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Materials compatibility

Somerday, Brian P.; Dedrick, Daniel E.

Objectives are to enable development and implementation of codes and standards for H{sub 2} containment components: (1) Evaluate data on mechanical properties of materials in H{sub 2} gas - Technical Reference on Hydrogen Compatibility of Materials; (2) Generate new benchmark data on high-priority materials - Pressure vessel steels, stainless steels; and (3) Establish procedures for reliable materials testing - Sustained-load cracking, fatigue crack propagation. Summary of this presentation are: (1) Completed measurement of cracking thresholds (K{sub TH}) for Ni-Cr-Mo pressure vessel steels in high-pressure H{sub 2} gas - K{sub TH} measurements required in ASME Article KD-10 (2) Crack arrest test methods appear to yield non-conservative results compared to crack initiation test methods - (a) Proposal to insert crack initiation test methods in Article KD-10 will be presented to ASME Project Team on Hydrogen Tanks, and (b) Crack initiation methods require test apparatus designed for dynamic loading of specimens in H{sub 2} gas; and (3) Demonstrated ability to measure fatigue crack growth of pressure vessel steels in high-pressure H{sub 2} gas - (a) Fatigue crack growth data in H{sub 2} required in ASME Article KD-10, and (b) Test apparatus is one of few in U.S. or abroad for measuring fatigue crack growth in >100 MPa H{sub 2} gas.

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Hydrogen-assisted fracture of welded AISI 316 austenitic stainless steel

Proceedings of the 2008 International Hydrogen Conference - Effects of Hydrogen on Materials

Tang, X.; Schiroky, G.H.; Marchi, C.S.; Somerday, Brian P.

AISI 316 austenitic stainless steel is a preferred material of construction for valves, fittings, and other fluid system components for high-pressure gaseous hydrogen service. The interaction of hydrogen with stainless steel depends on the prevailing stress-state and the microstructural characteristics of a component's material of construction, among other variables. To evaluate the effects of geometrical stress-risers and two-phase microstructures on hydrogen-assisted fracture of AISI 316 stainless steel, smooth and notched tensile properties were measured for annealed material as well as for autogenously welded specimens after thermal precharging with hydrogen. The tensile ductility of welded microstructures is significantly reduced by hydrogen precharging, and the addition of a notch further degrades ductility. These observations are rationalized in terms of hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity. Copyright © 2009 ASM International® All rights reserved.

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J-Integral modeling and validation for GTS reservoirs

Nibur, Kevin A.; Somerday, Brian P.; Brown, Arthur B.; Lindblad, Alex L.; Ohashi, Yuki O.; Antoun, Bonnie R.; Connelly, Kevin C.; Zimmerman, Jonathan A.; Margolis, Stephen B.

Non-destructive detection methods can reliably certify that gas transfer system (GTS) reservoirs do not have cracks larger than 5%-10% of the wall thickness. To determine the acceptability of a reservoir design, analysis must show that short cracks will not adversely affect the reservoir behavior. This is commonly done via calculation of the J-Integral, which represents the energetic driving force acting to propagate an existing crack in a continuous medium. J is then compared against a material's fracture toughness (J{sub c}) to determine whether crack propagation will occur. While the quantification of the J-Integral is well established for long cracks, its validity for short cracks is uncertain. This report presents the results from a Sandia National Laboratories project to evaluate a methodology for performing J-Integral evaluations in conjunction with its finite element analysis capabilities. Simulations were performed to verify the operation of a post-processing code (J3D) and to assess the accuracy of this code and our analysis tools against companion fracture experiments for 2- and 3-dimensional geometry specimens. Evaluation is done for specimens composed of 21-6-9 stainless steel, some of which were exposed to a hydrogen environment, for both long and short cracks.

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Effect of high-pressure hydrogen gas on fracture of austenitic steels

Journal of Pressure Vessel Technology, Transactions of the ASME

San Marchi, Christopher W.; Balch, Dorian K.; Nibur, K.; Somerday, Brian P.

Applications requiring the containment and transportation of hydrogen gas at pressures greater than 70 MPa are anticipated in the evolving hydrogen economy infrastructure. Since hydrogen is known to alter the mechanical properties of materials, data are needed to guide the selection of materials for structural components. The objective of this study is to characterize the role of yield strength, microstructural orientation, and small concentrations of ferrite on hydrogen-assisted fracture in two austenitic stainless steels: 21Cr-6Ni-9Mn (21-6-9) and 22Cr-13Ni-SMn (22-13-5). The testing methodology involves exposure of tensile specimens to high-pressure hydrogen gas at elevated temperature in order to precharge the specimens with hydrogen, and subsequently testing the specimens in laboratory air to measure strength and ductility. In all cases, the alloys remain ductile despite precharging to hydrogen concentrations of ∼1 at. %, as demonstrated by reduction in area values between 30% and 60% and fracture modes dominated by microvoid processes. Low concentrations of ferrite and moderate increases in yield strength do not exacerbate hydrogen-assisted fracture in 21-6-9 and 22-13-5, respectively. Microstructural orientation has a pronounced effect on ductility in 22-13-5 due to the presence of aligned second-phase particles. Copyright © 2008 by ASME.

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Thermodynamics of gaseous hydrogen and hydrogen transport in metals

Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings

San Marchi, Christopher W.; Somerday, Brian P.

The thermodynamics and kinetics of hydrogen dissolved in structural metals is often not addressed when assessing phenomena associated with hydrogen-assisted fracture. Understanding the behavior of hydrogen atoms in a metal lattice, however, is important for interpreting materials properties measured in hydrogen environments, and for designing structurally efficient components with extended lifecycles. The assessment of equilibrium hydrogen contents and hydrogen transport in steels is motivated by questions raised in the safety, codes and standards community about mixtures of gases containing hydrogen as well as the effects of stress and hydrogen trapping on the transport of hydrogen in metals. More broadly, these questions are important for enabling a comprehensive understanding of hydrogen-assisted fracture. We start by providing a framework for understanding the thermodynamics of pure gaseous hydrogen and then we extend this to treat mixtures of gases containing hydrogen. An understanding of the thermodynamics of gas mixtures is necessary for analyzing concepts for transitioning to a hydrogen-based economy that incorporate the addition of gaseous hydrogen to existing energy carrier systems such as natural gas distribution. We show that, at equilibrium, a mixture of gases containing hydrogen will increase the fugacity of the hydrogen gas, but that this increase is small for practical systems and will generally be insufficient to substantially impact hydrogen-assisted fracture. Further, the effects of stress and hydrogen trapping on the transport of atomic hydrogen in metals are considered. Tensile stress increases the amount of hydrogen dissolved in a metal and slightly increases hydrogen diffusivity. In some materials, hydrogen trapping has very little impact on hydrogen content and transport, while other materials show orders of magnitude increases of hydrogen content and reductions of hydrogen diffusivity. © 2008 Materials Research Society.

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Results 101–125 of 146
Results 101–125 of 146