Abstract

A stress-modified, critical-strain model of fracture-initiation toughness has been adapted to the case of hydrogen-affected pearlite shear cracking, which is a critical event in transverse fracture of cold-drawn, pearlitic steel wire. This shear cracking occurs via a process of cementite lamellae failure, followed by microvoid nucleation, growth, and linkage to create shear bands that form across pearlite colonies. The key model feature is that the intrinsic resistance to shear-band cracking at a transverse notch or crack is related to the effective fracture strain at the notch root. This fracture strain decreases with the logarithm of the diffusible hydrogen concentration (C H). Good agreement with experimental transverse fracture-initiation-toughness values was obtained when the sole adjustable parameter of the model, the critical microstructural dimension (l*), was set to the mean dimension of shearable pearlite colonies within this steel. The effect of hydrogen was incorporated through the relationship between local effective plastic strain (ɛ eff f ) and C H, obtained from sharply and bluntly notched tensile specimens analyzed by finite-element analysis (FEA) to define stress and strain fields. No transition in the transverse fracture-initiation morphology was observed with increasing constraint or hydrogen concentration. Instead, shear cracking from transverse notches and precracks was enabled at lower global applied stresses when C H increased. This shear-cracking process is assisted by absorbed and trapped hydrogen, which is rationalized to either reduce the cohesive strength of the Fe/Fe3C interface, localize slip in ferrite lamellae so as to more readily enable shearing of Fe3C by dislocation pileups, or assist subsequent void growth and link-up. The role of hydrogen at these sites is consistent with the detected hydrogen trapping. Large hydrogen-trap coverages at carbides can be demonstrated using trap-binding-energy analysis when hydrogen-assisted shear cracking is observed at low applied strains.

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