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Journal article

Change in Hydrogen Trapping Characteristics and Influence on Hydrogen Embrittlement Sensitivity in a Medium-Carbon, High-Strength Steel: The Effects of Heat Treatments

Abstract

Medium-carbon, high-strength steels are widely used in the field of hydrogen energy because of their good mechanical properties, and they can be readily tailored by heat treatment processes such as the normalizing-tempering (N&T) and quenching-tempering (Q&T) methods. The hydrogen embrittlement (HE) susceptibility of a medium-carbon, high-strength steel was investigated utilizing microstructural characterization with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), the electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) technique, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). A study was also conducted on the steel's hydrogen transport behavior as affected by the N&T and Q&T treatments. The steel contained more hydrogen traps, such as dislocations, grain boundaries, lath boundaries, and carbide interfaces, after the Q&T process, which was associated with a lower HE sensitivity when comparing the two treatments. In comparison, the N&T process produced larger-size and lesser-density carbides distributed along the grain boundaries, and this resulted in a relatively higher HE susceptibility, as revealed by the slow-strain-rate tensile (SSRT) tests of the hydrogen-charged steels and by the fractographic study of the fracture surface.

Authors

Tong Z; Wang H; Zheng W; Zhou H

Journal

Materials, Vol. 17, No. 8,

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

April 17, 2024

DOI

10.3390/ma17081854

ISSN

1996-1944

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