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      Hydrogen Effect on Plastic Deformation and Fracture in Austenitic Stainless Steel

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          Abstract

          The effect of hydrogen on the fracture behaviour of austenitic stainless steel has been investigated in the past [1][2]. It has been reported that fracture initiates by void formation at inclusions and regions of enhanced strain localisation [3]. There is experimental evidence that supports the fact that hydrogen influences void nucleation, growth and coalescence during material fracture [4]. This work investigates the effect of hydrogen on void growth and coalescence in austenitic stainless steel. The effect of hydrogen on void growth and coalescence for different stress triaxialities has been examined by analysing the stress strain response of a single crystal representative volume element (RVE). The results show that the higher the stress triaxiality, the lower the equivalent stress required to yield. This response is found to be similar irrespective of whether the material is being exposed to hydrogen or not. Lower equivalent strain values to yield were experienced for higher stress triaxialities for both hydrogen free and hydrogenated samples. Hydrogen slowed down void growth at high stress triaxialities but promoted void growth as lower triaxialities. For lower triaxialities, the presence of hydrogen was found to initially inhibit void growth at low equivalent strain values. However, this effect reversed at higher equivalent strain values and hydrogen was found to promote void growth. The effect of hydrogen promoting or inhibiting void growth have been shown to increase in magnitude with increasing hydrogen concentration.

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          Hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity—a mechanism for hydrogen-related fracture

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            Hydrogen embrittlement in different materials: A review

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              Damage due to hydrogen embrittlement and stress corrosion cracking

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                15 October 2019
                Article
                1910.06603
                7bc2767a-2b79-4fa2-b07f-6091d2e5e883

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                19 pages, submitted to NACE 2020
                cond-mat.mtrl-sci cs.NA math.NA

                Numerical & Computational mathematics,Condensed matter
                Numerical & Computational mathematics, Condensed matter

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