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    Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/7311

    Título
    Modelling hydrogenation during cold dwell fatigue of additively manufactured titanium alloys
    Autor
    Díaz Portugal, AndrésUBU authority Orcid
    Cuesta Segura, Isidoro IvánUBU authority Orcid
    Alegre Calderón, Jesús ManuelUBU authority Orcid
    Publicado en
    Procedia Structural Integrity. 2021, V. 34, p. 229-234
    Editorial
    Elsevier
    Fecha de publicación
    2021-10
    ISSN
    2452-3216
    DOI
    10.1016/j.prostr.2021.12.033
    Descripción
    Artículo publicado en el V. 34 dedicado a: The second European Conference on the Structural Integrity of Additively Manufactured Materials
    Abstract
    Titanium alloys are widely employed in aerospace and automotive industries where lightweight applications are required. Additive Manufacturing (AM) processes have been proposed in order to reduce material waste and optimise mechanical properties. In addition, throughout these manufacturing processes and during service life, hydrogen uptake is expected, and the corresponding modification of mechanical properties needs to be modelled. Hydrogenation process including diffusion, trapping and hydride formation in a Ti-6Al-4V alloy during cold dwell fatigue loading, a common failure mode of titanium alloys, is simulated here. All governing equations are implemented in ABAQUS user subroutines. A boundary layer approach is used to simulate how hydrogen redistribution affects hydride kinetics near a blunting crack tip, in which cyclic loading is implemented considering different dwell times. The influence of AM techniques, especially Selective Laser Melting, is expected to promote the increase in martensite phase and microstructure defects due to rapid cooling; thus, the influence of martensite volume fraction and of trapping density on hydrogen redistribution near the crack tip is analysed. The possibility to implement hydrogen and hydride-induced dilatation is also presented, as well as a hydrogen-dependent localised plasticity model. This framework facilitates the prediction of how additive manufacturing processes affect susceptibility to hydrogen embrittlement in Ti-6Al-4V components subjected to dwell fatigue.
    Palabras clave
    Finite Element modelling
    Hydrogen embrittlement
    Hydride formation
    Ti-6Al-4V
    Selective Laser Melting
    Materia
    Ingeniería mecánica
    Mechanical engineering
    Materiales
    Materials
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10259/7311
    Versión del editor
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prostr.2021.12.033
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