Alloy steel
Steels |
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Phases |
Microstructures |
Classes |
Other iron-based materials |
Alloy steel is steel that is alloyed with a variety of elements in amounts between 1.0% and 50% by weight, typically to improve its mechanical properties.
Types
Alloy steels divide into two groups: low and high alloy. The boundary between the two is disputed. Smith and Hashemi define the difference at 4.0%,[1]: 393 while Degarmo, et al., define it at 8.0%.[2]: 112 Most alloy steels are low-alloy.
The simplest steels are iron (Fe) alloyed with (0.1% to 1%) carbon (C) and nothing else (excepting slight impurities); these are called carbon steels. However, alloy steel encompasses steels with additional (metal) alloying elements. Common alloyants include manganese (Mn) (the most common), nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr), molybdenum (Mo), vanadium (V), silicon (Si), and boron (B). Less common alloyants include aluminum (Al), cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), cerium (Ce), niobium (Nb), titanium (Ti), tungsten (W), tin (Sn), zinc (Zn), lead (Pb), and zirconium (Zr).
Properties
Alloy steels variously improve strength, hardness, toughness, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, hardenability, and hot hardness. To achieve these improved properties the metal may require specific heat treating, combined with strict cooling protocols.
Although alloy steels have been made for centuries, their metallurgy was not well understood until the advancing chemical science of the nineteenth century revealed their compositions. Alloy steels from earlier times were expensive luxuries made on the model of "secret recipes" and forged into tools such as knives and swords. Machine age alloy steels were tool steels and stainless steels.
Because of iron's ferromagnetic properties, some alloys find important applications where their responses to magnetism are valued, including in electric motors and in transformers.
Low-alloy steels
SAE designation | Composition |
---|---|
13xx | Mn 1.75% |
40xx | Mo 0.20% or 0.25% or 0.25% Mo & 0.042% S |
41xx | Cr 0.50% or 0.80% or 0.95%, Mo 0.12% or 0.20% or 0.25% or 0.30% |
43xx | Ni 1.82%, Cr 0.50% to 0.80%, Mo 0.25% |
44xx | Mo 0.40% or 0.52% |
46xx | Ni 0.85% or 1.82%, Mo 0.20% or 0.25% |
47xx | Ni 1.05%, Cr 0.45%, Mo 0.20% or 0.35% |
48xx | Ni 3.50%, Mo 0.25% |
50xx | Cr 0.27% or 0.40% or 0.50% or 0.65% |
50xxx | Cr 0.50%, C 1.00% min |
50Bxx | Cr 0.28% or 0.50%, and added boron |
51xx | Cr 0.80% or 0.87% or 0.92% or 1.00% or 1.05% |
51xxx | Cr 1.02%, C 1.00% min |
51Bxx | Cr 0.80%, and added boron |
52xxx | Cr 1.45%, C 1.00% min |
61xx | Cr 0.60% or 0.80% or 0.95%, V 0.10% or 0.15% min |
86xx | Ni 0.55%, Cr 0.50%, Mo 0.20% |
87xx | Ni 0.55%, Cr 0.50%, Mo 0.25% |
88xx | Ni 0.55%, Cr 0.50%, Mo 0.35% |
92xx | Si 1.40% or 2.00%, Mn 0.65% or 0.82% or 0.85%, Cr 0.00% or 0.65% |
94Bxx | Ni 0.45%, Cr 0.40%, Mo 0.12%, and added boron |
ES-1 | Ni 5%, Cr 2%, Si 1.25%, W 1%, Mn 0.85%, Mo 0.55%, Cu 0.5%, Cr 0.40%, C 0.2%, V 0.1% |
Material science
Alloying elements enable specific properties.[3] As a guideline, alloying elements are added in lower percentages (less than 5%) to increase strength or hardenability, or in larger percentages (over 5%) to improve corrosion resistance or temperature stability.[2]: 112
Property | Elements | Mechanism |
---|---|---|
Steelmaking | Manganese, silicon, or aluminum | remove dissolved oxygen, sulfur and phosphorus |
Strength | Manganese, silicon, nickel, and copper | form solid solutions in ferrite |
Strength | Chromium, vanadium, molybdenum, and tungsten | form second-phase carbides |
Corrosion resistance | Nickel and copper | |
Embrittlement resistance | Molybdenum | |
Control inclusion shape | Zirconium, cerium, and calcium | |
Machinability | Sulfur (manganese sulfide), lead, bismuth, selenium, and tellurium | [2]: 113 |
The alloying elements tend to form either solid solutions, compounds or carbides.
- Nickel is soluble in ferrite; therefore, it usually forms Ni3Al.
- Aluminum dissolves in ferrite and forms Al2O3 and AlN. Silicon is also soluble and usually forms SiO2•MxOy.
- Manganese mostly dissolves in ferrite forming MnS, MnO•SiO2, but also carbides: (Fe,Mn)3C.
- Chromium forms partitions between the ferrite and carbide phases in steel, forming (Fe,Cr3)C, Cr7C3, and Cr23C6. The type of c#arbide that chromium forms depends on the amount of carbon and other alloying elements present.
- Tungsten and molybdenum form carbides given enough carbon and an absence of stronger carbide forming elements (i.e., titanium and niobium), they form the carbides W2C and Mo2C, respectively.
- Vanadium, titanium, and niobium are strong carbide-forming elements, forming vanadium carbide, titanium carbide, and niobium carbide, respectively.[1]: 394–395
Eutectoid temperature
Alloying elements can have an effect on the eutectoid temperature.
- Manganese and nickel lower the eutectoid temperature and are known as austenite stabilizing elements. With enough of these elements the austenitic structure may form at room temperature.
- Carbide-forming elements raise the eutectoid temperature and stabilize ferrites.[1]: 395–396
Element | Percentage | Primary function |
---|---|---|
Aluminum | 0.95–1.30 | Alloying element in nitriding steels |
Bismuth | — | Improves machinability |
Boron | 0.001–0.003 | (Boron steel) A powerful hardenability agent |
Chromium | 0.5–2 | Increases hardenability |
4–18 | Increases corrosion resistance | |
Copper | 0.1–0.4 | Corrosion resistance |
Lead | — | Improved machinability |
Manganese | 0.25–0.40 | Combines with sulfur and with phosphorus to reduce brittleness. Also helps to remove excess oxygen. |
>1 | Increases hardenability by lowering transformation points and causing transformations to be sluggish | |
Molybdenum | 0.2–5 | Stable carbides; inhibits grain growth. Increases the toughness of steel, thus making molybdenum a very valuable alloy metal for making the cutting parts of machine tools and also the turbine blades of turbojet engines. Also used in rocket motors. |
Nickel | 2–5 | Toughener |
12–20 | Increases corrosion resistance | |
Niobium | — | Stabilizes microstructure |
Silicon | 0.2–0.7 | Increases strength |
2.0 | Spring steels | |
Higher percentages | Improves magnetic properties | |
Sulfur | 0.08–0.15 | Free-machining properties |
Titanium | — | Fixes carbon in inert particles; reduces martensitic hardness in chromium steels |
Tungsten | — | Also increases the melting point. |
Vanadium | 0.15 | Stable carbides; increases strength while retaining ductility; promotes fine grain structure. Increases the toughness at high temperatures |
Microstructure
The properties of steel depend on its microstructure: the arrangement of different phases, some harder, some with greater ductility. At the atomic level, the four phases of auto steel include martensite (the hardest yet most brittle), bainite (less hard), ferrite (more ductile), and austenite (the most ductile). The phases are arranged by steelmakers by manipulating intervals (sometimes by seconds only) and temperatures of the heating and cooling process.[4]
Transformation-induced plasticity
TRIP steels transform from relatively ductile to relatively hard under deformation such as in a car crash. Deformation transforms austenitic microstructure to martensitic microstructure. TRIP steels use relatively high carbon content to create the austenitic microstructure. Relatively high silicon/aluminum content suppresses carbide precipitation in the bainite region and helps accelerate ferrite/bainite formation. This helps retain carbon to support austenite at room temperature. A specific cooling process reduces the austenite/martensite transformation during forming. TRIP steels typically require an isothermal hold at an intermediate temperature during cooling, which produces some bainite. The additional silicon/carbon requires weld cycle modification, such as the use of pulsating welding or dilution welding.[5]
In one approach steel is heated to a high temperature, cooled somewhat, held stable for an interval and then quenched. This produces islands of austenite surrounded by a matrix of softer ferrite, with regions of harder bainite and martensite. The resulting product can absorb energy without fracturing, making it useful for auto parts such as bumpers and pillars.
Three generations of advanced, high-strength steel are available. The first was created in the 1990s, increasing strength and ductility. A second generation used new alloys to further increase ductility, but were expensive and difficult to manufacture. The third generation is emerging. Refined heating and cooling patterns increase strength at some cost in ductility (vs 2nd generation). These steels are claimed to approach nearly ten times the strength of earlier steels; and are much cheaper to manufacture.[5]
Intermetallics
Researches created an alloy with the strength of steel and the lightness of titanium alloy. It combined iron, aluminum, carbon, manganese, and nickel. The other ingredient was uniformly distributed nanometer-sized B2 intermetallic (two metals with equal numbers of atoms) particles. The use of nickel team avoided problems with earlier attempts to use B2, while increasing ductility.[6]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Smith, William F.; Hashemi, Javad (2001), Foundations of Material Science and Engineering (4th ed.), McGraw-Hill, p. 394, ISBN 0-07-295358-6
- ^ a b c d Degarmo, E. Paul; Black, J T.; Kohser, Ronald A. (2007), Materials and Processes in Manufacturing (10th ed.), Wiley, ISBN 978-0-470-05512-0
- ^ "What Are the Different Types of Steel? | Metal Exponents Blog". Metal Exponents. 2020-08-18. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
- ^ Johnson, Jr, John (2024-08-05). "New forms of steel for stronger, lighter cars". Knowable Magazine. doi:10.1146/knowable-080524-1.
- ^ a b Hickey, Kate (2021-06-23). "Transformation Induced Plasticity (TRIP)". AHSS Guidelines. Retrieved 2024-08-21.
- ^ Jeffrey, Collin (2015-02-12). "New alloy of steel created that's as strong and light as titanium". New Atlas. Retrieved 2024-12-22.
External links
- Groover, Mikell P. (February 26, 2009). FUNDAMENTALS OF MODERN MANUFACTURING: Materials, Processes, and Systems. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.