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Multiscale modeling of hydrogen-enhanced void nucleation

Posted on:2008-06-07Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Mississippi State UniversityCandidate:Chandler, Mei QiangFull Text:PDF
GTID:1441390005469889Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Many experiments demonstrate that the effects of hydrogen solutes decrease macroscopic fracture stresses and strains in ductile materials. Hydrogen-related failures have occurred in nearly all industries involving hydrogen. The financial losses incurred from those failures reaches billions of dollars annually. With the ever-urgent needs for alternative energy sources such as hydrogen, safe storage and transportation of hydrogen increases the momentum for studying hydrogen-related failures, especially in ductile materials.; To quantify ductile material damage with the effects of hydrogen embrittlement, it is necessary to add hydrogen effects into the void nucleation, void growth, and void coalescence equations. In this research, hydrogen-enhanced void nucleation is our focus, with hydrogen-enhanced void growth and void coalescence to be studied in the future.; Molecular Dynamic (MD) and Monte Carlo (MC) simulations with Embedded Atom Method (EAM) potentials were performed to study how hydrogen affects dislocation nucleation, dislocation structure formation and nanovoid nucleation at nickel grain boundaries. The results were inserted into the continuum void nucleation model by Horstemeyer and Gokhale, and the relationships between stress triaxiality-driven void nucleation, grain boundary hydrogen concentrations and local grain geometries were extracted.; MD and MC simulations with EAM potentials were also performed to study how hydrogen interstitials affect the dislocation nucleation, dislocation structure formation and subsequent nanovoid nucleation of single crystal nickel in different hydrogen-charging conditions. Evolutions of dislocation structures of nickel single crystal with different hydrogen concentrations were compared. The effects of nanovoid nucleation stress and strain at different hydrogen concentrations were quantified. The results were also inserted into the Horstemeyer and Gokhale model and the relationship between stress triaxiality-driven void nucleation and hydrogen concentration caused by stress gradient, which showed similar trends as the grain boundary studies.; From nanoscale studies and existing experimental observations, a continuum void nucleation model with hydrogen effects was proposed and used in a continuum damage model based upon Bammann and coworkers. The damage model was implemented into user material code in FEA code ABAQUS. Finite element analyses were performed and the results were compared to the experimental data by Kwon and Asaro.
Keywords/Search Tags:Hydrogen, Void nucleation, Model, Effects, Stress
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