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Analysis of Hydrogen Embrittlement on Aluminum Alloys for Vehicle-Mounted Hydrogen Storage Tanks: A Review

Abstract

High-pressure hydrogen tanks which are composed of an aluminum alloy liner and a carbon fiber wound layer are currently the most popular means to store hydrogen on vehicles. Nevertheless, the aluminum alloy is easily affected by high-pressure hydrogen, which leads to the appearance of hydrogen embrittlement (HE). Serious HE of hydrogen tank represents a huge dangers to the safety of vehicles and passengers. It is critical and timely to outline the mainstream approach and point out potential avenues for further investigation of HE. An analysis, including the mechanism (including hydrogen-enhanced local plasticity model, hydrogen-enhanced decohesion mechanism and hydrogen pressure theory), the detection (including slow strain rate test, linearly increasing stress test and so on) and methods for the prevention of HE on aluminum alloys of hydrogen vehicles (such as coating) are systematically presented in this work. Moreover, the entire experimental detection procedures for HE are expounded. Ultimately, the prevention measures are discussed in detail. It is believed that further prevention measures will rely on the integration of multiple prevention methods. Successfully solving this problem is of great significance to reduce the risk of failure of hydrogen storage tanks and improve the reliability of aluminum alloys for engineering applications in various industries including automotive and aerospace.

Funding source: The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation Council of China (Grant No. 51905395, 51775398, 51805392), the Program for Innovative Research Team in University of Education Ministry (Grant No.IRT_17R83), Nature Science Foundation of Hubei Province (Grant No. 2020CFB550, No. 2018CFB595), the 111 Project (B17034), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Grant No. WUT: 2020III004XZ, 2020IVB021,2019IVB022, 2019IVA026, 2018III074GX, 2018III067GX, 2020-QC-B1-07), and the State Key Laboratory of Materials Processing and Die & Mould Technology (Grant No. P2019-010).
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/content/journal6378
2021-08-17
2024-12-22
/content/journal6378
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