Hydrogen Embrittlement Detection Technology Using Nondestructive Testing for Realizing a Hydrogen Society
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Procedure
2.1. Hydrogen Charging Method and Measurement of Hydrogen Ingress
2.2. Nondestructive Inspection System
2.3. Finite Element Method (FEM) Stress Analysis
Analysis of Changes in the Distance between Loading Points
3. Experimental Results
3.1. Results of Hydrogen Measurement
3.2. Crack Growth Property
3.3. Fracture Morphologies
3.4. Nondestructive Flaw Detection
4. Hammering Test
5. Conclusions
- When the piping specimens were immersed in a 20 wt% ammonium thiocyanate solution at 40 °C, the hydrogen content reached the saturation value after 72 h. Thus, the optimal immersion time was set to 72 h.
- The crack growth rate of the hydrogen-precharged specimen was accelerated by hydrogen compared with that of the uncharged specimen, and the cracks that started from the inner surface of the pipe were accelerated by approximately 10 times until they reached the outer surface.
- The fracture surface morphology of the cracks exhibited a flat fracture surface in the hydrogen-precharged material, whereas the morphology was convex or concave in the uncharged material.
- The results of eddy current and hammering tests revealed differences in the presence and absence of large cracks in the uncharged and hydrogen-precharged materials. In the eddy current test, clear results were not obtained for the half-cracked material, whereas in the hammering test, the results were similar to those obtained for the fractured and half-cracked materials. No significant differences were observed between the uncharged and hydrogen-precharged materials.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Load P (kN) | Figure | Hydrogen Precharging | Number of Loading Cycles | Crack and Dent | Peaks of RMS Value for Crack Detection |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | Figure 11 | Uncharged | - | without crack and indent | No peak |
40 | Figure 12 | Uncharged | N = 6000 | without crack and with indent | No peak |
40 | Figure 13 | Uncharged | N = 20,498 | with crack and indent | +75 (mV) |
40 | Figure 15 | Hydrogen precharged after cyclic loading of uncharged N = 16,000 | N = 113 | with crack and indent | +25 (mV) |
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Abiru, Y.; Nishiguchi, H.; Maekawa, M.; Nagata, T.; Itaya, T.; Koga, M.; Nishi, T. Hydrogen Embrittlement Detection Technology Using Nondestructive Testing for Realizing a Hydrogen Society. Materials 2024, 17, 4237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17174237
Abiru Y, Nishiguchi H, Maekawa M, Nagata T, Itaya T, Koga M, Nishi T. Hydrogen Embrittlement Detection Technology Using Nondestructive Testing for Realizing a Hydrogen Society. Materials. 2024; 17(17):4237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17174237
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbiru, Yamato, Hiroshi Nishiguchi, Masato Maekawa, Takara Nagata, Toshiya Itaya, Michie Koga, and Toshiomi Nishi. 2024. "Hydrogen Embrittlement Detection Technology Using Nondestructive Testing for Realizing a Hydrogen Society" Materials 17, no. 17: 4237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17174237
APA StyleAbiru, Y., Nishiguchi, H., Maekawa, M., Nagata, T., Itaya, T., Koga, M., & Nishi, T. (2024). Hydrogen Embrittlement Detection Technology Using Nondestructive Testing for Realizing a Hydrogen Society. Materials, 17(17), 4237. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17174237