Abstract

Hydrogen induced cracking (HIC) has been a persistent issue in welding of high-strength steels. Mitigating residual stresses is one of the most efficient ways to control HIC. The current study develops a proactive in-process weld residual stress mitigation technique, which manipulates the thermal expansion and contraction sequence in the weldments during welding process. When the steel weld is cooled after welding, martensitic transformation will occur at a temperature below 400 C. Volume expansion in the weld due to the martensitic transformation will reduce tensile stresses in the weld and heat affected zone and in some cases produce compressive residual stresses in the weld. Based on this concept, a customized filler wire which undergoes a martensitic phase transformation during cooling was developed. The new filler wire shows significant improvement in terms of reducing the tendency of HIC in high strength steels. Bulk residual stress mapping using neutron diffraction revealed reduced tensile and compressive residual stresses in the welds made by the new filler wire.

Highlights

  • Hydrogen induced cracking (HIC), called cold cracking or delayed cracking has been a persistent issue in welding of high-strength steels

  • MIL-DTL-12560 Y-grooved plates were both welded by conventional ER100 (LA-100) filler wire and Low temperature transformation (LTT) filler wire

  • A crack throughout the weld in conventional ER100 filler wire indicates ER100 is very susceptible to HIC for MIL-DTL-12560

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Summary

Introduction

Hydrogen induced cracking (HIC), called cold cracking or delayed cracking has been a persistent issue in welding of high-strength steels. Many studies have shown that tensile residual stress contributes to the high susceptibility of pre-mature fatigue failure [3,4] and hydrogen induced cracking (HIC) in steel welds [5,6,7,8]. Current study applied LTT filler wire principles to mitigate HIC in high-strength armor steels.

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