Simulation of hydrogen permeation through pure iron for trapping and surface phenomena characterisation
A. D\'iaz, A. Zafra, E. Mart\'inez-Pa\~neda, J.M. Alegre, J. Belzunce,, I.I. Cuesta

TL;DR
This study models hydrogen permeation in pure iron to understand grain boundary trapping and surface effects, combining experiments and simulations to improve predictions of hydrogen behavior in steels.
Contribution
It introduces a combined experimental and numerical approach to characterize hydrogen trapping and diffusion in pure iron, considering grain size and boundary effects.
Findings
Finer grains delay hydrogen diffusion due to boundary trapping.
Trap parameters vary with charging conditions, affecting permeation.
Grain boundary trapping energies are between 37.8 and 39.9 kJ/mol.
Abstract
There is a need for numerical models capable of predicting local accumulation of hydrogen near stress concentrators and crack tips to prevent and mitigate hydrogen assisted fracture in steels. The experimental characterisation of trapping parameters in metals, which is required for an accurate simulation of hydrogen transport, is usually performed through the electropermeation test. In order to study grain size influence and grain boundary trapping during permeation, two modelling approaches are explored; a 1D Finite Element model including trap density and binding energy as input parameters and a polycrystalline model based on the assignment of a lower diffusivity and solubility to the grain boundaries. Samples of pure iron after two different heat treatments - 950C for 40 minutes and 1100C for 5 minutes - are tested applying three consecutive rising permeation steps and three decaying…
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