Abstract

This article reviews the microstructural evolution in ultrafine-grained and nanotwinned austenitic stainless steels that have been subjected to hydrogen embrittlement (HE) and fatigue cracking. It provides guidelines for the development of high-strength austenitic steels without sacrificing HE and fatigue performance. The author focuses on the hydrogen-induced ductility loss and short fatigue crack growth associated with deformation-induced martensitic transformation, using micro-tension and micro-fatigue testing technologies. In type 304 metastable austenitic stainless steel, the microstructure produced by high-pressure torsion depends strongly on the processing temperature. Nanocrystalline austenite with enhanced strength and moderate ductility can be obtained at a processing temperature of ~423–573 K, whereas dual-phase microstructures comprising austenite and martensite are formed by processing at room temperature. Introducing ultrafine grains and nanotwin bundles mitigates the hydrogen-induced ductility loss in metastable austenitic steel by controlling the dynamic martensitic transformation. The microstructure refinement also contributes to enhanced resistance to short fatigue crack growth by changing the route of the damage accumulation process via phase transformation and detwinning.

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