New insights into hydrogen-assisted intergranular cracking in nickel
S. Quan, A. Zafra, E. Mart\'inez-Pa\~neda, C. Wu, Z.D. Harris, L. Cupertino-Malheiros

TL;DR
This study investigates how hydrogen affects intergranular cracking in pure nickel, revealing that certain grain boundaries are more resistant and that hydrogen concentration influences crack formation and embrittlement.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the role of specific grain boundary types and hydrogen levels in nickel's susceptibility to intergranular cracking, contrasting previous findings in Ni alloys.
Findings
$ ext{Sigma}$-3 boundaries are most resistant to cracking.
Higher hydrogen levels increase intergranular fracture and embrittlement.
Cracking susceptibility varies with hydrogen concentration and boundary type.
Abstract
We characterize the grain boundary (GB) susceptibility to hydrogen-assisted intergranular cracking in pure nickel as a function of coincident site lattice value (-n), over a wide range of hydrogen concentrations (4 to 14 wppm). Cracks on the surface and within the bulk material were identified across the entire gauge region of the specimens. The susceptibility of GBs to crack initiation and propagation was evaluated by separating cracks containing single GB or multiple GBs. A larger loss in fracture strain, a smaller reduction in area, and an increase in the percentage of intergranular fracture indicated a higher degree of embrittlement at elevated hydrogen concentrations. The number of cracks was significantly higher on the surface than in the bulk for the most severe hydrogen charging conditions ( 8 wppm), while a similar number was observed for lower concentrations. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrogen embrittlement and corrosion behaviors in metals · Material Properties and Failure Mechanisms · Cold Fusion and Nuclear Reactions
