Abstract
One of the recurring anomalies in the hydrogen induced fracture of high strength steels is the apparent disconnect between their toughness and uniaxial tensile strength in identical hydrogen environments. Here we propose, supported by detailed atomistic and continuum calculations, that unlike macroscopic toughness, hydrogen-mediated tensile failure is a result of a fast-fracture mechanism. Specifically, we show that failure originates from the fast propagation of cleavage cracks that initiate from cavities that form around inclusions such as carbide particles. The failure process occurs in two stages. In stage-A, hydrides rapidly form around the roots of stressed notches on the cavity surfaces with hydrogen fed from the hydrogen gas within the cavity. These hydrides promote cleavage fracture with the cracks propagating at >100ms−1 until the hydrogen gas in the cavity is exhausted. Predictions of this hydrogen-assisted crack growth mechanism are supported by atomistic calculations of binding energies, mobility barriers and molecular dynamics calculations of the fracture process. Typically, cracks grow by less than 1 μm via this hydrogen-assisted mechanism and thus insufficient to cause macroscopic fracture of the specimen. However, this stage is then followed by a stage-B process where these fast propagating cracks can continue to grow, now in the absence of hydrogen supply, given an appropriate level of remote tensile stress. This is surprising because the fracture energy is now that of Fe in the absence of H and cleavage fracture requires opening tractions on the order of 15 GPa to be generated. Thus, fracture is usually precluded due to plasticity around the crack-tip. Here we show via macroscopic continuum crack growth calculations in a rate dependent elastic-plastic solid with fracture modelled using a cohesive zone that cleavage is possible if the crack propagates fast enough. This is because strain-rates at the tips of fast propagating cracks are sufficiently high for the drag on the motion of dislocations resulting from phonon scattering to limit plasticity. This combined atomistic/continuum model is used to explain a host of well-established experimental observations including (but not limited to): (i) insensitivity of the strength to the concentration of trapped hydrogen; (ii) the extensive microcracking in addition to the final cleavage fracture event and (iii) the higher susceptibility of high strength steels to hydrogen embrittlement. Importantly, we also show that the stage-A hydrogen-assisted fracture process only occurs in certain crystallographic orientations with crack-tip plasticity processes, such as twinning, blunting cracks in other orientations. This inhibits the fast-fracture mechanism in a macroscopic toughness on a polycrystalline material and thus explains the apparent contradiction between the hydrogen-assisted macroscopic toughness and tensile strength of steels.
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