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BS ISO 15724:2001

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Metallic and other inorganic coatings. Electrochemical measurement of diffusible hydrogen in steels. Barnacle electrode method

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

21-12-2001

£134.00
Excluding VAT

1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Principle
4 Reagents
5 Apparatus
6 Test specimens
7 Calibration
8 Procedure
9 Results
10 Interpretation of results
11 Test report
Bibliography

Specifies a method that uses an electronic hydrogen instrument for measuring relative, diffusible hydrogen concentrations in bare steel or in plated steels after the coating has been removed.

Committee
STI/33
DevelopmentNote
Supersedes 98/121309 DC. (01/2002) Reviewed and Confirmed by BSI, July 2006. (07/2006)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
20
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Current
Supersedes

This International Standard describes a method that uses an electronic hydrogen detection instrument for measuring relative, diffusible hydrogen concentrations in bare steels or in plated steels after the coating has been removed. It is assumed that the hydrogen is uniformly distributed throughout a part.

The method does not measure actual hydrogen concentration. However, oxidation current densities measured against time provide a useful indication of relative hydrogen concentrations and, therefore, the measurements can be used for comparison purposes. The method may be used as a quality control procedure as it does provide a quick means of measuring the effectiveness of pre- and/or post-plating heat treatments or of monitoring hydrogen uptake during plating or due to corrosion.

It is important to note that the absence of failure in a particular test does not provide confirmation of complete elimination of hydrogen embrittlement because no one test method can provide all the data necessary to evaluate the degree of hydrogen degradation.

For unplated parts the method is non-destructive; however, for plated parts the coating has to be removed prior to measurement by a means proven not to damage the steel or to introduce hydrogen.

This test method is limited to:

  • carbon and alloy steels, excluding austenitic stainless steels (see note1);

  • flat specimens to which the cell can be attached (see note2);

  • measurements at room temperature (25°C±1°C).

NOTE1 If this method is used for austenitic stainless steels and other face centred cubic (FCC) alloys, measurement times and interpretation of results will have to be determined because of the different kinetics involved.

NOTE2 For slightly curved surfaces it is essential to define an area that is reproducible. The area calculation will be different from that described in this International Standard.

NOTE3 The method can be applied to small parts, however, this necessitates some modification of the technique, procedure and interpretation of results.

Standards Relationship
ISO 15724:2001 Identical

ISO 2080:2008 Metallic and other inorganic coatings Surface treatment, metallic and other inorganic coatings Vocabulary
ISO 9587:2007 Metallic and other inorganic coatings Pretreatment of iron or steel to reduce the risk of hydrogen embrittlement
ISO 10587:2000 Metallic and other inorganic coatings Test for residual embrittlement in both metallic-coated and uncoated externally-threaded articles and rods Inclined wedge method
ISO 9588:2007 Metallic and other inorganic coatings Post-coating treatments of iron or steel to reduce the risk of hydrogen embrittlement
ISO 7539-7:2005 Corrosion of metals and alloys — Stress corrosion testing — Part 7: Method for slow strain rate testing

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