Formulating stress corrosion cracking growth rates by combination of crack tip mechanics and crack tip oxidation kinetics

2010 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 769-779 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsuo Shoji ◽  
Zhanpeng Lu ◽  
Hiroyoshi Murakami
Author(s):  
Tetsuo Shoji ◽  
Zhanpeng Lu ◽  
Nishith Kumar Das ◽  
Hiroyoshi Murakami ◽  
Yoichi Takeda ◽  
...  

Quantitative prediction of environmentally assisted cracking such as stress corrosion cracking is one of the greatest concerns in lifetime management and consequent lifetime extension of light water reactors. Continuum mechanics has been applied to quantify the effect of crack tip mechanics on crack tip film degradation and its physical interaction with the oxidation kinetics. Besides such an effect, it has been realized that crack tip stress/strain can significantly affect the oxidation kinetics by a physical-chemical mode. The present paper focuses on optimizing crack tip asymptotic fields, oxidation kinetics laws, and their interaction modes for modeling stress corrosion cracking growth rates. Meanwhile, the physical-chemical effect of stress/strain on solid state oxidation kinetics at the stress corrosion crack tip is emphasized. The criteria for formulating stress corrosion cracking and optimizing input parameters are also discussed.


Author(s):  
Tetsuo Shoji ◽  
Zhanpeng Lu ◽  
He Xue ◽  
Yubing Qiu ◽  
Kazuhiko Sakaguchi

Stress corrosion cracking is the result of the interaction between crack tip oxidation kinetics and crack tip mechanics. Oxidation kinetic processes for austenitic alloys in high temperate water environments are analyzed, emphasizing the effects of alloy composition and microstructure, temperature, water chemistry, etc. The crack chemistry is investigated with introducing the effect of aging on reactivity of crack sides and the throwing power of bulk water chemistry. Oxidation rate constants under various conditions are calculated based on quasi-solid state oxidation mechanism, which are incorporated in the theoretical growth rate equation to quantify the effects of several key parameters on stress corrosion cracking growth rates of austenitic alloys in high temperature water environments, especially the effect of environmental parameters on stress corrosion cracking of Ni-base alloys in simulated PWR environments and stainless steels in simulated boiling water environments.


Author(s):  
Bruce C. Bunker ◽  
William H. Casey

Although dissolution reactions involving water can etch and decompose oxides, truly catastrophic failures of oxide structures usually involve fractures and mechanical failures. Geologists and geochemists have long recognized that water and ice both play key roles in promoting the fracture and crumbling of rock (see Chapter 17). Freezing and thawing create stresses that amplify the rate at which water attacks metal–oxygen bonds at the crack tip. The interplay between water and stressed oxides also leads to common failures in man-made objects, ranging from the growth of cracks from flaws in windshields to the rupture of optical fibers in communication systems. In this chapter, we outline how mechanical deformations change the reactivity of metal–oxygen bonds with respect to water and other chemicals, and how reactions on strained model compounds have been used to predict time to failure as a function of applied stress. The basic phenomenon of stress corrosion cracking is illustrated in Figure 16.1. Cracks can propagate through oxide materials at extremely fast rates, as anyone who has dropped a wine glass on the floor can attest. High-speed photography reveals that when glass shatters, cracks can spread at speeds of hundreds of meters per second, or half the speed of sound in the glass. At the other end of the spectrum, cracks in glass can grow from preexisting flaws so slowly that only a few chemical bonds are broken at the crack tip per hour. Because mechanical failures are associated with cracking, it is critical for design engineers to understand the factors that control crack growth rates for this enormous range of crack velocities (a factor of 1012). In addition, because it is difficult to measure crack velocities slower than 10−8 m/second, it is often necessary to make major extrapolations from measured data to predict the long-term reliability of glass and ceramic objects. Will an optical fiber under stress fail in 1 year or 10 years? Answering this question can require accurate extrapolations down to crack growth rates as low as 10−10 m/second.


Author(s):  
Frank Y. Cheng

A thermodynamic model was developed to determine the interactions of hydrogen, stress and anodic dissolution at the crack-tip during near-neutral pH stress corrosion cracking in pipelines. By analyzing the free-energy of the steel in the presence and absence of hydrogen and stress, it is demonstrated that a synergism of hydrogen and stress promotes the cracking of the steel. The enhanced hydrogen concentration in the stressed steel significantly accelerates the crack growth. The quantitative prediction of the crack growth rate in near-neutral pH environment is based on the determination of the effect of hydrogen on the anodic dissolution rate in the absence of stress, the effect of stress on the anodic dissolution rate in the absence of hydrogen, the synergistic effect of hydrogen and stress on the anodic dissolution rate at the crack-tip and the effect of the variation of hydrogen concentration on the anodic dissolution rate.


Author(s):  
Jiajun (Jeff) Liang ◽  
Ziqiang (Alex) Dong ◽  
Mengshan Yu ◽  
Mariko Dela Rosa ◽  
Gurwinder Nagra

Although stress corrosion cracking (SCC) growth is attributed to the synergistic effects of stress and corrosion, these two factors can just as easily become competing mechanisms, with stress cycles driving growth (hydrogen, the by-product of corrosion, may facilitate the growth), and corrosion working to blunt the crack tip and arrest growth. It follows that reducing the maximum pressure and cycling severity can slow down the crack growth or even stop it, and aggressive corrosion can further blunt the sharp crack tip. The Authors have observed, on a particular Polyethylene (PE) tape coated pipeline, instances where SCC has exhibited a propensity to corrode and convert into sharp edge corrosion. This is attributed to the combined effects of limited corrosion protection and low stresses. The focus of the paper is to assist operators in recognizing this phenomenon and integrate lessons learned into pipeline integrity management strategies.


1995 ◽  
Vol 409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tong-Yi Zhang ◽  
Wu-Yang Chu ◽  
Ji-Mei Xiao

AbstractThe present work analyzes the effects of a passive film formed during stress corrosion cracking on ductile/brittle fracture behavior, considering the interaction of a screw dislocation with a thin film-covered mode III crack under an applied remote load. Exact solutions are derived, and the results show that the crack stress field due to the applied load is enhanced by a harder film or abated by a softer film. The critical stress intensity factor for dislocation emission from the crack tip is greatly influenced by both the stiffness and thickness of the filn. A dislocation is more easily to be emitted from the crack tip if the covered film has a shear modulus larger than that of the substrate. The opposite is also true, i.e., a softer film makes dislocation emission more difficult. Both phenomena become more significant when the film thickness is smaller.


2014 ◽  
Vol 494-495 ◽  
pp. 651-654
Author(s):  
He Xue ◽  
Jin Tian ◽  
Fu Qiang Yang

Stress and strain at the crack tip are main mechanical parameters which estimate the stress corrosion cracking rate in metals, and the creep of metals in high temperature and high pressure environment will lead to the redistribution of stress and strain nearby the crack tip. The effects of creep on stress and strain nearby the crack tip are discussed by using 1T-CT specimen and finite element method in this study. The investigated results indicate that both increasing of temperature and stress intensity factor would induce the equivalent creep strain increases at the crack tip.


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