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Hydrogen embrittlement of Zircaloy-4 fabricated by ultrasonic additive manufacturing

by Yong Yan, Caleb P Massey, Benton E Garrison, Stephen A Taller, Andrew T Nelson
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Materials Science and Engineering: A
Publication Date
Page Number
147126
Volume
914

Ultrasonic additive manufacturing (UAM) was successfully applied to the zirconium material system to create a planar geometry. Following fabrication, SS-J3 type tensile specimens of the UAM and wrought Zircaloy-4 with a nominal gage section of 5 × 1.2 × 0.75 mm were machined for hydriding studies and mechanical testing. The SS-J3 type tensile specimens were gas-charged with hydrogen using a custom system that precisely controls hydrogen gas flow rate, hydrogen partial pressure, and temperature. To avoid altering the UAM material, the maximum process temperature was limited to 550 °C. Using different initial hydrogen gas pressures and flow rates, various hydrogen contents (70–1755 wppm) were achieved for Zircaloy-4 specimens. Tensile testing shows that, regardless of hydrogen content, all UAM specimens measured yield strengths in the range of 557 ± 16 MPa and ultimate tensile strengths of 660 ± 4 MPa. However, total elongation clearly decreased as a function of increasing hydrogen content. At the lowest hydrogen content, the total plastic elongation measured 21.5 %, and this value decreased to less than 2 % when the hydrogen content was increased to 1000 wppm. Cross-sectional optical microscopy images revealed that the hydride distributions are randomly oriented. For the low hydrogen content specimen, these randomly distributed hydrides are isolated from each other. A sandwiched structure, consisting of high-density and low-density layers, was also observed for the specimens with hydrogen content between 200 and 400 wppm. As the hydrogen content increases, the hydrides diffuse into the low-density hydride layers to form a network across the whole specimen. Although the tensile properties of UAM and wrought Zircaloy-4 exhibit the same behavior with increasing hydrogen content, the distinctions in grain orientations led to differences in the hydride orientations at low and intermediate hydrogen concentrations.