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AbstractAbstractA study is reported of temper embrittlement and hydrogen embrittlement in a series of model 9Cr–1Mo steel alloys in which the levels of silicon and phosphorus have been varied to separate the formation of the brittle intermetallic (Laves) phase from the segregation of phosphorus during aging. Phosphorus segregation was mildly detrimental to ductility properties, Laves phase formation was more detrimental, and their effects combined produced the most severe loss in ductility. Hydrogen effects were additive to those of aging. In unaged material without silicon enrichment, only M23C6 precipitates were detected, with little phosphorus segregation. With silicon enrichment, phosphorus segregation to lath and grain boundaries was enhanced. This enhancement increased the susceptibility of the materials to hydrogen embrittlement, promoting transgranular cleavage and chisel fracture. In aged material, the high phosphorus alloys showed some grain boundary segregation, but only limited interaction with hydrogen. In the high silicon alloys, the formation of Laves phase was most evident. This enhanced hydrogen embrittlement resulted in extensive chisel, transgranular cleavage, and some intergranular fracture. In the high silicon high phosphorus alloy, both Laves phase formation and phosphorus segregation were evident. This resulted in enhanced susceptibility to hydrogen embrittlement, producing intergranular fracture. Thus, silicon controls the susceptibility to hydrogen embrittlement in unaged alloy by promoting phosphorus segregation and in aged alloy by promoting Laves phase formation. In the aged alloy, segregation of phosphorus can enhance the effect of silicon.MST/1785
Published in: Materials Science and Technology
Volume 9, Issue 12, pp. 1115-1122