The effect of hydrogen on the low cycle fatigue behavior of a single crystal superalloy

1990 
The present study compares the room temperature fatigue properties of PWA 1480 single crystals containing either normal or elevated hydrogen levels, giving attention to the effects of various levels of HIPing process-controlled porosity on hydrogen-trapping and fatigue life. Hydrogen charging is found to degrade the fatigue lives of alloy samples by an order of magnitude; the magnitude of this degradation is comparable at both high and low porosity. HIPing accomplished a small beneficial effect on the fatigue life of both the hydrogen-charged and uncharged PWA 1480 samples. Fatigue cracks are noted to have consistently initiated at large, near-surface pores. By reducing the size and frquency of the larger pores, HIPing apparently retarded fatigue-crack initiation.
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