Abstract

Elastic–plastic fracture mechanics methods were used to characterize hydrogen-assisted crack propagation in two austenitic stainless steel gas tungsten arc (GTA) welds. Thermally precharged hydrogen (140wppm) degraded fracture initiation toughness and crack growth toughness and altered fracture mechanisms. Fracture initiation toughness in hydrogen-precharged welds represented a reduction of >67% from the estimated toughness of non-charged welds. In hydrogen-precharged welds, microcracks initiated at ferrite, and dendritic microstructure promoted crack propagation along ferrite. Deformation twinning in austenite interacts with ferrite, facilitating microcrack formation. While hydrogen altered fracture mechanisms similarly for both welds, the amount of ferrite governed the severity of hydrogen-assisted crack propagation.

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