Evaluation and Prevention of Hydrogen Embrittlement by NDT Methods: A Review †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Hydrogen Embrittlement
2.1. Factors Responsible for the Sensitivity of the Material to HE-
- Material strength and residual stress in the material.
- Pressure, temperature, and time of exposure.
- The degree of strain applied and the surface conditions of the material.
- Amount of hydrogen or number of hydrogen traps.
- Certain metal layers and deposits.
- The microstructure of a material.
- Solutions that react with metals (acid solutions).
- Heat treatment of a material.
2.2. Mechanism
2.2.1. Hydrogen Enhanced Decohesion Mechanism (HEDE)
2.2.2. Hydrogen Enhanced Local Plasticity Model (HELP)
2.2.3. Adsorption-Induced Dislocation Emission (AIDE)
2.2.4. Hydrogen Enhanced Macroscopic Ductility (HEMP)
2.2.5. Hydrogen Changed Micro-Fracture Mode (HAM)
2.2.6. Decohesive Hydrogen Fracture (DHF)
2.2.7. Hydrogen Assisted Micro Void Coalescence (HDMC)
2.3. Hydrogen Charging Characteristic
2.4. Techniques and Tools to Measure HE
2.4.1. Linearly Increasing Stress Test (LIST)
2.4.2. TDS
2.4.3. Hydrogen Permeation Test
2.4.4. Microstructural Analysis
2.4.5. Hydrogen Microprint Technique (HMT)
3. Nondestructive Testing (NDT)
3.1. Non-Destructive Testing Methods
3.1.1. Visual Inspection
3.1.2. Ultrasonic Testing
3.1.3. Radiography
3.1.4. Eddy Current Testing
3.1.5. Magnetic Particle Inspection
3.1.6. Acoustic Emission Testing
3.1.7. Liquid Penetrate Testing
4. Literature Survey
5. Summary of Literature Survey
6. Evaluation of Hydrogen Embrittlement through NDT
7. Conclusions
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
References
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S.No. | Author Name (Year) | Remarks/Findings |
---|---|---|
1 | Bae et al., (2014) | It depicts the dimple type ductile fracture mode in conjunction with the sum of quasi-cleavage type brittle fracture mode. |
2 | Capriotti ed al. (2000) | It reveals that the XRD technique is being used as a basic NDT test to determine residual stress differences in aircraft high strength steel components. |
3 | Yashar javadi et al.(2020) | The micrograph and microscopic investigation shows very large no. of cracks have been measured from water quenched process and large number of cracks was subsequently detected. |
4 | Motomichi koyama et al., (2011) | Two types of cracks are observed namely intergranual fracture and transgranular fracture along twin boundaries. |
5 | Haiting Zhou et al., (2020) | The finding is that hydrogen content low alloy steel increases with increasing hydrogen charging time and then reaches the saturation level after 40 h. |
6 | Dmitry. L. Merson et al., (2008) | AE appears too sensitive in hydrogen damage during first 10 h of immersion in H2S solution. Noticeably only after about 300 h holding the same solution. |
7 | D. X. Yang et al., (2001) | The results extracted three properties from the study, which are jumpsum and jumpsum rate and deferential permeability. They vary in sensitivity with small deformations well below the 0.2 offset strains in ultra low carbon steel. |
8 | Shejun xie et al., (2014) | With increasing plastic pressure, the findings indicate a decrease in electrical conductivity and an improvement in magnetic permeability. |
9 | Takayuki shiraiwa et al., (2020) | Two processed images were used to locate cracks; the smallest crack found was a hole form with a radius of 0.25 mm and a depth of 0.4 mm. |
10 | Takayuki shiraiwa et al., (2020) | The initial crack estimated from AE signals decreases as the hydrogen content increases from the initial deviation. |
11 | AV Bochkaryova et al., (2015) | Hydrogenated alloy has lower degree of ductility with respect to the original alloy; however, the behavior of plastic flow in material has practically not changed. |
12 | Xingle Chen et al., (2015) | The Pulsed eddy current testing conductivity measuring approach is highly useful for sorting ferromagnetic materials. |
13 | Meisam Sheikh et al., (2009) | They established the relationship between surface carbon content and impedance, phase angle. The carbon content of surface increases with decreased the calculated and measurement parameters. |
14 | K.Beyer et al., (2011) | The finding of this study is that increase in temperature increases hydrogen flow. |
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Choudhary, S.; Vishwakarma, M.; Dwivedi, S.K. Evaluation and Prevention of Hydrogen Embrittlement by NDT Methods: A Review. Mater. Proc. 2021, 6, 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/CMDWC2021-10044
Choudhary S, Vishwakarma M, Dwivedi SK. Evaluation and Prevention of Hydrogen Embrittlement by NDT Methods: A Review. Materials Proceedings. 2021; 6(1):18. https://doi.org/10.3390/CMDWC2021-10044
Chicago/Turabian StyleChoudhary, Sujeet, Manish Vishwakarma, and Sandeep Kumar Dwivedi. 2021. "Evaluation and Prevention of Hydrogen Embrittlement by NDT Methods: A Review" Materials Proceedings 6, no. 1: 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/CMDWC2021-10044
APA StyleChoudhary, S., Vishwakarma, M., & Dwivedi, S. K. (2021). Evaluation and Prevention of Hydrogen Embrittlement by NDT Methods: A Review. Materials Proceedings, 6(1), 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/CMDWC2021-10044