Stress Corrosion Cracking
Stress Corrosion Cracking
Stress Corrosion Cracking
CHAPTER 1
Mechanisms of Stress-Corrosion
Cracking
R.H. Jones, Pacific Northwest Laboratories
R.E. Ricker, National Institute of Standards
and Technology
Stress-Corrosion Cracking
Environment
Hot nitrate, hydroxide, and carbonate/bicarbonate solutions
Aqueous electrolytes, particularly when containing H2S
Hot, concentrated chloride solutions; chloride-contaminated steam
High-purity steam
Ammoniac al solutions
Aqueous CT, Br", and I~ solutions
Aqueous CT, Br - , and r solutions; organic liquids; N 2 0 4
Aqueous CT solutions
Aqueous CT solutions; organic liquids; I 2 at 350 C (660 F)
Table 2 Alloy/Environment Combinations and the Resulting Films That Form at the Crack Tip
Metal or alloy
a-brass, copper-aluminum
Gold-copper
Iron-chromium nickel
a-brass
Copper
Ferritic steel
Titanium alloys
Aluminum alloys, steels
Environment
Initiating layer
Ammonia
FeCb
Acid sulfate
Chloride
Hydroxide
High-temperature water
Nitrite
Nitrite
Ammonia (cupric)
High-temperature water
Phosphate
Anhydrated ammonia
CO/CO2/H2O
CS2/H2O
Chloride
Various media
Mechanisms ofSCC
fi
J O
H
a
E o
>
Threshold stress
Intensity lor SCC
(fscc)
Threshold
Stress
"applied
Fracture
Stmts
Critical fracture
stress Intensity
<K|e>
Stress-Corrosion Cracking
4
crack propagation, or to evaluate the influence of
metallurgical and environmental changes on
SCC. However, the time required for crack initia
tion is strongly dependent on a wide variety of pa
rameters, such as surface finish. The presence of
flaws that concentrate stress or crevices that alter
the environment may dramatically change the
threshold stress or the crack-initiation time (Ref
9,10). The entire crack-initiation process is pres
ently not well understood.
Tests on statically loaded precracked sam
ples are usually conducted with either a constant
applied load or with a fixed crack opening dis
placement, and the actual rate or velocity of crack
propagation, da/dt, is measured (Ref 11). The
magnitude of the stress distribution at the crack
tip (the mechanical driving force for crack propa
gation) is quantified by the stress-intensity factor,
K, for the specific crack and loading geometry. As
a result, the crack-propagation rate, da/dt, is plot
ted versus K, as illustrated in Fig. 2. These tests
can be configured such that K increases with
crack length (constant applied load), decreases
with increasing crack length (constant crack
mouth opening displacement), or is approxi
mately constant as the crack length changes (spe
cial tapered samples). Each type of test has its
advantages and disadvantages. However, in serv
100
Inert environment, A B
"~
...
Aggressive
environment,
^r
Jf
"
8*
a
o
(a)
1
10-8
1
io-6
1
10-4
I
10-1
10-2
(b)
10-8
io-6
io-
10-2
Fig. 3 Strain-to-failure plots resultingfrom slow-strain-rate testing, (a) Schematic of typical ductility versus strainrate behavior of two different types of alloys tested by the slow-strain-rate technique, (b) Schematic of the ductility
ratio versus strain-rate behavior of two different types ofalloys. The ductility ratio is the ratio ofa ductility measure
ment such as elongation, reduction in area, orfracture energy measured in the aggressive environment to that ob
tained in the inert reference environment.
Mechanisms ofSCC
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25
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c
80.0%
CI
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-O
100.0%
s
I 15
60.0%
(a)
100
e
c
S 10
1000
(b)
^^^^^^^^^^mm*mmtmmUmlmm4m*mm*mJ>mm+m^m^**
10
15
20
25
Fig. 4 Comparison of (a) slow-strain-rate data plotted as a ductility ratio to (b) the same data plotted as an environ
ment-dependent property versus the environment-independent value of the same property. Source: Ref 13
Stress-Corrosion Cracking
Controlling Parameters
The mechanisms that have been proposed for
SCC require that certain processes or events oc
cur in sequence for sustained crack propagation
to be possible. These requirements explain the
Mechanisms ofSCC
(b)
Fig. 6 Optical micrographs showing defects on the innersurface of type 304 stainless steel pipe near weld root (a)
and near through-crack (b). Both lOOOx
Stress-Corrosion Cracking
(a)
(b)
Fig. 7 Stress-corrosion crack initiatingfrom a corrosion pit in a quenched-and-tempered high-strength turbine disk
steel (339Ni-1.56Cr-0.63Mo-0.11V) test coupon exposed to oxygenated, demineralized water for 800 h under a
bending stress of 90% of the yield stress, (a) 275x. (b) 370x. Courtesy ofSJ. Lennon, ESCOM, andF.PA. Robinson,
University ofWitwatersrand
Phenomenology of
Crack-Initiation Processes
Crack Initiation at Surface Discontinuities.
Stress-corrosion cracking frequently initiates at
preexisting or corrosion-induced surface fea
tures. These features may include grooves, laps,
or burrs caused by fabrication processes. Exam
ples of such features are shown in Fig. 6; these
were produced during grinding in the preparation
of a joint for welding. The feature shown in Fig.
6(a) is a lap, which is subsequently recrystallized
during welding and could then act as a crevice at
which deleterious anions or cations concentrate.
The highly sensitized recrystallized material
could also more readily become the site of crack
initiation by intergranular corrosion. A coldworked layer and surface burrs, shown in Fig.
6(b), can also assist crack initiation.
Crack Initiation at Corrosion Pits. Stresscorrosion cracks can also initiate at pits that form
during exposure to the service environment (Fig.
7) or during cleaning operations, such as pickling
of type 304 stainless steel before fabrication. Pits
can form at inclusions that intersect the free sur
face or by a breakdown in the protective film. In
electrochemical terms, pits form when the poten
tial exceeds the pitting potential. It has been
shown that the SCC potential and pitting potential
were identical for steel in nitrite solutions (Ref
16,17).
The transition between pitting and cracking
depends on the same parameters that control
SCC, that is, the electrochemistry at the base of
the pit, pit geometry, chemistry of the material,
and stress or strain rate at the base of the pit. Adetailed description of the relationship between
these parameters and crack initiation has not been
developed because of the difficulty in measuring
crack initiation. Methods for measuring short sur
face cracks are under development, but are lim
ited to detecting cracks that are beyond the
initiation stage. The geometry of apit is important
in determining the stress and strain rate at its base.
Mechanisms ofSCC
Generally, the aspect ratio between the penetra
tion and the lateral corrosion of a pit must be
greater than about 10 before a pit acts as a crackinitiation site. A penetration to lateral corrosion
ratio of 1 corresponds to uniform corrosion, and a
ratio of about 1000 is generally observed for a
growing stress-corrosion crack. As in the ease of
a growing crack, the pit walls must exhibit some
passive-film-forming capability in order for the
corrosion ratio to exceed 1.
A change in the corrosive environment and
potential within a pit may also be necessary for
the pit to act as a crack initiator. Pits can act as oc
cluded cells similar to cracks and crevices, al
though in general their volume is not as restricted.
There are a number of examples in which stresscorrosion cracks initiated at the base of a pit by intergranylar corrosion. In these circumstances, the
grain-boundary chemistry and the pit chemistry
were such that intergranular corrosion was fa
vored. Crack propagation was also by intergranu
lar SCC in these cases.
Although the local stresses and strain rates at
the base of the pit play a role in SCC initiation,
there are examples of preexisting pits that did not
initiate stress-corrosion cracks. This observation
has led to the conclusion mat the electrochemistry
of the pit is more important than the local stress or
strain rate (Ref 16). A preexisting pit may not de
velop the same local electrochemistry as one
grown during service, because the development
of a concentration cell depends on the presence of
an actively corroding tip that establishes the an
ion and cation current flows. Similarly, an inabil
ity to reinitiate crack growth in samples in which
active growth was occurring before the samples
were removed from solution, rinsed, dried, and
reinserted into solution also suggests that the lo
cal chemistry is very important.
Crack Initiation by Intergranular Corro
sion or Slip Dissolution. Stress-corrosion crack
initiation can also occur in the absence of pitting
by intergranular or slip-dissolution processes. In
tergranular corrosion-initiated SCC requires that
the local grain-boundary chemistry differ from
the bulk chemistry. This condition occurs in sen
sitized austenitic stainless steels or with the seg
regation of impurities such as phosphorus, sulfur,
or silicon in a variety of materials. Slip-dissolu-
10
20
30
Stnm Intensity, MPaVfif
40
50
(a)
a.
/^fif
2 10'5-
IO* -
/W
In
+1* I
f I
+
1
10
(b)
Fig. 8 Crack-growth rate versus elastic-plastic stress
intensity for iron and nickel tested in 1 N H^S04 at
given cathodic overpotentials (COP), (a) 2 mm (0.08
in.) thick iron and nickel, (b) 10 mm (0.4 in.) thick iron
and nickel
Stress-Corrosion Cracking
10
tion-initiated SCC resultsfromlocal corrosion at
emerging slip planes and occurs primarily in lowstacking-fault materials. The processes of crack
initiation and propagation by the slip-dissolution
process are in fact very similar.
Crack initiation can be thought of as occurring
in several stages, including the first few atomic
layers that fail due to the transition from shortcrack to long-crack behavior. Evidence obtained
by electrochemical (Ref 18) and acoustic-emis
sion monitoring (Ref 19) of crack initiation in
austenitic stainless steel suggests that the process
occurs by the initiation of multiple short cracks
prior to the propagation of a single dominant
crack. Examples of the electrochemical and
acoustic-emission transients thought to be associ
ated with the growth and retardation of multiple
short cracks are given in Fig. 8. Retardation of the
initiated cracks occurs because of variations in
grain-boundary sensitization, crack angle, elec
trochemistry, and so on, with cracks being arrested after they grow about one grain diameter.
Details of the conditions required for a single
dominant crack to propagate have not been fully
evaluated, but most likely it is a statistical process
where there is a finite probability for a crack to
find a path that does not retard its growth.
Another concept suggested by Parkins (Ref
20) for gas pipeline SCC initiation involves crack
coalescence. It has been suggested that crack in
itiation in gas pipeline steels occurs by the fol
lowing steps:
Penetration of ground water to the pipeline
surface and generation of a critical SCC en
vironment
Initially rapid formation of multiple cracks,
the velocity decreasing with time to a con
stant value
A period of constant crack-growth velocity
Conventional stages 1,2, and 3 as described
by single-crack behavior, during which time
crack coalescence leads to final fracture
Crack-Initiation Mechanisms
Although the features causing SCC initiation,
such as pits, fabrication defects, and intergranular
corrosion, are easily observed and identified,
there are few well-developed models of SCC in
itiation, for several reasons. For example, the in
itiation of a crack is difficult to measure
V
J
where AATu, is the corrosion fatigue threshold, F is
a constant, and Aoo is the alternating surface
stress. A pit could be represented by a half-ellipti
cal surface crack because it had intergranular cor
rosion at the base that caused the pit to have
cracklike characteristics.
A model for stress-corrosion crack growth
from pits in brass tested in a nontarnishing ammoniacal solution was developed (Ref 22). The re
searchers evaluated the corrosion and stress
aspects of a pit to develop a model for crack initia
tion. They assumed that the corrosion conditions
in the base of the pit were essentially the same as
those on a flat surface and that initiation required
that a critical crack-tip opening displacement be
exceeded. Using linear-elastic fracture mechan
ics, the researchers developed the following rela
tionship for the time to initiate a crack:
,
(Kiscd2
(-Vm)
^ = *(<?-<&"*{*)
0,
(Eq2)