Abstract

The role of dispersions of pre-existing grain boundary microvoids is investigated in fracture toughness and fatigue crack propagation behavior in a low alloy steel. Microvoid damage is achieved by prior exposure of the steel to gaseous hydrogen atmospheres at high temperatures and pressures, where carbon within the steel reacts with ingressed hydrogen to nucleate methane bubbles along prior austenite grain boundaries (hydrogen attack). It is shown that, whereas the crack initiation and crack growth toughness (i.e. K Ic and the tearing modulus) are severely degraded, even for comparatively mild degrees of microvoid damage, rates of sub-critical crack growth by fatigue remain relatively unaffected. Such results are interpreted in terms of a mutual competition between microstructural damage generated by the grain boundary microvoids, which promotes crack growth by lowering the intrinsic resistance of the microstructure, and the resulting tortuous crack paths, which extrinsically retard crack growth at low stress intensities by lowering the local crack tip “driving force” (crack tip shielding). As shielding effects are minimized at high stress intensities, the degradation in intrinsic toughness is related to changes in ductility by means of a stress-modified critical strain model for ductile fracture, where the presence of small microvoid clusters is shown to promote coalescence through the easier onset of plastic strain localization. Fatigue behavior, conversely, is dominated by extrinsic shielding mechanisms and is modeled in terms of two-dimensional models of crack deflection and roughness-induced crack closure.

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