

TL;DR: In this article, the methodes are numeriques and the fonction de forme reference record created on 2005-11-18, modified on 2016-08-08.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Path Independent Integral and the Approximate Analysis of Strain Concentration by Notches and Cracks

TL;DR: In this paper, an integral is exhibited which has the same value for all paths surrounding a class of notches in two-dimensional deformation fields of linear or non-linear elastic materials.
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

The diffusion and trapping of hydrogen in steel

TL;DR: In this paper, the mobility of dissolved hydrogen in an iron lattice having a population of extraordinary, or trapping, sites for hydrogen is analyzed under the assumption of local equilibrium between the mobile and the trapped populations.
Book

Hydrogen in metals

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