Chemomechanical Origin of Hydrogen Trapping at Grain Boundaries in fcc Metals

Hydrogen embrittlement of metals is widely observed, but its atomistic origins remain little understood and much debated. Combining a unique identification of interstitial sites through polyhedral tessellation and first-principles calculations, we study hydrogen adsorption at grain boundaries in a v...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physical review letters Vol. 116; no. 7; p. 075502
Main Authors: Zhou, Xiao, Marchand, Daniel, McDowell, David L, Zhu, Ting, Song, Jun
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 19-02-2016
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Summary:Hydrogen embrittlement of metals is widely observed, but its atomistic origins remain little understood and much debated. Combining a unique identification of interstitial sites through polyhedral tessellation and first-principles calculations, we study hydrogen adsorption at grain boundaries in a variety of face-centered cubic metals of Ni, Cu, γ-Fe, and Pd. We discover the chemomechanical origin of the variation of adsorption energetics for interstitial hydrogen at grain boundaries. A general chemomechanical formula is established to provide accurate assessments of hydrogen trapping and segregation energetics at grain boundaries, and it also offers direct explanations for certain experimental observations. The present study deepens our mechanistic understanding of the role of grain boundaries in hydrogen embrittlement and points to a viable path towards predictive microstructure engineering against hydrogen embrittlement in structural metals.
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ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/physrevlett.116.075502