Atomistic simulations of the effects of H on edge dislocation mobility and pile-ups are performed to investigate possible nanoscale mechanisms for hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity (HELP). alpha-Fe is used as a model system because H diffusion is fast enough to capture kinetics within the time scales of molecular dynamics and because edge dislocation glide in alpha-Fe is similar to glide in face-centered cubic metals. Results over a wide range of H concentrations sufficient to generate a range of sizes in the Cottrell atmospheres show that the Cottrell atmospheres follow the moving dislocations, leading to a resistance to dislocation motion that is consistent with solute drag theory; thus, H reduces the dislocation mobility. Furthermore, once motion stops and a pile-up is established, the H Cottrell atmospheres do not affect the equilibrium spacing of dislocations in the pile-up; thus, the H atmosphere provides no "shielding" of dislocation dislocation interactions. This result is consistent with conclusions from previous continuum calculations. Two oft-proposed mechanisms for HELP (H-induced increase in true dislocation mobility and decrease in dislocation-dislocation pile-up interactions) are therefore not supported by the present simulations. A mechanistic understanding of HELP phenomena observed in various experiments thus requires evaluation of more complex H-dislocation interactions. (C) 2014 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Pascal Fua, Benoît Alain René Guillard, Ren Li, Corentin Camille Marius Dumery
Denis Gillet, Juan Carlos Farah