Abstract

Uniaxial mechanical testing conducted at room temperature (RT) and 77 K on hydrogen (H)-exposed nickel was coupled with targeted microscopy to evaluate the influence of deformation temperature, and therefore mobile H-deformation interactions, on intergranular cracking in nickel. Results from interrupted tensile tests conducted at cryogenic temperatures (77 K), where mobile H-deformation interactions are effectively precluded, and RT, where mobile H-deformation interactions are active, indicate that mobile H-deformation interactions are not an intrinsic requirement for H-induced intergranular fracture. Moreover, an evaluation of the true strain for intergranular microcrack initiation for testing conducted at RT and 77 K suggests that H which is segregated to grain boundaries prior to the onset of straining dominates the H-induced fracture process for the prescribed H concentration of 4000 appm. Finally, recent experiments suggesting that H-induced fracture is predominately driven by mobile H-deformation interactions, as well as the increased susceptibility of coherent twin boundaries to H-induced crack initiation, are re-examined in light of these new results.

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