Hydrogen-enhanced cracking revealed by in situ micro-cantilever bending test inside environmental scanning electron microscope

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Abstract

To evaluate the hydrogen (H)-induced embrittlement in iron aluminium intermetallics, especially the one with stoichiometric composition of 50 at.% Al, a novel in situ micro-cantilever bending test was applied within an environmental scanning electron microscope (ESEM), which provides both a full process monitoring and a clean, in situ H-charging condition. Two sets of cantilevers were analysed in this work: one set of un-notched cantilevers, and the other set with focused ion beam-milled notch laying on two crystallographic planes: (010) and (110). The cantilevers were tested under two environmental conditions: vacuum (approximately 5×10-4 Pa) and ESEM (450 Pa water vapour). Crack initiation at stressconcentrated locations and propagation to cause catastrophic failure were observed when cantilevers were tested in the presence of H; while no cracking occurred when tested in vacuum. Both the bending strength for un-notched beams and the fracture toughness for notched beams were reduced under H exposure. The hydrogen embrittlement (HE) susceptibility was found to be orientation dependent: The (010) crystallographic plane was more fragile to HE than the (110) plane.

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Deng, Y., Hajilou, T., & Barnoush, A. (2017). Hydrogen-enhanced cracking revealed by in situ micro-cantilever bending test inside environmental scanning electron microscope. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 375(2098). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2017.0106

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