We present a theoretical and numerical scheme that enables quantifying
hydrogen ingress in metals for arbitrary environments and defect geometries.
This is achieved by explicitly resolving the electrochemical behaviour of the
electrolyte, the hydrogen and corrosion reactions, the kinetics of surface
adsorption, and hydrogen uptake, diffusion and trapping in
mechanically-deforming solids. This new framework is used to produce maps that
relate the absorbed hydrogen with the applied potential, specimen geometry and
fluid velocity. We also present simplified versions of our generalised model,
and benchmark predictions of these and other existing models against the
generalised electro-chemo-mechanical results, establishing regimes of validity