TY - JOUR
T1 - A novel framework for assessing the fracture toughness through the wall thickness of hydrogen pipelines
AU - Nyhus, Bård
AU - Jemblie, Lise
AU - Hagen, Catalina H.M.
AU - Hagen, Anette B.
AU - Matsunaga, Hisao
AU - Yamabe, Junichiro
AU - Alvaro, Antonio
AU - Olden, Vigdis
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - This article presents a novel model for assessing the fracture toughness in hydrogen pipelines. By combining experimental fracture toughness data with recognized hydrogen uptake and diffusion models, the local hydrogen-affected fracture toughness across the wall thickness of a hydrogen pipeline can be determined. The model specifically accounts for hydrogen concentration gradients across the pipe wall thickness and the existence of surface barriers. Presented results demonstrate that embedded defects may possess higher fracture toughness values compared to inner surface flaws for the same operating pressure, reducing their criticality compared to that of inner surface defects. The model has thus the potential to reduce conservative selection of hydrogen-affected fracture toughness, yielding less restrictive flaw-acceptance criteria in pipeline integrity assessments. The approach can efficiently be applied in combination with various integrity assessment methods as a readily accessible and easy to use engineering tool for fracture analysis of hydrogen pipelines and pressure vessels.
AB - This article presents a novel model for assessing the fracture toughness in hydrogen pipelines. By combining experimental fracture toughness data with recognized hydrogen uptake and diffusion models, the local hydrogen-affected fracture toughness across the wall thickness of a hydrogen pipeline can be determined. The model specifically accounts for hydrogen concentration gradients across the pipe wall thickness and the existence of surface barriers. Presented results demonstrate that embedded defects may possess higher fracture toughness values compared to inner surface flaws for the same operating pressure, reducing their criticality compared to that of inner surface defects. The model has thus the potential to reduce conservative selection of hydrogen-affected fracture toughness, yielding less restrictive flaw-acceptance criteria in pipeline integrity assessments. The approach can efficiently be applied in combination with various integrity assessment methods as a readily accessible and easy to use engineering tool for fracture analysis of hydrogen pipelines and pressure vessels.
KW - Embedded defects
KW - Engineering critical assessment
KW - Fracture toughness
KW - Hydrogen embrittlement
KW - Hydrogen pipelines
KW - Integrity assessment
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U2 - 10.1016/j.engfailanal.2024.109208
DO - 10.1016/j.engfailanal.2024.109208
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212398052
SN - 1350-6307
VL - 169
JO - Engineering Failure Analysis
JF - Engineering Failure Analysis
M1 - 109208
ER -