physical metallurgy 20 th lecture ms&e 410 d.ast [email protected] 255 4140

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Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast [email protected] 255 4140

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Page 1: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Physical Metallurgy20 th Lecture

MS&E 410

D.Ast

[email protected]

255 4140

Page 2: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

It is impossible to discuss all the various forms of steels and iron in Professor Bakers handout so I will concentrate on 3 examples

a) low carbon steel. The most used one. It is cheap and works well - except that the yield strength is 30 KSI unless you want to do fancy heat treatments which cost too much to be worth the effort.

b) Duplex stainless steel. It is expensive but beloved by the petroleum and chemical industry. You will see why

c) Tool steels. These are very sophisticated steels, and highly specific. But the principle for all the same - stable carbides.

Page 3: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Steels in the US (but not in other countries) go by AISI (American Institute for Steel and Iron) classification

Carbon steels and low alloy steels are designated by a four digit number,

• first two digits indicate the alloying elements

• last two digits indicate the amount of carbon, in hundredths of a percent by weight.

The UNS system is a letter plus 5 digits and not popular in the US, we will get to it later.

Tables exists that indicate what classification in one system (say ASTM) is closest to that in other (say SAE) but they are not exact. And yes, the military has MIL specs !

Classifications

Page 4: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140
Page 5: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

More AISI classifications18/8 means 18wt% Ni, 12wt% Cr. Ni expands the field

Cheapest grade used in US cars. Cr provides corrosion resistance, absence of Ni makes it ferriticSee App, Lec 19

Page 6: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

In the ferritc SS you can tolerate 0.2% C as long as you have higher Cr as Cr binds C.

Martensitic SS have higher C content to force transition to martensite

Page 7: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

The austenitic SS all contain Ni (or Mn which is cheaper). The fcc phase has 12 glide systems, thus this SS are ductile.

Also, do not embrittle at low T

S is a controlled impurity as it sensitizes SS

Page 8: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Example 1: Low Carbon steel

Page 9: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Low Carbon Steel

Typical example 1020

• 1020 steels have all the same composition

• Yet 1020 steels have different specs (and prices) - because mechanical properties and composition are not 1:1 linked (slags rolled in, surface finish, defect etc etc)

P embrittles grain boundaries, and S was the downfall of the Titanic

Page 10: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

The military, the ASTM, ASM, SAE, even USDA, they all have their own specifications. As have Swedes, Germans...

UNS is Unified Number System. The letter G indicates Carbon Steels, the 5 digits its composition. Not widely adopted yet :-(

The ASM used to be the American Society for Metals but now is the Materials Information Society… .

Page 11: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Applications of 1020 SteelGood steel for general purposes.

Case hardening is packing the part into C and lead the C diffuse in.

Heat and time required => both cost money.

No matter how you hard, the piece will distort. After hardening, the only way to machine is grinding - an very expensive process compared to precision turning on a lathe

Page 12: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Heat Treatments

HW question next page… may come back at final.

Page 13: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

HW 20-1

What happens during tempering ? Why does the yield strength increase ?

Page 14: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

More 1020 Data

Page 15: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Clarifying the Baker Table

“Rephosporized” steel

Page 16: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Glossary

Resulferized steel. Steel to which controlled amounts of S have been added to improve machinability

Remember: Machining is to drive a crack in front of the cutting tool. It is not cutting as in cutting meat !

Rephosphorized : P is a very effective solute solution strengthening addition to Fe, but unfortunately, if not heat treated properly tends to wind up in GB. Rephosporized steel have low C contents. Hence a low yield stress. Given their high UTS they have good “deep draw ability” Mostly used in automotive side panels, hoods etc, as they are highly dent resistant once properly strained ( if designed to have about equal strain everywhere when stamped )

Page 17: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

This is from a Japanese paper that I put on our website.

The point is that you need to cool quickly to prevent the P from moving to grain boundaries. The steel is an ultra-low Carbon steel specifically developed for deep drawing automotive panels

Page 18: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Example Stainless Steels

a) Duplex

b) Stress Driven Martensitic transformation

Page 19: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Duplex (dual phase) stainless steel A mixture of ferritic and austenitic SS.

UNS 31803

Page 20: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Composition

Note : Higher Cr than 18/8

Note : Lower Ni than 18/8

Note : Mo

Note : NO (!) C, low S, P, N is added as an anti-pitting agent.

Page 21: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140
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So what so good about it ?

Page 25: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140
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Stress induced martensite in austenitic SS at -44 C

The stress induced transition is the trick of memory shape alloys

Page 28: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

On to an other SS in Professor Bakers table: 440C

A ferritic SS with high C ideal for knives.

Page 29: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

440 C SS products

If you like to cook, you want to have on of those !

Page 30: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Professional scissors for hairdressers

Page 31: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

The inner and outer bearing cages in your dentists drill

Page 32: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Role of alloying elements, table and comments

Page 33: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Alloying Elements

Read Bain’s Book free on line (see lecture 19)

Page 34: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Si shares a chemical similarity with C.

In formulas that lump the influence of C and Si together, Si is counted 1/3 (I.e. C is three times as effective).

It is major component in transformer steel

P increases corrosion resistance. The famous iron pillar in Deli !

Page 35: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Cr forms Cr oxide at the surface but needs to be there at 12 wt%.

Secondary hardening of Mo in steel is the formation of Mo carbide. Once formed very stable

Page 36: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Vanadium forms a very hard and stable carbide.

As does Mo, W, and Co

Page 37: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

VC precipitates in tempered martensitic Fe-C-V steel

VC as an ultra hard surface film is used in some on some tools

Page 38: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Transformer steel contains up to 6% Si.The one the left has 3%.

The main purpose of the silicon is to increase the electrical resistivity thus lowering eddy current losses. (Alloy scattering, Si has a lot charge !)

The secondary purpose is to form a SiO2 layer on the surface that isolates on transformer sheet from the other.

Electrical Silicon Steel (A funny word!)

Page 39: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Tool steels - interesting beasts….

440C is a tool steel in the sense that it used for knifes, shears etc.

But usually, tool steels implies high hardness and wear resistance at elevated temperatures.

The higher the redhardness, the higher the feedrate.

Time is money

Page 40: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

We will only discuss Mo/Co and W/Co tool steels

Page 41: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140
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Co is good for high redhardness. Total wt% of T.M. is around 25%

Page 45: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

M stands for Moly, T for Tungsten (AISI classification)

Page 46: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

The W,V, Cr can all be lumped together as W with weight factors, and so lets look at Fe-C-W

The field shrunk by a factor 5 !!!!!!

Thus, the max solubility of C in austenite is now 0.4% ! This is lower the the C in the tool steels so the C must be in the form of transition metal carbides - which is what we want - if we can get the carbides into spherical shape so that the toughness is ok. The Co3C is very stable

Wear: C can “burn away” at the surface.

The Fe-C-W25 wt% systwm

Page 47: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Steel production and Consumption

Page 48: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

In 2005 (From Prof Bakers Handout)

Page 49: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

In 2006/2007 Oh, oh.. US is shrinking !

Not good !

Page 50: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

Largest company Mittal

The top steel companies in the world

Page 51: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

THE CORROSION RESISTANT DELHI IRON PILLAR

The Delhi iron pillar is testimony to the high level of skill achieved by ancient Indian iron smiths in the extraction and processing of iron. The iron pillar at Delhi has attracted the attention of archaeologists and corrosion technologists as it has withstood corrosion for the last 1600 years.

Also, recall that India was the first country to produce crucible steel, called wootz steel, so maybe its fitting the Mittal is now the worlds largest steel company :-) and Tata # 5 (Cornell 62’)

Page 52: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

But steel is only a small part of Tata...

…. See where you can go when you study hard ?

Page 53: Physical Metallurgy 20 th Lecture MS&E 410 D.Ast dast@ccmr.cornell.edu 255 4140

The End

So, in case you missed Lect. 19

The first form of crucible steel was wootz, developed in India some time around 300 AD. In its production the iron was mixed with glass and then slowly heated and then cooled. As the mixture cooled the glass would bond to impurities in the steel and then float to the surface, leaving the steel considerably more pure. Carbon could enter the iron by diffusing in through the porous walls of the crucibles. Carbon dioxide would not react with the iron, but the small amounts of carbon monoxide could, adding carbon to the mix with some level of control. Wootz was widely exported throughout the Middle East, where it was combined with a local production technique around 1000 AD to produce Damascus steel.

It took the European till 1740 to reproduce this….