Effect of Hydrogen Charging on Mechanical Twinning, Strain Hardening, and Fracture of ‹111› and ‹144› Hadfield Steel Single Crystals


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Abstract

This paper studies the effect of electrolytic hydrogen charging on the plastic deformation and fracture of Hadfield steel single crystals oriented for tension along the ‹111› and ‹144› directions, which the major deformation mechanism is mechanical twinning. Electrolytic hydrogen charging for five hours at a current density of 100 A/m2 slightly affects the stages of plastic flow, deformation mechanism, and the value of uniform elongation of ‹111› and ‹144› single clreystals. Hydrogen saturation causes shear microlocalization and a decrease of the strain hardening coefficient in twinning in one system, but slightly affects the strain hardening characteristics in multiple twinning. Hydrogen charging increases the fraction of the brittle component on fracture surfaces and leads to microand macrocracking near the fracture zone on the lateral surface of deformed specimens. It has been found experimentally that the stress relaxation rate in loaded ‹111› single clreystals after hydrogen saturation decreases. Mechanisms of describing this phenomenon have been proposed.

About the authors

E. G. Astafurova

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch

Author for correspondence.
Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055

G. G. Maier

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055

E. V. Melnikov

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055

V. A. Moskvina

National Research Tomsk Polytechnic University

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634050

V. F. Vojtsik

National Research Tomsk Polytechnic University

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634050

G. N. Zakharov

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055

A. I. Smirnov

Novosibirsk State Technical University

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Novosibirsk, 630073

V. A. Bataev

Novosibirsk State Technical University

Email: elena.g.astafurova@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Novosibirsk, 630073


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