Abstract

There is no common standard for blended hydrogen use in the natural gas grid; hydrogen content is generally based on delivery systems and end-use applications. The need for a quantitative evaluation of hydrogen-natural gas mixtures related to the mechanical performance of materials is becoming increasingly evident to obtain long lifetime, safe, and reliable pipeline structures. This study attempts to provide experimental data on the effect of H2 concentration in a methane/hydrogen (CH4/H2) gas mixture used in hydrogen transportation. The mechanical performance under various blended hydrogen concentrations was compared for three pipeline steels, API X42, X65, and X70. X65 exhibited the highest risk of hydrogen-assisted crack initiation in the CH4/H2 gas mixture in which brittle fractures were observed even at 1% H2. The X42 and X70 samples exhibited a significant change in their fracture mechanism in a 30% H2 gas mixture condition; however, their ductility remained unchanged. There was an insignificant difference in the hydrogen embrittlement indices of the three steels under 10 MPa of hydrogen gas. The coexistence of delamination along with the ferrite/pearlite interface, heterogeneous deformation in the radial direction, and abundance of nonmetallic MnS inclusions in the X65 sample may induce a high stress triaxiality at the gauge length at the beginning of the slow strain rate tensile process, thereby facilitating efficient hydrogen diffusion.

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