The 9th International Conference on Multiscale Materials Modeling

Presentation information

Poster Session

I. Multiscale Modeling of Grain Boundary Dynamics, Grain Growth and Polycrystal Plasticity

[PO-I1] Poster Session 1

Symposium I

Mon. Oct 29, 2018 5:45 PM - 8:00 PM Poster Hall

[P1-64] Diffusion and trapping of hydrogen at grain boundaries scale in fcc polycrystalline nickel: some implications of the atomic volume and the interstitial self-stress

xavier Feaugas, jiaqi Li, abdel malek Hallil, abdelali oudriss, arnaud metsue, jamaa bouhattate (university of La Rochelle, France)

The mobility of hydrogen in metals is a key parameter for understanding the basic mechanisms of hydrogen embrittlement (HE). This problem is directly related to the mechanisms of diffusion and trapping of hydrogen within a specific metallurgical state. These mechanisms depend on the various microstructural heterogeneities and in particular the grain boundaries (GBs), triple junction (TJs) and several defects (dislocations, vacancies …). Although a number of theories have been proposed to describe the role of GBs for hydrogen diffusion and segregation, none of them is able to give an exact answer. In present work we report our recent works, which support the investigation of diffusion and trapping of hydrogen in two elementary systems: nickel single crystals and bi-crystals to highlight the impact of GB on hydrogen mobility in polycrystalline fcc metals. We developed a methodology combining experimental tools (electrochemical permeation / TDS, HRTEM, EBSD) and numerical methods (FEM-COMSOL / EAM-LAMMPS). We propose to screen several bi-crystals of pure nickel with different grain boundaries (Σ11-50°30<110>{311}, Σ11-129°30<110>{332}, Σ3-70°30<110>{111} and Σ5-37°<100>{310}).

The results allow us to associate the short-circuit diffusion and trapping phenomena to the grain boundaries and defect characters (excess volume, defects density and distribution …). In each situation, we highlight the importance of the self-stress on the processes of diffusion and segregation. The segregation energy of hydrogen depends on the nature of the site (the local free volume and the elastic energy associated with the incorporation of solute). The diffusion of hydrogen is directly influenced by the nature of the grain boundary (the free volume and the distribution of the segregation sites). Our results, at the atomic scale, show a correlation between the solubility and the free volume of the grain boundary. The grain boundaries with a higher free volume have more favorable diffusion paths for hydrogen than in the crystal lattice and at the same time more segregation sites.