Technial basis for materis curve for fatigue crack grwoth of ferritic steels in high-pressure gaseous hydrogen in ASME section VIII-3 code
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Acta Materialia
Microstructures and mechanical properties are evaluated in austenitic stainless steel structures fabricated by directed energy deposition (DED) considering the effects of applied loading orientation, build geometry, and distance from the deposition baseplate. Locations within an as-deposited build with different thermomechanical history display different yield strength, while those locations with similar history have approximately the same yield strength, regardless of test specimen orientation. Thermal expansion of deposited material near the baseplate is inhibited by the mechanical constraint imposed by the baseplate, promoting plastic deformation and producing a high density of dislocations. Concurrently, high initial cooling rates decrease away from the baseplate as the build is heated, causing an increased spacing of cellular solidification features. An analysis of strengthening mechanisms quantitatively established for the first time the important strengthening contribution of high dislocation densities in the materials (166–191 MPa) to yield strength that ranged from 438 to 553 MPa in the present DED fabricated structures. A newly adopted mechanistic relationship for microsegregation strengthening from the literature indicated an additional important contribution to strengthening (123–135 MPa) due to the cellular solidification features. These findings are corroborated by the measured evolution of microstructure and hardness caused by annealing the DED material. These results suggest that the mechanical properties of deposited austenitic stainless steels can be influenced by controlling thermomechanical history during the manufacturing process to alter the character of compositional microsegregation and the amount of induced plastic deformation.
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American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Pressure Vessels and Piping Division (Publication) PVP
Austenitic stainless steels are used extensively in hydrogen gas containment components due to their known resilience in hydrogen environments. Depending on the conditions, degradation can occur in austenitic stainless steels but typically the materials retain sufficient mechanical properties within such extreme environments. In many hydrogen containment applications, it is necessary or advantageous to join components through welding as it ensures minimal gas leakage, unlike mechanical fittings that can become leak paths that develop over time. Over the years many studies have focused on the mechanical behavior of austenitic stainless steels in hydrogen environments and determined their properties to be sufficient for most applications. However, significantly less data have been generated on austenitic stainless steel welds, which can exhibit more degradation than the base material. In this paper, we assess the trends observed in austenitic stainless steel welds tested in hydrogen. Experiments of welds including tensile and fracture toughness testing are assessed and comparisons to behavior of base metals are discussed.
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Pressure Vessels and Piping Division (Publication) PVP
Additive manufacturing (AM) offers the potential for increased design flexibility in the low volume production of complex engineering components for hydrogen service. However the suitability of AM materials for such extreme service environments remains to be evaluated. This work examines the effects of internal and external hydrogen on AM type 304L austenitic stainless steels fabricated via directed-energy deposition (DED) and powder bed fusion (PBF) processes. Under ambient test conditions, AM materials with minimal manufacturing defects exhibit excellent combinations of tensile strength, tensile ductility, and fatigue resistance. To probe the effects of extreme hydrogen environments on the AM materials, tensile and fatigue tests were performed after thermalprecharging in high pressure gaseous hydrogen (internal H) or in high pressure gaseous hydrogen (external H). Hydrogen appears to have a comparable influence on the AM 304L as in wrought materials, although the micromechanisms of tensile fracture and fatigue crack growth appear distinct. Specifically, microstructural characterization implicates the unique solidification microstructure of AM materials in the propagation of cracks under conditions of tensile fracture with hydrogen. These results highlight the need to establish comprehensive microstructure-property relationships for AM materials to ensure their suitability for use in extreme hydrogen environments.
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Additive Manufacturing
This work proposes a finite element (FE) analysis workflow to simulate directed energy deposition (DED) additive manufacturing at a macroscopic length scale (i.e. part length scale) and to predict thermal conditions during manufacturing, as well as distortions, strength and residual stresses at the completion of manufacturing. The proposed analysis method incorporates a multi-step FE workflow to elucidate the thermal and mechanical responses in laser engineered net shaping (LENS) manufacturing. For each time step, a thermal element activation scheme captures the material deposition process. Then, activated elements and their associated geometry are analyzed first thermally for heat flow due to radiation, convection, and conduction, and then mechanically for the resulting stresses, displacements, and material property evolution. Simulations agree with experimentally measured in situ thermal measurements for simple cylindrical build geometries, as well as general trends of local hardness distribution and plastic strain accumulation (represented by relative distribution of geometrically necessary dislocations).
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JOM
Directed energy deposited (DED) and forged austenitic stainless steels possess dissimilar microstructures but can exhibit similar mechanical properties. In this study, annealing was used to evolve the microstructure of both conventional wrought and DED type 304L austenitic stainless steels, and significant differences were observed. In particular, the density of geometrically necessary dislocations and hardness were used to probe the evolution of the microstructure and properties. Forged type 304L exhibited the expected decrease in measured dislocation density and hardness as a function of annealing temperature. The more complex microstructure–property relationship observed in the DED type 304L material is attributed to compositional heterogeneities in the solidification microstructure.
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JOM. Journal of the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society
Directed energy deposition (DED) and forged austenitic stainless steels possess distinct microstructures, but may exhibit similar mechanical properties. In this study, annealing is used to evolve the microstructures of these materials, and scanning electron microscopy techniques are used to probe the similarities and differences of the microstructure-property relationships. A strong correlation between geometrically necessary dislocation (GND) density and hardness is observed for the forged material. Finally, a more complex relationship is observed in the DED material and is attributed to the thermally driven dissolution of the solidification microstructure.
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