TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydrogen Embrittlement Susceptibility of Fe-Mn Binary Alloys with High Mn Content
T2 - Effects of Stable and Metastable ε-Martensite, and Mn Concentration
AU - Koyama, Motomichi
AU - Okazaki, Shota
AU - Sawaguchi, Takahiro
AU - Tsuzaki, Kaneaki
N1 - Funding Information:
MK gratefully acknowledges the financial support by KAKENHI (15K18235). The Materials Manufacturing and Engineering Station at the National Institute for Materials Science supported this work through the production of the samples.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International.
PY - 2016/6/1
Y1 - 2016/6/1
N2 - To obtain a basic understanding of hydrogen embrittlement associated with ε-martensite, we investigated the tensile behavior of binary Fe-Mn alloys with high Mn content under cathodic hydrogen charging. We used Fe-20Mn, Fe-28Mn, Fe-32Mn, and Fe-40Mn alloys. The correlation between the microstructure and crack morphology was clarified through electron backscatter diffraction measurements and electron channeling contrast imaging. ε-martensite in the Fe-20Mn alloy critically deteriorated the resistance to hydrogen embrittlement owing to transformation to α′-martensite. However, when ε-martensite is stable, hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility became low, particularly in the Fe-32Mn alloys, even though the formation of ε-martensite plates assisted boundary cracking. The Fe-40Mn alloys, in which no martensite forms even after fracture, showed higher hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility compared to the Fe-32Mn alloy. Namely, in Fe-Mn binary alloys, the Mn content has an optimal value for hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility because of the following two reasons: (1) The formation of stable ε-martensite seems to have a positive effect in suppressing hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity, but causes boundary cracking, and (2) an increase in Mn content stabilizes austenite, suppressing martensite-related cracking, but probably decreases the cohesive energy of grain boundaries, causing intergranular cracking. As a consequence, the optimal Mn content was 32 wt pct in the present alloys.
AB - To obtain a basic understanding of hydrogen embrittlement associated with ε-martensite, we investigated the tensile behavior of binary Fe-Mn alloys with high Mn content under cathodic hydrogen charging. We used Fe-20Mn, Fe-28Mn, Fe-32Mn, and Fe-40Mn alloys. The correlation between the microstructure and crack morphology was clarified through electron backscatter diffraction measurements and electron channeling contrast imaging. ε-martensite in the Fe-20Mn alloy critically deteriorated the resistance to hydrogen embrittlement owing to transformation to α′-martensite. However, when ε-martensite is stable, hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility became low, particularly in the Fe-32Mn alloys, even though the formation of ε-martensite plates assisted boundary cracking. The Fe-40Mn alloys, in which no martensite forms even after fracture, showed higher hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility compared to the Fe-32Mn alloy. Namely, in Fe-Mn binary alloys, the Mn content has an optimal value for hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility because of the following two reasons: (1) The formation of stable ε-martensite seems to have a positive effect in suppressing hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity, but causes boundary cracking, and (2) an increase in Mn content stabilizes austenite, suppressing martensite-related cracking, but probably decreases the cohesive energy of grain boundaries, causing intergranular cracking. As a consequence, the optimal Mn content was 32 wt pct in the present alloys.
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U2 - 10.1007/s11661-016-3431-9
DO - 10.1007/s11661-016-3431-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84960419849
SN - 1073-5623
VL - 47
SP - 2656
EP - 2673
JO - Metallurgical Transactions A (Physical Metallurgy and Materials Science)
JF - Metallurgical Transactions A (Physical Metallurgy and Materials Science)
IS - 6
ER -