Hydrogen embrittlement, revisited by in situ electrochemical nanoindentation
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The fine scale mechanical probing capability of NI-AFM was used to examine hydrogen interaction with plasticity. To realize this, an electrochemical three electrode setup was incorporated into the NI-AFM. The developed ECNI-AFM is capable of performing nanoindentation as well as imaging surfaces inside electrolytes. The developed ECNI-AFM setup was used to examine the effect of cathodically charged hydrogen on dislocation nucleation in pure metals and alloys. It was shown that hydrogen reduces the pop-in load in all of the tested materials except Cu. The reduced pop-in load can be interpreted as the HELP mechanism. Classical dislocation theory was used to model the homogeneous dislocation nucleation and it was shown that H reduces the activation energy for dislocation nucleation in H sensitive metals which are not undergoing a phase transformation. The activation energy for dislocation nucleation is related to the material specific parameters; shear modulus μ, dislocation core radius ρ and in the case of partial dislocation nucleation, stacking fault energy γ. These material properties can be influenced by H resulting in a reduced activation energy for dislocation nucleation.
Nákup knihy
Hydrogen embrittlement, revisited by in situ electrochemical nanoindentation, Afrooz Barnoush
- Jazyk
- Rok vydání
- 2009
Doručení
Platební metody
2021 2022 2023
Navrhnout úpravu
- Titul
- Hydrogen embrittlement, revisited by in situ electrochemical nanoindentation
- Jazyk
- anglicky
- Autoři
- Afrooz Barnoush
- Vydavatel
- Shaker
- Rok vydání
- 2009
- ISBN10
- 3832278346
- ISBN13
- 9783832278342
- Série
- Saarbrücker Reihe Materialwissenschaft und Werkstofftechnik
- Kategorie
- Skripta a vysokoškolské učebnice
- Anotace
- The fine scale mechanical probing capability of NI-AFM was used to examine hydrogen interaction with plasticity. To realize this, an electrochemical three electrode setup was incorporated into the NI-AFM. The developed ECNI-AFM is capable of performing nanoindentation as well as imaging surfaces inside electrolytes. The developed ECNI-AFM setup was used to examine the effect of cathodically charged hydrogen on dislocation nucleation in pure metals and alloys. It was shown that hydrogen reduces the pop-in load in all of the tested materials except Cu. The reduced pop-in load can be interpreted as the HELP mechanism. Classical dislocation theory was used to model the homogeneous dislocation nucleation and it was shown that H reduces the activation energy for dislocation nucleation in H sensitive metals which are not undergoing a phase transformation. The activation energy for dislocation nucleation is related to the material specific parameters; shear modulus μ, dislocation core radius ρ and in the case of partial dislocation nucleation, stacking fault energy γ. These material properties can be influenced by H resulting in a reduced activation energy for dislocation nucleation.