148 research outputs found
Cracks in Martensite Plates as Hydrogen Traps in a Bearing Steel
It is demonstrated that a macroscopically homogeneous distribution of
tiny cracks introduced into a martensitic bearing steel sample can provide
powerful hydrogen traps. The phenomenon has been investigated through
thermal desorption spectroscopy and hydrogen permeation measurements
using both cracked and integral samples. The e↵ective hydrogen di↵usion
coefficient through the cracked sample is found to be far less than in the uncracked
one. Similarly, when samples are charged with hydrogen, and then
subjected to thermal desorption analysis, the amount of hydrogen liberated
from the cracked sample is smaller due to the trapping by the cracks. Theoretical
analysis of the data shows that the traps due to cracks are so strong,
that any hydrogen within the cracks can never in practice de-trap and cause
harm by mechanisms that require the hydrogen to be mobile for the onset of
embrittlement.W. Solano-Alvarez is very
grateful for support from the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers, CONACyT,
the Cambridge Overseas Trust, and the Roberto Rocca Education Programme.This is the accepted manuscript. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11661-014-2680-8
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