The present invention relates to a hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation method and hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus.
In recent years, there has been increasing demand for high-strength steel used for reinforcing bars in prestressed concrete as building materials. High-strength steel has high hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility, and loses ductility and gets remarkably reduced in strength if hydrogen is contained continuously in the steel. This phenomenon is called hydrogen embrittlement (see Non-Patent Literature 1). In relation to hydrogen embrittlement of steel, hydrogen embrittlement resistance is evaluated as performance of the steel. For example, an evaluation method is widely used that measures fracture time of steel by applying constant tensile stress (constant-load test) to the steel while electrochemically charging hydrogen into the steel (see Non-Patent Literature 2).
Regarding steel actually applied to facilities and the like, if the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when the steel fractures due to hydrogen embrittlement can be known, it becomes possible to predict to what extent hydrogen embrittlement will progress during the service period of the steel and determine to renew the facilities with an appropriate timing before the steel fractures.
However, a conventional method for evaluating hydrogen embrittlement resistance using fracture time is mainly aimed at qualitative evaluation among steels and is not able to know the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when the steel fractures.
The present invention has been made in view of the above circumstances and has an object to know the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when steel fractures due to hydrogen embrittlement.
A hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation method according to the present invention comprises: a first step of finding a cumulative distribution function of fracture time from hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data measured under a test condition that assumes a reinforcing bar in prestressed concrete; a second step of calculating transition probability from the cumulative distribution function of the fracture time with a hydrogen embrittlement fracture being regarded as a stochastic process through which a degraded state progressively reaches a fracture; and a third step of finding a time integral of the transition probability as a degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement.
A hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus according to the present invention comprises: a cumulative distribution function calculation unit configured to find a cumulative distribution function of fracture time from hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data measured under a test condition that assumes a reinforcing bar in prestressed concrete; a transition probability calculation unit configured to calculate transition probability from the cumulative distribution function of the fracture time with a hydrogen embrittlement fracture being regarded as a stochastic process through which a degraded state progressively reaches a fracture; and a hydrogen embrittlement progress calculation unit configured to find a time integral of the transition probability as a degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement.
The present invention makes it possible to know the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when steel fractures due to hydrogen embrittlement.
An embodiment of the present invention will be described below with reference to the drawings.
(Configuration of Hydrogen Embrittlement Progress Evaluation Apparatus)
The hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus 1 is connected with a storage device 2 and display device 3. Alternatively, the hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus 1 may include the storage device 2 and display device 3.
The cumulative distribution function calculation unit 11 calculates a cumulative distribution function of fracture time from large quantities of hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data measured under test conditions that assume reinforcing bars in prestressed concrete. The hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data is stored in the storage device 2. The cumulative distribution function calculation unit 11 calculates the cumulative distribution function of fracture time by reading the hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data out of the storage device 2.
Hydrogen embrittlement fracture time data such as shown in
To find the cumulative distribution function of fracture time from the hydrogen embrittlement fracture time data, a typical method can be used, and no particular method is specified. The fracture time due to hydrogen embrittlement is considered to follow a Weibull distribution, and thus a cumulative distribution function F(t) is estimated using, for example, typical Weibull probability paper. When the cumulative distribution function F(t) was calculated from the hydrogen embrittlement fracture time data of
Formula 1
F(t)=1−exp(−0.12t1.99) (1)
Using the cumulative distribution function calculated by the cumulative distribution function calculation unit 11, the transition probability calculation unit 12 calculates the transition probability with a hydrogen embrittlement fracture being regarded as a stochastic process through which a degraded state progressively reaches a fractured state.
Based on the following two suppositions, the inventors found that is was possible to calculate the transition probability of a degraded state caused by hydrogen embrittlement and estimate the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement from the transition probability.
Supposition 1: with hydrogen embrittlement, degradation accumulates over time and a fracture occurs when the degradation exceeds a predetermined value.
Supposition 2: a change from a degraded state to another degraded state occurs probabilistically according to a transition probability λ(t).
The transition probability is the probability that a degraded state transitions once per unit time and represents the average value of degradation increase rates. That is, it is considered that a value H(t) of the time integral of the transition probability (degradation increase rate) represents the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement.
The idea that degradation progresses probabilistically, leading to a fracture is also applicable to fatigue failure of metallic materials. However, in the case of fatigue failure, because the transition probability λ is a constant value not subject to time variation, the idea is not directly applicable to phenomena, such as hydrogen embrittlement, whose transition probability (degradation increase rate) is considered to be subject to time variation. On the other hand, in the field of reliability engineering, in a system called a duplex system in which any devices that fail are replaced one by one by backup devices, it is known that a relationship between a failure rate λ(t) of one device and a cumulative distribution function F(t) that represents a failure rate of the entire system is known to be given by Formula (2) shown below when the number of backup devices is n (see Non-Patent Literature 3).
The transition of a degraded state caused by hydrogen embrittlement is considered to be based on the same mechanism as the mechanism of transitioning to a backup device when a device fails in a duplex system. That is, the use of Formulae (1) and (2) makes it possible to find the transition probability λ(t) of hydrogen embrittlement. Also, when the cumulative distribution function F(t) follows a Weibull distribution, Formula (2) cannot be solved analytically, but can be approximated accurately if the transition probability λ(t) is given by Formula (3) shown below.
Formula 3
λ(t)=At−B+C (3)
According to the above method, assuming that a fracture occurs when a degraded state transitions 100 times (n=100), if Formula (3) is substituted into Formula (2) and values of A, B, and C in Formula (3) are determined so as to fit the cumulative distribution function F(t) of Formula (1), the transition probability λ(t) is calculated as shown by Formula (4) below. The time variation graph in transition probability given by Formula (4) is shown in
Formula 4
λ(t)=7.4t−0.91+0.4 (4)
Note that although the value of n at which a fracture occurs is set arbitrarily, the curve of the transition probability λ(t) is almost similar even if the value of n is changed as long as n is sufficiently large, and thus for the purpose of knowing the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when a fracture occurs, n may be any value, provided that n is sufficiently large.
The hydrogen embrittlement progress calculation unit 13 finds the time integral of the transition probability as the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement. No particular method is specified, and a typical method can be used. The hydrogen embrittlement progress calculation unit 13 displays the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement thus found on the display device 3.
The degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement H(t) is calculated from Formula (4) as shown by Formula (5) below.
Since it is assumed that a fracture occurs when a degraded state transitions 100 times (H(t)=100), t (t=2.6 hours) at which H(t)=100 corresponds to an average fracture time. Also, when read from
The hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus 1 may include a renewal time estimation unit configured to associate the hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data used to calculate the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement with life data of steel in actual facilities and estimate a renewal time of the actual facilities from the found degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement. For example, if average life of the steel used to acquire the hydrogen embrittlement fracture time data used this time is 20 years in an actual environment, t=2.6 hours, which satisfies H(t)=100, corresponds to 20 years in an actual environment. To renew the actual facilities when the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement is 90% the fracture level, the actual facilities can be renewed in the actual environment after about 11 years that correspond to t=1.4 hours at which H(t)=90.
(Another Method for Finding Transition Probability)
The transition probability λ(t) can be found more accurately using the following method. When the cumulative distribution function F(t) of fracture time in Formula (1) is substituted into Formula (2) and the formula is rearranged with respect to t, Formula (6) shown below is obtained.
By substituting values 1 to 100 in sequence into the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement H(t) in Formula (6) and finding the value of t corresponding to the value of H(t), variation of H(t) with time is found. The transition probability λ(t) can be approximated by the slope of H(t). Using Formula (7) shown below, the slope of H(t) is found as λ(t) by the calculus of finite differences.
where t1 and t2 are arbitrary times, and t1<t2. This method calculates λ(t) directly without using an approximation formula, and thus can find λ(t) more accurately.
Values of λ(t) are found by the method for finding the slope of H(t) and the method that uses the approximation formula of (4), and compared between the two methods as shown in
(When Environmental Conditions Change)
By combining degrees of progress of hydrogen embrittlement found under different environmental conditions the present embodiment can forecast the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement when environmental conditions change, such as when hydrogen generation conditions resulting from corrosion reactions or progress rates of hydrogen embrittlement vary with the seasons.
First, the degrees of progress of hydrogen embrittlement H(t) are found under different environmental conditions using the methods described so far. In
H(t) exhibits behavior such as indicated by a solid line in
Whether the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement is predicted correctly under changing environmental conditions can be checked by a stochastic simulation (Monte Carlo simulation). Probability P that a degraded state transitions to a next state while Δt elapses from the time t is expressed by P=λ(t)Δt using λ(t). For example, cumulative fracture probability is found by setting Δt such that P=0.01 and repeating a simulation from the start of testing to a fracture under conditions that a degraded state transitions to a next degraded state with P=0.01 while Δt elapses from the time t and that a fracture occurs when the degraded state reaches 100. When the cumulative fracture probability found by the simulation is compared with results of an experiment actually conducted under the same conditions, if the results of the simulation and experiment match each other, it can be said that the prediction about the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement is correct.
The transition probability λ(t) found from the slope of H(t) in
In this way, if the degrees of progress of hydrogen embrittlement are grasped in a few cases of unchanging environmental conditions in advance, the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement under changing environmental conditions can be predicted. Because in an actual environment, environmental conditions change in many cases, this method allows the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement in an actual environment to be predicted using simple experiments.
(Operation of Hydrogen Embrittlement Progress Evaluation Apparatus)
Next, a process flow of the hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus 1 according to the present embodiment will be described.
The cumulative distribution function calculation unit 11 finds a cumulative distribution function of fracture time from the hydrogen embrittlement test data (step S11).
With a hydrogen embrittlement fracture being regarded as a stochastic process through which a degraded state progressively reaches a fracture, the transition probability calculation unit 12 calculates transition probability from the cumulative distribution function of fracture time (step S12).
The hydrogen embrittlement progress calculation unit 13 finds the time integral of the transition probability as the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement (step S13).
If provided on the hydrogen embrittlement progress evaluation apparatus 1, the renewal time estimation unit estimates a renewal time of actual facilities from the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement based on life data of reinforcing bars in the actual facilities, the reinforcing bars having been used for measurement of hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data.
As has been described above, the present embodiment calculates a cumulative distribution function of fracture time from large quantities of hydrogen embrittlement fracture test data measured under test conditions that assume reinforcing bars in prestressed concrete, calculates transition probability from the cumulative distribution function of fracture time with a hydrogen embrittlement fracture being regarded as a stochastic process through which a degraded state progressively reaches a fractured state, finds the time integral of the transition probability as the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement, and thereby makes it possible to know the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement up to when steel fractures due to hydrogen embrittlement. Consequently, if the degree of progress of hydrogen embrittlement of the steel is evaluated in advance, it becomes possible to predict to what extent hydrogen embrittlement will progress during the service period of the steel and thereby provide criterion for determining the renewal time of facilities that use the steel.
For example, a general-purpose computer system such as illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018-186637 | Oct 2018 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2019/037857 | 9/26/2019 | WO | 00 |