Marina Cabrini1,2,3, Ennio Sinigaglia4, Carlo Spinelli5, Marco Tarenzi6, Cristian Testa7,8,9, Fabio Maria Bolzoni10. 1. Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences, University of Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. marina.cabrini@unibg.it. 2. INSTM Unità di Ricerca Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. marina.cabrini@unibg.it. 3. CSGI Unità di Ricerca Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. marina.cabrini@unibg.it. 4. Transitgas AG Zurich (Ch), 8001 Zurich, Switzerland. sinigaglia@transitgas.ch. 5. Eni S.p.A TECM, 20097 San Donato Milanese (MI), Italy. carlo.maria.spinelli@eni.com. 6. Snam S.p.A. DIREZIONE TECNICA, 20097 San Donato Milanese (MI), Italy. marco.tarenzi@snam.it. 7. Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences, University of Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. cristian.testa@unibg.it. 8. INSTM Unità di Ricerca Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. cristian.testa@unibg.it. 9. CSGI Unità di Ricerca Bergamo, 24044 Dalmine (BG), Italy. cristian.testa@unibg.it. 10. Dipartimenti di Chimica, Materiali e Ingegneria Chimica G. Natta Politecnico di Milano, 20131 Milano (MI), Italy. fabio.bolzoni@polimi.it.
Abstract
The aim of this work is the evaluation of the hydrogen effect on the J-integral parameter. It is well-known that the micro alloyed steels are affected by Hydrogen Embrittlement phenomena only when they are subjected at the same time to plastic deformation and hydrogen evolution at their surface. Previous works have pointed out the absence of Hydrogen Embrittlement effects on pipeline steels cathodically protected under static load conditions. On the contrary, in slow strain rate tests it is possible to observe the effect of the imposed potential and the strain rate on the hydrogen embrittlement steel behavior only after the necking of the specimens. J vs. Δa curves were measured on different pipeline steels in air and in aerated NaCl 3.5 g/L solution at free corrosion potential or under cathodic polarization at -1.05 and -2 V vs. SCE. The area under the J vs. Δa curves and the maximum crack propagation rate were taken into account. These parameters were compared with the ratio between the reduction of area in environment and in air obtained by slow strain rate test in the same environmental conditions and used to rank the different steels.
The aim of this work is the evaluation of thehydrogen effect on the J-integral parameter. It is well-known that the micro alloyed steels are affected by Hydrogen Embrittlement phenomena only when they are subjected at the same time to plastic deformation and hydrogen evolution at their surface. Previous works have pointed out the absence of Hydrogen Embrittlement effects on pipeline steels cathodically protected under static load conditions. On the contrary, in slow strain rate tests it is possible to observe the effect of the imposed potential and the strain rate on thehydrogenembrittlement steel behavior only after the necking of the specimens. J vs. Δa curves were measured on different pipeline steels in air and in aerated NaCl 3.5 g/L solution at free corrosion potential or under cathodic polarization at -1.05 and -2 V vs. SCE. The area under the J vs. Δa curves and the maximum crack propagation rate were taken into account. These parameters were compared with the ratio between the reduction of area in environment and in air obtained by slow strain rate test in the same environmental conditions and used to rank the different steels.
Environmental Assisted Cracking (EAC) phenomena take place when a specific aggressive environment and a mechanical load over a critical threshold value act simultaneously on a susceptible material. Different mechanisms have been proposed for EAC phenomena, and one of these is Hydrogen Embrittlement (HE), which takes place when atomic hydrogen enters into themetal lattice. At room temperature, adsorption of atomic hydrogen on a metal surface can be caused by the electrochemical reduction of water during steel corrosion or by the application of a cathodic potential (CP) that is lower than the thermodynamic threshold for hydrogen evolution. Buried pipelines and sea lines are normally protected against general corrosion by means of CP. Although the transport of hydrocarbons through pipelines is an established and secure technology, several cases of EAC resulting from the effect of hydrogen on steel have been reported globally [1,2]. In the presence of altered microstructures, i.e., hard spots, hydrogen can favor the initiation and propagation of brittle fracture [3,4]. Hard spots in pipeline steels may be caused by the manufacturing process or during the execution of welding, mainly on steel with high content of carbon, sulfur and manganese, and are characterized by a hard, untempered martensite and bainite microstructure. Thecritical role of the hard spots can be ascribed to the presence of untempered martensite, which is the microstructure most susceptible to HE [5,6].Furthermore, Razzini et al.—by visualizing thehydrogen distribution in an artificial hard spot on API 5L X60 steel by using photo-electrochemical technique—demonstrated that the solubility of hydrogen in theheat affected zones of hard spots is higher than the base material [7]. In the absence of microstructural alterations, pipeline steels are immune to HE under cathodic protection, even at very low cathodic potentials [8]. The nominal desired potential range for a pipeline under cathodic protection is between −850 and −1200 mV, measured with respect to a Cu/CuSO4 reference electrode, but more negative potentials can be present in the correspondence of the remote anodes, especially in the case of high soil resistivity [9]. Only a few cases have been observed on buried pipeline under slow plastic deformations [10], mechanical damage and landslides [11].Recently, particular attention has been given to theHE risks, especially taking into account the possibility of increasing the mechanical properties of pipeline steel [12]. In fact, it is well known that the susceptibility to HE increases with the increase in the tensile resistance of thesteel [13]; on the other hand, increasing thesteel grade is the most convenient option for long-distance and high-pressure pipelines [14]. However, the behavior of pipeline steels with respect to HEphenomena is currently not well defined.The International Standards on CP have been altered to introduce critical values of negative potentials that cannot be exceeded in the case where high strength steels are used. For example, the ISO 15589-1:2015 (Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries—Cathodic protection of pipeline systems—Part 1: On-land pipelines) and the ISO 3183 standard specify that the cathodic protection potential of high strength steels (yield strength above 550 MPa) shall be determined correctly in order to avoid the risk of hydrogen formation at themetal surface. Unfortunately, neither of the above-mentioned standards suggest experimental procedures for determining the immunity/susceptibility to HE.Many laboratory studies have been carried out on pipeline steels [1,10,13,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26]; nevertheless, some aspects of this phenomenon remain poorly understood.Laboratory tests have also confirmed the immunity of pipeline steels to HE with applied cathodic potentials lower than −2 V vs. SCE under static load conditions (constant load or constant deformation) [27,28]. HEphenomena in this class of steels require the presence of dynamic straining in the plastic field. Several theories have underlined the role of hydrogen in the plastic strain of steels, including the decrease in cohesive force resulting in brittle fracture (Hydrogen Enhanced Decohesion—HEDE) [29,30] and theHydrogen Enhanced Localized Plasticity theory—HELP [31], as well as theHydrogen Enhanced Strain-Induced Vacancies theory—HESIV [32], which tries to explain the effect of hydrogen on ductile fracture. Srinivasan and Neeraj suggested failure mode transitions from ductile to quasi-brittle fracture with increasing yield strength and/or triaxiality of the stress state. The coexistence and applicability of different theories (HELP, HEDE and HESIV) seems to be necessary to explain this mechanism [33]. The Adsorption-Induced Dislocation Emission (AIDE) mechanism is based on hydrogen-induced weakening of interatomic bonds (as in HEDE), but with crack growth occurring by localized slip (as in HELP) [34].The Slow Strain Rate (SSR) test is one of the most used techniques for evaluating the EAC susceptibility of metals in determinate environments [15], but on cathodically protected pipeline steels, the environmental effects only become evident after necking [35]. Furthermore, secondary cracks are only observed in the necking zones [10]. Slow bending tests have been developed in order to provide an effective alternative test to SSR for assessing hydrogen embrittlement resistance of steels with tensile yield strength (TYS) ranging between 420 and 770 MPa [36] and to evaluate the effect of plastic deformation [37].Fracture mechanics are also often used to study thehydrogen effect on crack propagation [25,38], but the high toughness of pipeline steel makes it very difficult to obtain true plain stress conditions. Li et al. [39] studied hydrogen embrittlement in single edge notch tension (SENT) testing of high-strength pipeline steel using specimens with various thicknesses. The specimens were pre-charged with hydrogen and then tested in air. The results showed a hydrogen effect only when the thickness of the specimen was increased due to theconstrained crack tip deformation in thehydrogenated specimens. On the other hand, it is well known that thehydrogen embrittlement phenomena are enhanced when thehydrogen evolution is simultaneous with plastic strain, and thehydrogen supply at thecracktip depends on the loading mode and strain rate [40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55].Linear elastic mechanical fracture cannot be used in dynamic continuous deformation, like the conditions needed to have HE in pipeline steels, because pipeline steels have a good toughness and a very high ductile behavior also when they are fully saturated with atomic hydrogen. The effect of hydrogen, on the other hand, can also be evidenced in terms of ductile crack initiation and rate of crack growth in low-alloyed steels [32]. The study of ductile or mixed brittle/ductile fracture requires an elastic-plastic mechanical fracture approach to establish theHE susceptibility of the tested steels.Theductile fracture of metals, in which plastic deformation dominates at thecracktip and the material resistance against fracture increases as thecrack grows, is often described in a resistance curve format using the J-integral vs. thecrack’s growth Δa [56]. The J-integral is the strain energy release rate for a crack in a body subjected to monotonic loading, under quasi-static conditions, both for the linear elastic materials and for materials that experience small-scale yielding at thecrack [57].In this paper, the J-integral vs. Δa curves were obtained for different grade steels in air and in NaCl 3.5 g/L solution at the free corrosion potential and cathodically polarized at −1.05 and −2 V vs. SCE using the potential drop method to evaluate thecrack growth [58,59]. Thecrack growth rate and the area under the J vs. Δa curve were considered to evaluate the environmental effects, in comparison with the standardized slow strain rate tests results. These parameters were then used to rank thehydrogen susceptibility of the different tested steels.
2. Materials and Methods
The chemical compositions of the tested steels are reported in Table 1. The X70SS steel is an API (American Petroleum Institute) 5L Thermo-Mechanically Controlled Processed ferritic-pearlitic steel for sour service; it shows grains oriented along the hot rolling direction (Figure 1a). The “sour” grade warrants a low MnS inclusions tenor. Thesteels referred to as X80 and X100 are proposed pipeline steels sourced from an experimental melting, obtained by controlled rolling and accelerated cooling. The X80 has a bainitic microstructure, with ferrite islands (Figure 1b), while the X100 steel has a martensitic and bainitic microstructure (Figure 1c). The 30NiCrMo12 is a quenched and tempered steel with a tempered martensitic structure (Figure 1d). The mechanical properties of thesteels are summarized in Table 2.
Table 1
Chemical composition of the tested steels (% by weight).
1 TYS: Yield Tensile Strength at strain at 0.2%; 2 UTS: Ultimate Tensile Strength.
All tests were carried out in air (for comparison) and in aerated 3.5% NaCl (Carlo Erba RPS analytical grade reagents, Cornaredo Italy) aqueous solution, at free corrosion potential and potentiostatically polarizing the specimens at −1 or −2 V vs. SCE with an Amel mod. 352 (Italy) potentiostat/galvanostat and graphite as counter. All tests were carried out at 23 ± 1 °C.The experimental determination of thecrack resistance J versus crack length a (J-R curves) were conducted on Single Edge Notch Bend (SENB) (Figure 2) with the potential drop (PD) method described in [60]. Before the bending tests, the specimens were pre-cracked to represent a mechanical notch using an electromagnetic machine with a frequency of 220 Hz and an R ratio of 0.1 until the initial crack length equaled 50% of the specimen width. ThePD method is based on the change in electrical resistance of a specimen with crack length, independently of the type of loading. The change in electrical resistance results in a change of the potential drop between two measuring points across thecrack. A DC Potential Drop Reverse Current CrackSize Monitoring Units has been “in house” engineered to supply the right current, stability necessary for the Cycling Reverse DC potential drop method and it has been adapted with a voltage measurement to permit synchronized data storage. The power DC power supply unit provides a direct current of 15 amps within a voltage rating of 8 volts. It was based on solid-state polarity-reversing units; the adoption of this DC polarity inversion was chosen to supply constant current and to enlarge the voltage drop magnitude; furthermore, the DC power supply is less stressed, as thecurrent output remains constant wherever with minimal switching transients. The temperature drift was evaluated to be within 0.05%/°C. The data recording and managing software was developed internally and was based on an engineering platform from the LabView (National Instrument) platform. The measuring units were equipped with two channels for active and reference probes. The “as it is signals” were firstly amplified by differential units and then filtered with the aim of providing a maximum gain of 20k.
Figure 2
SENB tests specimen.
Polarization inversion was adopted to avoid the effect of the solution and temperature and to reduce the electric noise; two specimens, one loaded and one un-loaded, were connected in series and DC polarized at 8 V using polarization inversion; in this configuration, in fact, the potential values obtained by polarity opposite are subtracted and appropriately normalized.A dimensionless expression is obtained:
where U is a dimensionless ratio that expresses the extent of the growth of thecrack for a specific set composed of the test specimen and of the relative reference specimens, to avoid the effects due to fluctuations of the electrical, temperature, and local polarization parameters; U+ and U− represent the values of ohmic drop measured during the two moments in which thecurrent is made to flow in a sense and in the inverse sense in order to deduct the effects of local polarization during the permanence of the circulation of current in a verse; the subscript i is related to the specimen subjected to fracture mechanic test and r refers to the reference specimen immersed in the same solution but not subjected to mechanical testing. To guarantee a constant value of the reference potential Ur, this measurement was carried out on the second specimen of the same materials, not subject to deformation, placed in the same environmental conditions, electrical connected in series and placed close to the stressed specimen to avoid ohmic drop in themetallic conductor and erase the effects of possible variations of temperatures. The difference in potential among the specimens were measured using a microvoltmeter with high accuracy (0.1 µV) and high stability (drift 0.02 µV/°C). Tests were conducted by displacement control, at 0.001 m/s. During the bending tests, the value of the displacement, load, time and potential drop were measured every 300 s. Two repetitions for each condition were executed.The value of a by the potential drop can be evaluated by the Johnson’s equation [61,62]:
where a is thecrack length corresponding to potential drop U, y is one half of the potential gauge span (4.5 mm), W is the specimen width, and a0 and U0 are the initial crack length and the initial potential drop measurement, respectively.From thecrack lengths the J-integral can be calculated on the basis of the ASTM 1820-18 by following equation:
J is the elastic component, evaluable from the following equation:
where K is the stress intensity at the i-th data point, ν is Poisson’s ratio, E is the Young’s modulus of the material; K is given from the equation:
where P is the load at the i-th data point, B is the specimen thickness, B is the specimen net thickness, a is thecracksize at the i-th data point, and S is the span dimension.J is the plastic component of J at the i-th data point, and is evaluated by means of the relationship:
where J is the plastic part of J-integral for the (i−1)-th data point and assuming the initial plastic component J, equals to zero; b is the uncracked ligament for the (i−1)-th data point and is equal to W-a; η is a dimensionless parameter that relates plastic work done on a specimen to crack growth resistance, and is 1.9 for SENB specimens [62,63]; and γ is a function to correct the J-integral evaluated by the η parameter in thecrack growth situation [64] and is equal to 0.9 for SENB specimens. The quantity A is the increment of the plastic area under the load versus the plastic load-line displacement record between lines of constant plastic displacement v and v and can be calculated from the following equation:
where v is the plastic part of the i-th load-line displacement data point:
where v is the load-line displacement at the i-th data point and B is the effective thickness:Slow strain rate tests were performed on cylindrical tensile specimens (Figure 3) obtained according to the ISO 7539-7 (2005) standard. The specimens were obtained near the external surface of the original pipe, at minimum depth. Before the tests, the specimens were finished with abrasive paper (1200 grit) to eliminate the strain-hardened layer induced by mechanical working. Finally, they were degreased with acetone (Carlo Erba RPA reagents, Cornaredo Italy). The SSR tests were carried out through a tensile machine, with four independent stations of loading and displacement rate adjustable between 5·10−7 and 5·10−3 mm·s−1. A strain rate of 10−6 s−1 was adopted. During the test, the load was monitored as a function of time in order to estimate stress vs. strain curves. After the tests, the total elongation (A) and the reduction of area (Z) were measured on the specimens. The tests were conducted twice.
Figure 3
SSR tests specimens.
The susceptibility to environmental cracking was evaluated through thehydrogen embrittlement index, evaluated on the basis of the reduction in area ratio between the test in the environment and in air, following the relationships:
3. Results and Discussion
Figure 4 reports the J vs. Δa curves obtained for the different steels. The J vs. Δa curves in air are similar for the three pipeline steels (X70SS, X80 and X100), regardless of their different mechanical properties; on the contrary, the martensitic steel shows J values lower than those of the other steels at the same crack extension, indicating a decrease in toughness. When the tests were conducted in NaCl 3.5 g/L solution at the free corrosion potential, the J values decreased for all thesteels at every Δa, indicating a decrease in energy for the propagation of thefracture. In all cases, no brittle zones were present on thefracture surface, only on the shearing area (Figure 5).
Fracture surface in J-integral test for X100 steel at free corrosion potential: (a) macro and (b) close-up view of the crack propagation zone.
Applying the cathodic potentials, the J dramatically decreases, indicating a meaningful effect of hydrogen in fracture propagation. The decrease in the J vs. Δa grows more pronounced as the cathodic polarization increases, and corresponds to the presence of brittle areas on thefracture surface (Figure 6, Figure 7 and Figure 8).
Figure 6
Fracture surface in J-integral test for X70 steel polarized at −1 V vs. SCE: (a) macro and (b) close-up view of the fatigue pre-cracking crack propagation transition zone.
Figure 7
Fracture surface in J-integral test for X80 steel polarized at −1 V vs. SCE: (a) macro and (b) close-up view of the fatigue pre-cracking crack propagation transition zone.
Figure 8
Fracture surface in J-integral test for X100 steel polarized at −1 V vs. SCE: (a) macro and (b) close-up view of the crack propagation zone.
At the end of the tests, thecrack propagation rate was calculated by cubic spline approximation of experimental data [65]. An example of thecrack growth rate of the API 5L X100 steel obtained in air and in NaCl solution, with cathodic polarization of −2 V vs. SCE, is presented in Figure 9. Thecrack of the cathodically protected specimen begins to propagate at loads lower than that of the samples in air; moreover, its speed is noticeably superior. Thecrack growth rate in air is also practically constant throughout the test time, lower than 2·10−9 m/s, while in the environment, it peaks in the initial moments, and decreases over the following ten hours, before increasing again in the hours after that to settle in a value range of 5·10−8 m/s.
Figure 9
Crack growth rate as a function of time for the API 5L X00 steel in air (blue curve) and in NaCl 3.5% solution at −2 V vs. SCE (red curve).
The peak values of thecrack growth obtained in NaCl 3.5% solution were higher than those obtained in air, and increase with the increasing of cathodic polarization of the specimens, as shown in Figure 10. Thecrack growth rate in air increases with the increasing of the tensile resistance of thesteels. The maximum crack growth rate of 30NiCrMo12 steel was markedly higher than that of the three pipeline steels. At the same time, in NaCl 3.5% solution, thecrack growth rate was higher than in air, and further increases were observed when the specimens were cathodically protected.
Figure 10
Effect of the environment on the maximum crack growth rate.
From the J vs. Δa curves, a parameter for quantifying the effect of hydrogen on thefracture propagation was obtained. With reference to the ASTM 1820-18 standard, the blunting line, which describes the initial behavior of thecrack before ductile growth, was drawn with the equation:The region of validity of the data is between two lines parallel to the blunting line at a distance of 0.15 and 1.5 mm (exclusion line). The first line represents the lower limit, beyond which the growth of thecrack is considered stable, the second limit the condition under which the J-integral is fulfilled.To obtain an estimation of the energy needed for crack growth, the area under the J vs. Δa curve (S) was calculated using a polynomial regression of thecurves J vs. Δa, until R > 99.9% was achieved. The polynomial curve was then integrated between 0.2 and 0.5 mm. The value 0.5 mm was chosen by taking into account the maximum growth observed in the test in air.The results are summarized in Figure 11. The area under thecurves obtained in air tends to decrease with increasing tensile resistance in thesteel, and, for each steel, this value markedly decreased in the presence of the environment and with the application of the cathodic polarization. For all steels, the energy for thecrack growth decreased, passing to OCP to cathodic polarization (−1 V vs. SCE), and reached a minimum level in the presence of high cathodic polarization, i.e., −2 V vs. SCE. These conditions correspond to high surface hydrogen concentration. In the presence of high polarization, the differences between thesteels are strongly reduced.
Figure 11
Effect of the environment on the area under the curve J vs. Δa for the tested steel.
The ratios between the values in the environment and those in air were calculated in order to obtain an index for thehydrogen effect, following the relationship:This index was compared with the results of the SSR tests.The stress vs. strain curves obtained in NaCl 3.5% solution with cathodic protection are significantly different from those obtained in air only for very high polarization (Figure 12).
Figure 12
Stress vs. strain curves of the 30NiCrMo12 steel in air and in NaCl 3.5% solution with cathodic protection.
The analysis of thefracture surface evidenced an absence of thehydrogen embrittlement effect at the OCP (Open Circuit Potential) (Figure 13a) and the presence of brittle areas and secondary cracks on the specimens polarized at −1 V vs. SCE; in all cases, thehydrogen effect took place only after the insurgence of the necking, under strong tri-axial stress conditions (Figure 13b).
Figure 13
SEM images of the specimens of the X100 steel after the SSR test in NaCl 3.5% (strain rate 10−6 s−1) (a) at the open circuit potential; (b) polarized at −1 V vs. SCE; (c) polarized at −2 V vs. SCE.
Finally, the presence of quasi cleavage areas was observed on nearly all of thefracture surfaces on specimens polarized at −2 V vs. SCE (Figure 13c).Previous works have demonstrated that the value of the reduction of area is the most sensible parameter for assessing hydrogen embrittlement phenomena in this class of steel under cathodic polarization [8,28]. Figure 14 shows theHE indexes relative to the reduction of area as a function of the Ultimate Tensile Strength of thesteels.
Figure 14
Effect of the mechanical properties of the steels on the HE in SSR tests.
For all steels, theHE at the free corrosion potential is zero, or very low in the case of 30NiCrMo12, indicating the practical absence of hydrogen embrittlement effect. On the contrary, a marked increasing of theHE was observed under cathodic polarization. TheHE effects increase with the increasing of the cathodic polarization. TheHE indexes slightly increase with the mechanical properties of thesteels, especially for the lowest polarization potential (−2 V vs. SCE).Comparing the two hydrogen embrittlement indexes (HE vs. HE) (Figure 15), the J-integral tests seem to be more able than SSR to indicate thehydrogen effect inside themetal; in fact, theHE index is generally above the straight at 45°. In addition, by means of the J-integral, it is possible to demonstrate the influence of the environment and thesteel microstructure and mechanical properties on thefracture propagation at free corrosion potential.
Figure 15
Correlation between the average values of the HE vs. HE
The free corrosion potential of carbon steel in aerated NaCl 3.5% solution is about −0.65 V vs. SCE, which is practically the same value of the thermodynamic potential for hydrogen evolution at pH 7. However, as discussed in more detail in [28], the reduction of oxygen that takes place in aerated solution on metal surface increases the local pH; the alkalization is estimated to increase the pH of themetal surface to approximately pH 11. At this pH, thehydrogen equilibrium potential decreases, inhibiting thehydrogen evolution and, as a consequence, thehydrogen embrittlement. In his mechanochemistry theory, Gutman [66] demonstrated that mechanical deformation enhances steel corrosion. Xu and Cheng [67,68] studied the corrosion of pipeline steels under deformation and concluded that the mechano-electrochemical effect developed by thesteel was limited to the elastic region, but became significant under plastic strain [69]. High plastic straining conditions were present at thecracktip of the SENB specimens used in the J-integral tests, which had been fatigue pre-cracked. Strain-assisted dissolution with initiation of pits in aerated NaCl 3.5% solution at free corrosion potential was observed in the first steps of the initiation of corrosion-fatigue cracks [70]. Strain-assisted dissolution can reduce the energy required for crack growth. The growth of the pit depends on thesteel microstructure, i.e., the presence of inclusions and the orientation of the grain boundaries. This could explain the higher embrittlement index of the X70SS steels, which have larger grain size oriented perpendicularly to thecrack propagation direction. The X80 steel, which has a very small grain size, showed the lowest value of embrittlement index, while the martensite or bainite phase present in the X100 steel showed a behavior similar to that of the fully martensitic 30NiCrMo12 steel (Figure 16).
Figure 16
Effect of mechanical properties on the HE
In the presence of hydrogen, thecrack growth morphology changes from ductile to brittle, and theHE increases. The embrittlement effect is not only related to the mechanical properties, but also depends on the microstructure. Ferrite/acicular microstructure has higher resistance to stress corrosion cracking in acidic environments than ferrite/pearlite or ferrite/bainite microstructures [71]. Many authors have reported better stress corrosion cracking (SCC) and hydrogen-induced cracking (HIC) resistance in acicular ferrite than in polygonal ferrite and pearlite [72,73,74]. A similar behavior can also be assumed under cathodic protection [28]. The presence of hard constituents of untempered martensite decreases thecracking resistance [57,73,74,75]. The fine bainitic and acicular ferrite microstructure of the X80 steel gives it higher hydrogen embrittlement resistance than the lower grade X70SS, characterized by a polygonal ferritic microstructure, and also better HE resistance than the higher grades martensitic steels. The X100 steel did not show any appreciable difference with respect to the X70SS steels, characterized by lower tensile strength, while a worsening was evident for 30NiCrMo12 steel only at the lower potential considered (−2 V vs. SCE).
4. Conclusions
From the results illustrated above, the following conclusions can be drawn:The J-integral vs. Δa determination is a suitable technique to characterize pipeline steels, which are not susceptible to hydrogen embrittlement under static loading conditions, but can exhibit HE susceptibility under almost-static loading conditions, such as in Slow Strain Rate tests.The ratio of the areas under the J-Δa curve in the environment and in air was chosen as a parameter for characterizing thehydrogen embrittlement of the different steels.The X80 steel showed the highest hydrogen embrittlement resistance, while X70SS, X100 and 30CrNiMo had similar behaviors.