Home
Scholarly Works
Experimental Study on SCC Susceptibility of X60...
Conference

Experimental Study on SCC Susceptibility of X60 Steel Using Full Pipe Sections in Near-Neutral pH Environment

Abstract

Stress corrosion cracking (SCC) tests were performed using the pipe section buried in a clay type of soil with the pH adjusted to near-neutral range. Pipe specimens with various sizes of fatigue pre-cracks ahead of artifical notch tips on the outer surface were subjected to cyclic loading tests. Maximum level of hoop stress was 105% SMYS, and R-value (Ratio of minimum load to maximum load) was 0.5. Growth of cracks was observed from the fatigue crack tips. Fractographic and metallographic examination has confirmed the quasi-cleavage nature of the transgranular SCC that is typically observed in near-neutral pH SCC. Crack depth measurement using DCPD method revealed the relatively high crack growth rate up to 10−5 mm/s. Metallographic examinations showed the existence of many micro-cracks associated with MnS inclusions in the highly strained field ahead of the initial crack tips. The relatively high crack growth rate may be caused by MnS inclusions. The loading rate, dJ/dt, was calculated for each crack condition in order to correlate qualitatively the crack growth rate with the loading rate. J-integral was calculated through non-linear FEM analyses for semi-elliptical cracks based on the stress-strain relationships obtained from the tensile tests using the same X60 steel specimen. Linear relationship was then obtained between the crack growth rate and the loading rate, and therefore the possibility to predict crack growth rates for various loading condition in the field was demonstrated.Copyright © 2004 by ASME

Authors

Kim BA; Zheng W; Williams G; Laronde M; Gianetto JA; Shen G; Tyson WR; Oguchi N; Hosokawa Y

Pagination

pp. 133-141

Publisher

ASME International

Publication Date

January 1, 2004

DOI

10.1115/ipc2004-0280

Name of conference

2004 International Pipeline Conference, Volumes 1, 2, and 3

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team