В.Ю. Турилина
Материаловедение
Механические свойства металлов.
Термическая обработка металлов.
Специальные стали и сплавы
Учебное пособие
Под редакцией профессора С.А. Никулина
Москва 2013
УДК 669.017
Т86
Рецензент
д-р техн. наук, проф. С.В. Добаткин (ИМЕТ им. А.А. Байкова РАН)
Турилина, В.Ю.
Т86 Материаловедение : механические свойства металлов. Тер-
мическая обработка металлов. Специальные стали и сплавы :
учеб. пособие / В.Ю. Турилина ; под ред. С.А. Никулина. – М. :
Изд. Дом МИСиС, 2013. – 154 с.
ISBN 978-5-87623-680-7
УДК 669.017
V.Yu. Turilina
Material Science
Mechanical properties of metals.
Heat treatment of metals.
Special steels and alloys
Textbook
Edited by professor S.A. Nikulin
MISiS
PUBLISHING HOUSE
Moscow 2013
3
Reviewer
Dr. Sc., Professor S.V. Dobatkin (IMET RAN)
Turilina, V.Yu.
Material science : mechanical properties of metals. Heat treatment
of metals. Special steels and alloys : textbook / V.Yu. Turilina ;
edited S.A. Nikulin. – М. : Publishing House "MISiS", 2013. – 154 p.
The textbook contains the material needed for self-training foreign students
to lectures and practical classes on academic disciplines "Theory and technology
of heat treatment of metals", Special Steels and Alloys", "Mechanical properties
of metals", "Engineering Materials". It includes the following sections:
deformation, fracture and mechanical properties, phase and structural
transformations during heat treatment, the main types of heat treatment, the main
types of special steels and alloys and their applications in engineering. Each
section of the book contains questions for self-learning.
This material will provide students with a complete picture of the processes
occurring in the steel under thermal effect and deformation, the relationship
of structure and properties, the basic principles of alloying steels and alloys, how
to provide the required structure and properties by heat treatment in steels and al-
loys for various purposes.
The textbook is intended for undergraduate and graduate students in areas of
150100 "Materials Science and Technology of Materials", 150400 "Metallurgy",
011200 "Physics".
4
CONTENTS
Part 1 Mechanical properties of metals 6
1.1 Basic concepts and definitions 6
1.2 Deformation and fracture 9
1.2.1 Elastic deformation 9
1.2.2 Plastic deformation 14
1.2.3 Strengthening of metals 16
1.2.4 The fracture of materials 18
1.3 Mechanical testing of metals 28
1.3.1 Classification of mechanical tests 29
1.3.2 The main types of mechanical tests 29
Part 2 Management structure during heat treatment of steel 62
2.1 Basic concepts and definitions 62
2.2 Transformations in steel during heating and cooling 70
2.3 Heat treatment 87
2.3.1 Classification of heat treatment 87
2.3.2 First-order annealing 88
2.3.3 Second-order annealing 91
2.3.4 Hardening (quenching) 95
2.3.5 Tempering of steel 98
2.3.6 Precipitation hardening 101
2.3.7 Surface hardening 101
Part 3 Special steels and alloys 102
3.1 Ferrous alloys 105
3.1.1 General classification 106
3.1.2 Designation of steels 110
3.1.3 Constructional steels 110
3.1.4 Tool Steels 126
3.1.5 Steels with special physical properties 138
3.2 Non-ferrous alloys 147
References 153
5
Part 1 MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF METALS
1.1 Basic concepts and definitions
In the course of operation or use, all articles and structures are sub-
ject to the action of external forces which create internal stresses in the
metal. And that is inevitably cause deformation.
To keep these stresses, and, consequently, deformations within
permissible limits (to prevent structural failure), it is necessary to select
suitable materials for the components of various designs and to apply the
most effective heat treatment.
In the production of any product or design of metal is very impor-
tant to know the basic characteristics of workpieces and fabricated metal
product (strength, stiffness, hardness, toughness, and ductility).
Mechanical properties – these are the characteristics that define the
behavior of metal under the applied external forces. Mechanical properties
of metals used in the manufacture of various products and designs, are
determined by mechanical testing.
Mechanical tests are those in which specially prepared specimens
(test pieces) of standard form and size are tested on special machines.
A result of mechanical testing is numerical values of mechanical
properties, i.e. values of stress or strain, at which changes the physical and
mechanical condition of the material.
The mechanical properties are about the behavior of materials when
subject to forces. When a material is subject to external forces, then inter-
nal forces are set up in the material, which oppose the external forces.
The material can be considered to be rather like a spring. A spring,
when stretched by external forces, sets up internal opposing forces which
are readily apparent when the spring is released and they force it to con-
tract. A material subject to external forces which stretch it is said to be in
tension (Figure 1.l, a). A material subject to forces which squeeze it is
said to be in compression (Figure 1.1, b). If a material is subject to forces
which cause it to twist or one face slide relative to an opposite face then it
is said to be in shear (Figure 1.1, c).
An object, in some situations, can be subject to both tension and
compression, e.g. a beam (Figure 1.2) which is being bent, the bending
causing the upper surface to contract and so be in compression and the
lower surface to extend and be in tension.
6
Figure 1.1 – Scheme of load application:
a – tension; b – compression; c – shear
The term stress, symbol σ, is used for the force per unit area:
σ = P / F. (1.1)
7
Stress has the units of pascal (Pa), with 1 Pa being a force of 1 new-
ton per square metre, i.e. 1 Pa = 1 N/m2.
The stress is said to be direct stress when the area being stressed is
at right angles to the line of action of the external forces, as when the ma-
terial is in tension or compression. Shear stresses are not direct stresses
since the forces being applied are in the same plane as the area being
stressed. The area used in calculations of the stress is generally the origi-
nal area that existed before the application of the forces. The stress is thus
sometimes referred to as the engineering stress, the term true stress being
used for the force divided by the actual area existing in the stressed state.
When a material is subject to tensile or compressive forces, it
changes in length (Figure 1.4).
12
Figure 1.7 – Stress–strain behavior for a linear elastic solid.
The axes are calibratedfor a material such as steel
a b c
Figure 1.10 – Slip systems in different lattices:
a – f.c.c.; b – h.c.p.; c – b.c.c.
15
Deformation by twinning occurs in the case when sliding is compli-
cated. Normally twinning is observed at low temperatures and high defor-
mation velocities. Under such conditions this deformation mode is typical
for metals possessing by and b.c.c. lattices. In pure f.c.c. metals twinning
occurs just at negative temperatures and high deformation velocities.
Deformation by twinning is a sort of shear of some material volume
that is called twin. The shear is caused by sliding of partial dislocations in
all parallel atomic surfaces of this material volume. It creates the same
lattice but with a mirrored symmetrical orientation to the twinning sur-
face. Figure 1.11 shows a scheme that illustrates the principal of twinning.
18
According to fundamental concepts, there are only two modes in
which materials can fracture under a single or monotonic load. These two
modes are called shear (under the influence of tangents stress) and cleav-
age (as a result of action of normal stretching stress) and differ primarily
in the way the basic material crystal structure behaves under load. On ap-
pearance of the destroyed samples it is possible to define a destruction
kind (a shear or a cleavage), that in some cases has practical value.
On the characteristic mechanism of development, speed and power
consumption of development of destruction distinguish brittle and ductile
destruction. It is considered, that the separation can occur without pre-
liminary macroplastic deformation while by a cut such deformation al-
ways precedes destruction. Therefore the cleavage often corresponds to
brittle fracture, and a shear – to ductile fracture. Consider the shear frac-
ture mode. If in the course of plastic deformation a fracture occurs, the
shear causes initialization of micropores in the most highly stressed re-
gion. Pores are formed and merged under load and as a result, the frac-
tured surface is formed and consists of microvoids. Such fracture surface
is called ductile.
Ductile fracture occurs usually after considerable plastic deforma-
tion (ten percent). Its main features are slow development of cracks and
high the power consumption, caused necessity of an expense of consider-
able work of plastic deformation at crack top. Therefore ductile fracture is
the least dangerous kind of destruction. Nevertheless the analysis of duc-
tile fracture is very important, in particular at the analysis of behavior of
metals in the conditions of processing by pressure where considerable
plastic deformations and where destruction, including ductile are created,
is inadmissible.
If a metal fractures in a cleavage mode its separation occurs very
suddenly and goes along two adjacent cells. There is no plastic deforma-
tion of metal at cleavage at least on macroscale. A cleavage fracture usu-
ally occurs in relatively hard, strong metals that have b.c.c. or h.c.p. lat-
tices. However under certain conditions (for example at a low tempera-
ture) metals that normally fracture in the shear mode may fracture in the
cleavage mode. On a micro scale, cleavage fractures occur along cells in-
terfaces, but can be seen as a grains splitting with no relation to the grain
boundaries. This looks like a brick wall fracture along the bricks in. In
many cases the crack direction can be determined from the study of the
cleavage fracture surfaces by scanning electronic microscope. Brittle frac-
ture is the most dangerous kind of destruction as it occurs catastrophically
quickly even in the conditions of rather low stresses. Therefore data on the
19
mechanism of brittle fracture and conditions which promote it or compli-
cate, are especially important.
The main distinctive features of both modes are shown in Table 1.2.
Table 1.2 – The main distinctive features of both modes – shear and cleavage
Distinctive features Shear Cleavage
Movement Sliding Snapping apart
Occurrence Gradual Sudden
Deformation Yes No
Behavior Ductile Brittle
Visual appearance of fracture Dull and fibrous Bright and sparkling
Microfractography Dimpled rupture Cleavage
20
In metals with the b.c.c. lattice the crack can be formed on the
model offered by Kotrell. Scheme of Kotrell does not demand presence of
barriers to dislocations in an initial condition. Barriers, and then mistif
dislocations and cracks are formed as a result of plastic deformation.
In the conditions of strongly developed intergranular deformations
the probability of origin of cracks on so-called triple junction grain's
boundaries increases.
The considered schemes of origin of cracks show, that destruction
of metals with a different lattice and a microstructure can begin differ-
ently. But as a result resistibility of metal or an alloy to destruction and
character of destruction are defined by conditions in which there is a mi-
crocrack. Therefore the second stage of destruction – a stage of distribu-
tion of a crack – is solving.
Qualitative distinction between ductile and brittle fracture is con-
nected with power consumption and speed of distribution of a crack. At
brittle fracture this speed is very great it reaches 0.4–0.5 speeds of distri-
bution of a sound in a material of the sample. In a case of ductile fracture
the crack extends basically with rather small speed, commensurable with
speed of deformation of the sample.
At distribution (growth) of a crack before its top in some zone there
is a plastic deformation. The size of this plastic zone is defined by yield
strength of a material. Usually in materials with high strength a zone of
plastic deformation in crack top small and destruction develops on the brit-
tle mechanism. In materials with low strength its size much more and de-
struction develops on the ductile mechanism. Therefore power consumption
of ductile fracture much more as at development of a ductile crack plastic
deformation goes not only near to its top, but also on considerable volume
of a detail or the sample. As a result the work necessary for advancement of
a crack, in this case much more, than at development of a brittle crack when
plastic deformation is localized in a narrow zone at its top.
Crack distribution is the most important stage of destruction. This
process, basically, defines resistance of a material to destruction. The
stage of distribution of a crack too consists of two stages – subcritical
crack growth, concerning slow development of a crack when destruction
process still it is possible to supervise, and overcritical crack distributions
when definitive destruction becomes very fast, difficultly operated and
often irreversible.
In polycrystals the crack at destruction can extend on a body of
grain or along borders. Accordingly distinguish transgranular fracture and
intergranular fracture. At low temperatures intergranular fracture is usu-
21
ally observed in brittle materials and caused by presence on a surface of
borders of grains of particles of fragile superfluous phases or impurity
segregation. Such destruction can occur also at the raised temperatures, in
the conditions of intensive development intergranular deformations. Ten-
dency to intergranular fracture increases with decreasing strain rate.
Brittle fracture for any metal material is observed only under cer-
tain conditions tests, processing or operation. Propensity to brittle struc-
ture especially strongly depends on: the temperature more low the usually
is more probability of brittle structure. Therefore mark the interval of
temperatures of transition ΔТd–b from ductile fracture (with enough high
plasticity) to brittle fracture (is allocated at low plasticity) on temperature
dependence of indicators of ductility and plasticity of technical alloys
(Figure 1.13).
Examination of failures
The following are illustrations of the types of failure that can be
found with metals, polymers, ceramics and composites:
1 Ductile failure with metals
24
Ductile fracture is due to tangential stresses which have reached a
definite fracture value called the shear strength (τk). This type of fracture
is preceded by considerable plastic deformation.
Proceeding from the fact that ST and τk are constant values for a
given material consider that brittle fracture, due to normal stresses, will
occur in cases where the cohesive strength is lower than the shear
strength. If the tangential stresses produce considerable plastic deforma-
tion before the normal stresses reach the cohesive strength, the fracture
will be of the ductile type. Thus, fracture due to normal stresses by separa-
tion or cleavage may be either brittle or ductile.
Fracture due to tangential stresses, resulting from plastic deforma-
tion, will, of course, always be ductile. Most frequently, metal fracture
does not occur as pure separation or shear but as a complex combination
of these two types of fracture (see table 1.2).
A ductile material is characterised by having a significant plastic
region to its stress-strain graph. When a ductile material has a gradually
increasing tensile stress applied then when yielding starts the cross-
sectional area of the material becomes reduced, necking being said to oc-
cur (Figure 1.15).
a b c d
28
ous mechanical properties determined from such a test will be defined, but
the major emphasis in this chapter will be placed upon the change in yield
strength that results from cold working. It is this aspect of work hardening
that is of greatest interest in plasticity studies.
29
Such testing machines as Instron, MTS, ZWICK, and others are extensively
used for tension tests. All tension testing machines have two chief parts:
1 Unit for applying a load to the specimen (with a hydraulic or me-
chanical drive), and
2 Unit for measuring the applied load.
Testing machines are often equipped with recording devices which
automatically record changes in length of the specimen in accordance with
the applied load (stress–strain diagram).
The results determined by tensile testing are influenced by the con-
ditions that prevail during such a test; in general, the following are typical:
- Strain rate is of the order of 10–2 to 10–4 sec–1;
- Temperature is between 20 and 30 °C;
- Measurements are restricted to a gage section that experiences a
state of uniaxial tensile stress during uniform deformation.
Almost all materials, when strained by more than about 0.001
(0.1 percent), do something irreversible: and most engineering materials
deform plastically to change their shape permanently. If we load a piece
of ductile metal (like copper), for example in tension, we get the following
relationship between the load and the extension (Figure 1.18).
This can be demonstrated nicely by pulling a piece of plasticine (a
ductile nonmetallic material). Initially, the plasticine deforms elastically,
but at a small strain begins to deform plastically, so that if the load is re-
moved, the piece of plasticine is permanently longer than it was at the be-
ginning of the test: it has undergone plastic deformation. If you continue
to pull, it continues to get longer at the same time getting thinner because
in plastic deformation volume is conserved (matter is just flowing from
place to place). Eventually, the plasticine becomes unstable and begins to
neck at the maximum load point in the force-extension curve (Pu, see
fig. 1.18). Necking is instability. The neck then grows quite rapidly, and
the load that the specimen can bear through the neck decreases until
breakage takes place. The two pieces produced after breakage have a total
length that is slightly less than the length just before breakage by the
amount of the elastic extension produced by the terminal load.
Returning to fig. 1.18 it can be seen that after initial yielding has
taken place, further plastic deformation requires an increasing load but at
a decreasing rate. Work hardening strengthens the material but at the same
time the area is decreasing, and the combined effect of these two factors
produces the resulting shape of the load–extension curve. From initial
yielding up to ultimate load, the strengthening effect offsets the area re-
duction; at ultimate load a condition of tensile instability occurs. Note that
the deformation of the gage section is uniform up to this point.
30
Figure 1.18 – Typical load–extension curve
for a ductile metal during a tension test
where P and Δl are any pair of coordinate points on fig. 1.18 and F0 and l0
are the original area and gage length of the unloaded specimen. Since the
conversion from load – extension to nominal stress – strain utilizes the con-
stants F0 and l0, this amounts to nothing more than a scale factor adjustment.
Consequently, the shape of the σ–ε curve is identical to the P–Δl curve.
The stress, calculated by the formula
Pp
σp = , (1.12)
F0
where F0 – initial cross-sectional area of the sample, is called
the limit of proportionality or proportional limit.
The proportional limit is the stress at which the deviation from a
linear relationship between the stress and deformation is almost com-
pletely absent. This stress is very low and causes elastic deformation only,
i.e. deformation, which disappears when the load is removed. For this rea-
son, the limit of proportionality is often identified with the elastic limit.
This is actually not so but accurate enough for practical purposes.
Usually the elastic limit σe is defined as the stress at which the per-
manent set is equal to 0.005 percent of the initial length of the specimen.
Thus, σp and σe characterize the resistance of the metal to small plastic
deformations.
It’s important to remember, that the proportional and elastic limits
are essential characteristics of a metal. Any structure or machine compo-
nent must be designed so that its working stresses do not exceed σp and σe.
When a particular level of stress is reached, plastic flow begins; this
stress is called the yield strength and is defined as
Py
σy = (1.13)
F0
the subscript indicating a particular point on the curve.
32
Tensile strength, also called ultimate strength is defined as
Pu
σu = , (1.14)
F0
where Pu is the maximum or ultimate load carried by the specimen
(onset of necking).
Ductility, which is a measure of the extent to which a metal can be
deformed plastically, is commonly defined by two parameters; both are
based upon measurements made after the specimen has fractured. They are
δu =
(
100 l f − l0 )
; (1.15)
l0
ψ=
(
100 F0 − F f ), (1.16)
F0
where the subscript/relates to the values at fracture. Although standard
values of l0 and F0 are generally used, it should be realized that both per-
cent elongation (δ) and area reduction (ψ) will vary if non-standard values
of l0 and F0 are used. For this reason, these properties are not really fixed
for a given metal. ψ, the reduction of area at fracture in a tension test,
should not be confused with the area reduction in processing.
For a large number of metals and alloys, the region between the in-
ception of plastic deformation (yield point) and the onset of necking (ten-
sile strength) on a true stress-true strain diagram can be described by a
power law relationship of the form σt = K ⋅ εtn , where K and n are mate-
rial-specific constants, and n is called the strain-hardening exponent. The
strain-hardening exponent, n, is a measure of the ability of a metal to work
harden (i.e., strengthen through plastic deformation). A large value of
n indicates that strain hardening will be large for a given amount of plastic
deformation. Thus, annealed copper (n = 0.54) will strain-harden more
than annealed Al (n = 0.20) as would 70/30 brass (n = 0.49) compared to
4340 alloy steel (n = 0.15). Table 1.3 gives the values of n and K for
common metals and alloys.
Table 1.3 – Values of exponents n and K for different alloys
Alloy n K, MPa
Low-carbon steel (annealed) 0.26 530
4340 alloy steel (annealed) 0.15 640
304 stainless steel (annealed) 0.45 1275
2024 Al Alloy (annealed) 0.16 690
Brass (70 Co–30 Zn, annealed) 0.49 895
33
True stress-strain curves for plastic deformation. Naturally, be-
cause F0 and l0 are constant, the shape of the σ–ε (nominal stress–nominal
strain) curve is identical to that of the P–Δl (load–extension) curve. But
the σ–ε plotting method allows one to compare data for specimens having
different (though now standardized) F0 and l0, and thus to examine the
properties of material, unaffected by specimen size. The advantage of
keeping the stress in nominal units and not converting to true stress is that
the onset of necking can clearly be seen on the σ–ε curve (Figure 1.19).
The apparent difference between the curves for tension and com-
pression is due solely to the geometry of testing. If, instead of plotting
load, we plot load divided by the actual area of the specimen, A, at any
particular elongation or compression, the two curves become much more
like one another. In other words, we simply plot true stress as our vertical
coordinate. This method of plotting allows for the thinning of the material
when pulled in tension, or the fattening of the material when compressed.
But the two curves still do not exactly match. The reason is a dis-
placement of (for example) Δl = l0 / 2 in tension and compression gives
different strains; it represents a drawing out of the tensile specimen from
l0 to 1.5l0, but a squashing down of the compressive specimen from l0 to
0.5l0. The material of the compressive specimen has thus undergone much
more plastic deformation than the material in the tensile specimen, and
can hardly be expected to be in the same state, or to show the same resis-
34
tance to plastic deformation. The two conditions can be compared prop-
erly by taking small strain increments
dl
de = . (1.17)
l
about which the state of the material is the same for either tension or com-
pression. This is the same as saying that a decrease in length from
100 mm (l0) to 99 mm (l), or increase in length from 100 mm (l0) to
101 mm (l) both represent a 1 percent change in the state of the material.
Actually, they do not quite give exactly 1 percent in both cases, of course,
but they do in the limit
dl
de = , (1.18)
l
Then, if the stresses in compression and tension are plotted against
l
dl ⎛l ⎞ F ⎛ 1 ⎞
e=∫ = ln ⎜ ⎟ = ln ( ε + 1) = ln 0 = ln ⎜ ⎟, (1.19)
l0
l ⎝ l0 ⎠ Ff ⎝1− ψ ⎠
the two curves exactly mirror one another. The quantity e is called the true
strain and the matching curves are true stress/true strain (S / e) curves.
Further from the original load–extension or load–compression
curves easily calculate e, simply by knowing l0 and taking natural logs.
But how do we calculate S? Because volume is conserved during
plastic deformation we can write, at any strain,
F0 ⋅ l0 = F ⋅ l
provided the extent of plastic deformation is much greater than the extent
of elastic deformation (this is usually the case, but the qualification must
be mentioned because volume is only conserved during elastic deforma-
tion if Poisson's ratio v = 0.5, it is near 0.33 for most materials). Thus
F0 ⋅ l0
F= , (1.20)
l
and
P P⋅l
S= = = σ (1 + e ) , (1.21)
F F0 ⋅ l0
all of which we know or can measure easily.
35
Plastic work. When metals are rolled or forged, or drawn to wire, or
when polymers are injection molded or pressed or drawn, energy is ab-
sorbed. The work done on a material to change its shape permanently is
called the plastic work; its value, per unit volume, is the area under curves
1–2–3–4 (or 1–2′–3′–4′) shown in Figure 1.19; it may easily be found (if
the stress–strain curve is known) for any amount of permanent plastic de-
formation. Plastic work is important in metal- and polymer-forming op-
erations because it determines the forces that the rolls, or press, or mold-
ing machine must exert on the material.
There are different types of deformation curves.
The yielding behavior of an annealed brass and low-carbon steel is
illustrated in Figure 1.20.
Hardness tests
Hardness is the resistance of a metal to the penetration of another
harder body which does not receive a permanent set. The hardness of a
material may be specified in terms of some standard test involving indent-
ing or scratching of the surface of the material, the harder a material the
more difficult it is to make an indentation or scratch. There is no absolute
scale for hardness, each hardness form of test having its own scale.
38
Though some relationships exist between results on one scale and those
on another, care has to be taken in making comparisons because the dif-
ferent types of test are measuring different things.
Hardness tests consist in measuring the resistance to plastic defor-
mation of layers of metal near the surface of the specimen. In the process
of hardness determination when the metal is indented by a special tip (steel
ball or diamond cone), the tip first overcomes the resistance of the metal to
elastic deformation and then, a small amount of plastic deformation. Upon
deeper indentation of the tip, it overcomes large plastic deformation.
Therefore, hardness is not an independent characteristic of the mechanical
properties. It determines the same properties as in other testing methods,
for example, tension tests, but under different loading conditions.
This fact enables a relation to be established between the hardness
and ultimate tensile strength of ductile metals. For metals of low ductility,
in which the tensile strength is characterised by the cohesive strength and
not by the resistance to considerable plastic deformation, the relation be-
tween hardness and ultimate tensile strength is not sufficiently reliable.
It is necessary to distinguish: 1) macrohardness, which is the hard-
ness of a material determined by its resistance to plastic deformation in a
volume so large that the differences in actual hardness of its component
microvolumes are of no influence, and 2) microhardness, which is the
hardness of materials in microscopically small volumes (hardness of the
separate structural components).
Hardness measurements for determining the properties of a ma-
chine component have found extensive application in the quality control
of metals and metal products in all branches of industry due to the rapidity
and simplicity of the tests and their nondestructive character.
So, the most common form of hardness tests for metals involves
standard indentors being pressed into the surface of the material con-
cerned. Measurements associated with the indentation are then taken as a
measure of the hardness of the surface. The Brinell test, the Vickers test
and the Rockwell test are the main forms of such tests.
The most widely employed hardness testing methods are: Ball-
indentation tests (Brinell principle). This method consists in pressing a
hardened steel ball for a time of 10 to 15 s under a constant standard force
P into a specially prepared flat surface on the test specimen (Figure 1.21).
After removing the load, an indentation remains on the surface of the test
specimen.
39
Figure 1.21 – Brinell hardness test
Area =
1
2
πD ⎡ D −
⎢⎣ (D 2
)
− d2 ⎤ .
⎥⎦
If the indented area F is expressed by the ball diameter D and the
diameter of the indentation d, then the Brinell hardness number may be
determined from the formula
2P
HB = , [kg · f/mm2] or [MPa].
( )
(1.22)
πD D − D − d 2 2
The ball diameter and applied load are constant and are selected to
suit the composition of the metal, its hardness, and the thickness of the
test specimen. The diameter of the indentation is measured with a special
magnifying glass containing a scale graduated in tenths of a millimeter.
The diameter D (mm) of the ball used and the size of the applied
force P (kgf units) are chosen, for the British Standard, to give P / D2 val-
40
ues of 1, 5, 10 or 30 with the diameters of the balls being 1, 2, 5 or
10 mm. In principle, the same value of P / D2 should give the same hard-
ness value, regardless of the diameter of the ball used. It is necessary for
the impression to have a diameter of between 0.25 D and 0.50 D if accu-
rate values of the hardness are to be obtained. The P / D2 value is thus
chosen to fit the materials concerned, the harder the material the higher
the value used. For steels and cast iron the value used for P / D2 is 30, for
copper alloys and aluminium alloys 10, for pure copper and aluminium 5
and for lead, tin and tin alloys 1.
Diameter of a ball (indenter) and loading choose from several factors:
- The thickness of the sample should be not less tenfold depth of a
indentation;
- The distance from edge of the sample to the indentation centre
should be more or equally 2,5d (9d – diameter of indentation), and centre
to centre – it is more than two next indentation or equally 4d (on the sam-
ple do not less than two indentation);
- The more the indentation, the more exact its measurement, there-
fore we choose the largest size of indenter, satisfies first two requirements.
The thickness of the material being tested should be at least ten
times the depth of the indentation if the results are not to be affected by
the thickness of the material. Also, because of the large depth of the in-
dentation, it cannot be used on plated or surface hardened materials since
the result will be affected by the underlying material.
The Brinell test cannot be used with very soft or very hard materi-
als. In the one case the indentation becomes equal to the diameter of the
ball and in the other there is either no or little indentation on which meas-
urements can be based. Also, with very hard materials the material de-
forms the indenter. The Brinell test is thus limited to materials with hard-
nesses up to about 450 HB with a steel ball and 600 HB with a tungsten
carbide ball. It is not advisable to apply Brinell tests to materials having a
hardness which exceeds 450 HB since the ball may be easily deformed
and this will introduce errors into the test results. The hardness of the ball
should be at least 1.7 times higher than the test specimen to prevent per-
manent set in the ball.
When during the Brinell test a hardened steel ball D = 10 mm is
pressed for a time 10 s into the surface of the material by a standard force
P = 3000 kg · f, hardness number write down like 400 HB, 250 HB etc. At
use of other conditions of test it is recommended to supplement designa-
tion HB with the figures specifying diameter of the used ball (mm), load-
ing (kg) and time (s). For example, 350 HB 5/750/30 is a number of hard-
41
ness on Brinell (350), received at indentation of ball D = 5 mm under
loading P = 750 kg · f for a time τ = 30 s.
In practice, the Brinell numbers corresponding to a given observed
diameter of indentation d are taken from tables to simplify calculations.
Determining hardness by the depth of indentation of a diamond
cone or small steel ball (Rockwell principle). This test, like the Brinell
test, is based on the indentation of a hard tip or indenter under a static load
into the test specimen. In the Rockwell test the hardness is determined not
by the diameter but by the depth of the indentation or impression. The
Rockwell hardness test differs from the Brinell hardness tests in not ob-
taining a value for the hardness in terms of the area of an indentation but
using the depth of indentation, this depth being directly indicated by a
pointer on a calibrated scale.
The indenter in a Rockwell test may be either a conical-shaped
diamond (called a “brale”) with a 120° apex angle or a hardened steel ball
1.5875 mm in diameter (Figure 1.22). The brale is used for testing materi-
als with a high hardness and the steel ball for softer materials. The brale
and the ball are indented by two consecutive loads: the preliminary load
P0 (equal to 10 kg · f) and the additional load P which equals 90 kg · f for
the ball (Scale B) and 140 kg · f for the brale (Scale C). A brale with an
applied load of 50 kg · f (Scale A) is employed for very hard materials and
thin test specimens. The Rockwell superficial-hardness tester is applied
for testing thin layers near the surface or thin specimens (nitrided steel,
safety-razor blades, etc.). In this machine, the preliminary load is 3 kg and
the total loads may be 15, 30, or 45 kg · f.
There are a number of Rockwell scales (Table 1.4), the scale being
determined by the indenter and the additional force used. In any reference
to the results of a Rockwell test the scale letter must be quoted. At use
indenter a diamond, cone hardness on Rockwell define on three scales: A,
C, D (HRA, HRC, HRD). At work with steel balls hardness HR define on
six scales – B, E, F, G, H, K, L, M, R. More often than others scales A, C
and B are used.
42
After loading, the additional load is removed. The Rockwell hard-
ness number is the difference in depths of the indentations made by apply-
ing the total and preliminary loads, measured after removing the addi-
tional load.
This is the permanent increase in penetration e due to the additional
force. The Rockwell hardness number is then given by:
Rockwell hardness number (HR) = E – e,
where E is a constant determined by the form of the indenter. For
the diamond cone indenter E is 100, for the steel ball 130.
The Rockwell hardness number is read directly on the dial of the
instrument having a scale graduated in hardness units.
Table 1.4 – Rockwell hardness scales
Additional
Scale Indenter Typical applications
load, kg · f
A Diamond 60 Extremely hard materials, e.g. tool steels
B Ball 1.588 mm dia. 100 Softer materials, e.g. Cu alloys, Al alloys, mild steel
C Diamond 150 Hard materials, e.g. steels, hard cast irons, alloy steels
D Diamond 100 Medium case hardened materials
E Ball 3.175 mm dia. 100 Soft materials, e.g. Al alloys, Mg alloys, bearing metals
F Ball 1.588 mm dia. 60 As E, the smaller ball being more appropriate
where inhomogeneities exist
G Ball 1.588 mm dia. 150 Malleable irons, gun metals, bronzes
H Ball 3.175 mm dia. 60 Soft aluminium, lead, zinc, thermoplastics
K Ball 3.175 mm dia. 150 Aluminium and magnesium alloys
L Ball 6.350 mm dia. 60 Soft thermoplastics
M Ball 6.350 mm dia. 100 Thermoplastics
R Ball 12.70 mm dia. 60 Very soft thermoplastics
Rockwell tests are widely applied in industry due to the rapidity and
simplicity with which they may by performed, high accuracy achieved.
And for the most commonly used indenters with the Rockwell test the size
of the indentation is rather small. Localized variations of structure, com-
position and roughness can thus affect the results. The Rockwell test is,
however, more suitable for workshop or 'on-site' use as it less affected by
surface conditions than the Brinell or Vickers tests which require flat and
polished surfaces to permit accurate measurements. A variation of the
Rockwell test has to be used for thin sheet, this test being referred to as
the Rockwell superficial hardness test. Smaller forces are used and the
depth of indentation which is correspondingly smaller is measured with a
more sensitive device. The initial force used is 29.4 N. Table 1.5 indicates
the scales given by this test.
43
Table 1.5 – Rockwell superficial hardness scales
Scale Indenter Additional load, kg · f
15-N Diamond 15
30-N Diamond 30
45-N Diamond 45
15-T Ball 1.588 mm dia. 15
30-T Ball 1.588 mm dia. 30
45-T Ball 1.588 mm dia. 45
Note: the N scales are used for materials that if thick enough would have been tested on the
С scale, the T scales for those on the В scale.
44
The hardness number is determined from the formula:
α
2 P sin
HV = 2 = 1.854 P , (1.23)
2
d d2
where P is the applied load (5, 10, 20, 30, 50, 100, or 120 kg);
α is the angle between opposite faces of the pyramid
(α = 136°);
d is the arithmetical mean, in mm, of the two diagonals
measured after removing the load.
The Vickers test has the advantage over the Brinell test of the in-
creased accuracy that is possible in determining the diagonals of a square
as opposed to the diameter of a pyramid. The square indentation produced
for a particular material depends on the force used, but because the inden-
tation is always the same square shape regardless of how big the force and
the surface area is proportional to the force, the hardness value obtained is
independent of the size of the force used. Typically a load of 30 kg is used
for steels and cast irons, 10 kg for copper alloys, 5 kg for pure copper and
aluminium alloys, 2.5 kg for pure aluminium and 1 kg for lead, tin and tin
alloys. The load is selected in accordance with the size and hardness of the
specimen. The thinner the specimen, the less load required. On the other
hand, the higher the load, the more accurate the results will be. As a rule,
the Vickers hardness number is determined from special tables in accor-
dance with the measured value of d (length of the diagonal).
Up to a hardness value of about 300, the hardness value number
given by the Vickers test is the same as that given by the Brinell test.
At higher hardness, the Vickers number is larger than the Brinell number.
Microhardness. At the present time microhardness tests are widely
used to determine the hardness of exceedingly thin layers, very small
specimens, and even separate structural components of alloys. This method
is based on combining a hardness tester, using a diamond pyramid indenter
at low loads, with a metallurgical microscope. Loads from 1 to 200 g are
applied. The microhardness number is determined from the formula:
P
H = 1.854 , (1.24)
d2
where P is the load, in g;
d is the length of the diagonal, in microns.
45
Specimens for microhardness tests must be prepared in the same
manner as microsections. It is advisable to use electropolishing as this re-
moves the thin layer of cold-hardened metal, that is inevitable in grinding
the surface and which may affect the results of the test.
Comparison of the different hardness scales. The Brinell and Vick-
ers tests both involve measurements of the surface area of indentations,
the forms of the indenters used being different. The Rockwell test in-
volves measurements of the depth of penetration of indenters. Thus the
various tests are concerned with different measurements as an indication
of hardness. Consequently the values given by the different methods differ
for the same material. There are no simple theoretical relationships be-
tween the various hardness scales, though some simple approximate, ex-
perimentally derived, relationships have been obtained. Different relation-
ships, however, hold for different metals. The relationships are often pre-
sented in the form of tables.
There is an approximate relationship between hardness values and
tensile strengths:
tensile strength = k × hardness,
where k is a constant for a particular material. Thus for annealed
steels the tensile strength in MPa is about 3.54 times the Brinell hardness
value, and for quenched and tempered steels 3.24 times the Brinell hard-
ness value. For brass the factor is about 5.6 and for aluminium alloys
about 4.2.
The maximum stress σm occurs at the crack tip, and is given from
the formula:
1/2
⎛ a ⎞
σm = 2σ0 ⎜ ⎟ , (1.25)
⎝ pt ⎠
where σ0 is the applied stress, and the stress ratio (σm/σ0) is called the
stress concentration factor K. Thus, long cracks with sharp tips will raise
the stress more than small cracks with large tip radii. For fracture to occur,
a crack must extend through the solid, a process that creates additional
free surface within the material. The elastic strain energy released on
crack propagation is consumed in creating the new surface that has an ex-
cess energy (surface energy) associated with it. The critical stress σc (i.e.,
the fracture strength), required to propagate a crack of length 2a through a
solid of elastic modulus E, and surface energy γsv is given from the Grif-
fith equation, applicable to brittle solids, which is
1/2
⎛ 2 E γ sν ⎞
σc = ⎜ ⎟ . (1.26)
⎝ πa ⎠
47
In the Griffith equation, the parameter a is the depth of a surface
crack, or half-length of an internal crack. For metals (and some polymers),
fracture is accompanied by plastic deformation, so that a portion of the
stored mechanical energy is used up in the plastic deformation accompa-
nying crack propagation. For such materials, the Griffith equation has
been modified to account for the material plasticity in terms of a plastic
energy γp, so that
( ) ⎤⎥
1/2
⎡ 2 E γ sν + γ p
σc = ⎢ . (1.27)
⎢⎣ πa ⎥⎦
Table 1.6 – Mode I fracture toughness of selected metallic, polymeric and ceramic materials
Material K1c, MPa·m1/2
Cu alloys 30–120
Ni alloys 100–150
Ti alloys 50–100
Steels 80–170
Al alloys 5–70
Polyethylene 1–5
Polypropylene 3–4
Polycarbonate 1–2.5
Nylons 3–5
GFRP 20–60
Alumina 3–5
Si3N4 4–5
MgO 3
SiC 3
ZrO2 (PSZ) 8–13
Soda glass (Na2O–SiO2) 0.7–0.8
Concrete 0.2–1.4
a b
51
Impact test
Impact tests are designed to simulate the response of a material to a
high rate of loading and involve a test piece being struck a sudden blow.
The main form of test is the Charpy test. This test involves the same type
of measurement but differ in the form of the test pieces. Involve a pendu-
lum (Figure 1.29) swinging down from a specified height h0 to hit the test
piece and fracture it.
The height h to which the pendulum rises after striking and break-
ing the test piece is a measure of the energy used in the breaking. If no
energy were used the pendulum would swing up to the same height h0 it
started from, i.e., the potential energy mgh0 at the top of the pendulum
swing before and after the collision would be the same. The greater the
energy used in the breaking, the greater the “loss” of energy and so the
lower the height to which the pendulum rises. If the pendulum swings up
to a height h after breaking the test piece then the energy used to break it
is mgh0 – mgh.
Charpy test pieces. With the Charpy test, the energy absorbed in
breaking a test piece in the form of a beam is measured (Figure 1.30). The
standard machine has the pendulum hitting the test piece with energy of
300 ± 10 J. The test piece is supported at each end and notched at the
midpoint between the two supports. The notch is on the face directly op-
posite to where the pendulum strikes the test piece. The British and Euro-
pean Standard is BSEN 10045.
52
Figure 1.30 – Charpy test
Figure 1.31 – Charpy metal test pieces (a) and notch details (b)
Fatigue test
Failure caused by a fluctuating stress (periodic or random) acting
on a material that is smaller in magnitude than the material's tensile or
yield strength under static load, is called the fatigue failure. Parameters
used to characterize fatigue include: stress amplitude σa, mean stress σm,
and stress range σr. These parameters are defined as follows:
σ max − σ min σ + σ min
σa = , σ m = max , σ r = σ max − σ min .
2 2
Fatigue behavior is most conveniently characterized by subjecting a
specimen to cyclic tensile and compressive stresses until the specimen
fails (Figure 1.33).
Figure 1.34 – Fatigue response depicted as the stress amplitude (S) versus
number (N) of cycles to failure curves: a – the fatigue limit or endurance limit
is reached at a specific N value; b – material does not reach a fatigue limit
57
Tests at elevated temperatures
Many components of modern machinery operate under high-tempe-
rature conditions. An increase in temperature has a large effect on all me-
chanical properties. Research has shown that elevated temperatures reduce
the modulus of elasticity (by decreasing interatomic binding), yield point,
ultimate strength, and especially the modulus of strain hardening in the
process of plastic deformation.
If a metal is heated above the recrystallization temperature, the
yield point and ultimate strength may be reduced several times while the
modulus of strain hardening may be reduced tens and hundreds of times.
At elevated temperatures, the mechanical properties of metals are a
result of the simultaneous processes of strain hardening, due to plastic de-
formation, and the softening effect of recovery and recrystallization.
Continuous plastic deformation takes place in metals and alloys, sub-
ject to constant loads at elevated temperatures, and it may lead to failure.
Creep is the time-dependent deformation at elevated temperatures
under constant load or constant stress. Creep deformation occurs in all
type of materials, including metals, alloys, ceramics, plastics, rubbers, and
composites.
Special tests are conducted to determine the strength of metals at
elevated temperatures. The following chief types of high temperature tests
are most frequently conducted:
Short-time tension tests are similar to tension tests at room tempera-
tures except that the specimen is placed in a furnace. The aim of these
tests is to determine the strength and ductility at a specified temperature.
Creep tests. The purpose of these tests is to determine the creep
limit, i.e., the maximum stress that may be applied for a long period of
time at a given temperature if the rate of creep (over this given period of
time) is not to exceed a specified value.
The specimen is placed in an electric furnace where it is heated to
the given temperature and is constantly subject to a load applied by a lever
and weights. The strain in the specimen is measured by an optical exten-
someter with an accuracy of 0.001 mm. Four or five specimens are tested
at each temperature under different loads and elongation vs time curves
(creep curves) are plotted for each specimen.
The section 0a on creep curves (Figure 1.36) corresponds to elastic
and plastic deformation due to the momentary application of the load. In
the following section ab, the metal is elongated at a nonuniform (decreas-
ing) rate and in section bc the rate of creep is constant.
58
The creep limit may be characterized, for example, by the stress
which produces a total elongation of 1 per cent in 300 hrs. On the creep
curves, this will correspond to the stress σ3. If the specifications require
that the creep limit be determined for an elongation not exceeding 1 per
cent in 100 hrs, the stress value will be σ4 (see fig. 1.36).
Only the creep rate for a steady process is taken into consideration
for machine components that are designed for continuous operation at ele-
vated temperatures. Limiting conditions are specified for such compo-
nents. In practice the stresses are most frequently determined for a total
elongation of 1 percent in 1000, 10000, and 100 000 hrs. These corre-
spond to average creep rates of 10–3, 10–4 and 10–5 percent per hour, re-
spectively.
Creep–rupture tests (Figure 1.37) are creep tests which are carried
on to the failure of the specimen. In these tests, the time to fracture the
specimen, at a given temperature and stress, is measured. Often permanent
elongation and reduction of cross-sectional area are also measured.
The deformation strain versus time behavior for high-temperature
creep under constant load is characterized by three distinct regions, fol-
lowing an initial instantaneous (elastic) deformation region. These three
creep regimes are (1) primary creep with a continuously decreasing creep
rate; (2) secondary or steady-state creep, during which the creep rate is
constant; and (3) tertiary creep, during which creep rate is accelerated,
leading to eventual material failure.
59
Figure 1.37 – Creep curve after creep–rupture tests
In primary creep, the decrease in the creep rate is caused by the ma-
terial's strain hardening. In the steady-state regime, usually the longest in
duration, equilibrium is attained between the competing processes of
strain hardening and recovery (softening). The creep failure toward the
end of the third stage is caused by the structural and chemical changes
such as de-cohesion at the grain boundaries, and nucleation and growth of
internal cracks and voids. From the material and component design per-
spectives, the steady-state creep rate (dεt/dt) is of considerable impor-
tance. The steady-state creep rate depends on the magnitude of applied
stress, σ, and temperature, T, according to
d εt ⎛ Q ⎞
= K ′σ n exp ⎜ ⎟, (1.31)
dt ⎝ RT ⎠
where Q is the activation energy for creep;
K' and n are empirical constants;
R is the gas constant.
The exponent n depends on the dominant mechanisms of creep un-
der a given set of experimental conditions, which include vacancy
diffusion in a stress field, grain boundary migration, dislocation motion,
grain boundary sliding, and others. The materials used in modern aircraft
engines provide a classic example of how high-temperature creep
resistance is enhanced through microstructure design in Ni-base alloys by
dispersing nanometer-size oxide particles.
60
Control questions
1 How many independent variables contain stress tensor?
2 Why yield strength in fine-grained polycrystals is above, than in
the coarse-grained?
3 Why destruction is structurally more-sensitive process, than plas-
tic deformation?
4 In what the basic difference of brittle fracture from the ductile
fracture consists?
5 What mechanism of nucleation of brittle and ductile cracks?
6 What are general features of a structure of ductile fracture?
7 What is definition of brittleness temperature of a material and
how it to define experimentally?
8 How to define critical brittleness temperature Т50?
9 Why the same alloy with small grain has brittleness temperature
the lower, than with large grain?
10 Which characteristics of strength and plasticity define at tension
tests are?
11 Why true stresses and deformations have physical sense only?
12 How to define effective elongation of the sample if its settlement
length has doubled?
13 Why unit elongation is always more than effective elongation?
14 Two identical samples are tested by the same machine on a ten-
sion and compression. Whether will their strength limit and limit of pro-
portionality be identical?
15 How ductility of a material is connected with plasticity? Which
characteristic is more structurally-sensitive? Why?
16 Why at measurement of hardness НВ different indenters on the
same sample identical results turn out only under condition of a constancy
of the relation of loading to diameter of a ball?
17 What is the difference of hardness numbers НВ 5/250/30-110,
and НВ 110?
18 On the same sample hardness by a Rockwell test HRA, HRC,
and HRCэ is measured. How their numerical values differ?
19 What does the impact strength size characterize? On what sam-
ples it define?
20 In what case temperature ductile-brittle transition more low – at
its definition on value KCU or KCV?
21 What aim of the tests at elevated temperatures of metals and al-
loys?
61
Part 2 MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE
DURING HEAT TREATMENT OF STEEL
2.1 Basic concepts and definitions
The structure-sensitive properties like strength, ductility or tough-
ness depend critically on things like the composition of the metal and on
whether it has been heated, quenched or cold formed. Both alloying and
heat treatment are controlling the structure of the metal.
The most important examples are iron and titanium. Iron changes
from b.c.c. to f.c.c. at 914 °C but goes back to b.c.c. at 1391 °С; and tita-
63
nium changes from c.p.h. to b.c.c. at 882 °C. This multiplicity of crystal
structures is called polymorphism. But it is obviously out of the question to
try to control crystal structure simply by changing the temperature (iron is
useless as a structural material well below 914 °C). Polymorphism can,
however, be brought about at room temperature by alloying. Indeed, many
stainless steels are f.c.c. rather than b.c.c. and, especially at low tempera-
tures, have much better ductility and toughness than ordinary carbon steels.
This is why stainless steel is so good for cryogenic work: the fast
fracture of a steel vacuum flask containing liquid nitrogen would be em-
barrassing, to say the least, but stainless steel is essential for the vacuum
jackets needed to cool the latest superconducting magnets down to liquid
helium temperatures, or for storing liquid hydrogen or oxygen.
64
The main parameters for describing the crystal lattice are the crys-
tallographic planes and crystallographic directions.
Crystallographic direction it’s the line between two points in the
unit cell, and denoted as [uvw] where u, v, and w are the projections along
the x, y, and z axes. Crystal planes or atomic planes are specified relative
to the unit cell as (hkl) and for h.c.p. as (hklm).
If molten metals (or, more usually, alloys) are cooled very fast –
faster than about 106 K·s–1 – there is no time for the randomly arranged
atoms in the liquid to switch into the orderly arrangement of a solid crys-
tal. Instead, a glassy or amorphous solid is produced which has essentially
a “frozen-in” liquid structure. This structure – which is termed dense ran-
dom packing (drp) – can be modelled very well by pouring ball-bearings
into a glass jar and shaking them down to maximise the packing density. It
is interesting to see that, although this structure is disordered, it has well-
defined characteristics. For example, the packing density is always 64%,
which is why corn was always sold in bushels (1 bushel = 8 UK gallons):
provided the corn was always shaken down well in the sack a bushel al-
ways gave 0.64 · 8 = 5.12 gallons of corn material! It has only recently
become practicable to make glassy metals in quantity but, because their
structure is so different from that of “normal” metals, they have some very
unusual and exciting properties.
65
the dissolved atoms to have a similar size to those of the host metal. Then
the dissolved atoms simply replace some of the host atoms to give a sub-
stitutional solid solution (Figure 2.2, b). Brass and cupronickel are good
examples of the large solubilities that this atomic substitution can give.
Solutions normally tend to be random so that one cannot predict
which of the sites will be occupied by which atoms (Figure 2.2, c). But if
A atoms prefer to have A neighbors, or В atoms prefer В neighbors, the
solution can cluster (Figure 2.2, d); and when A atoms prefer В neighbors
the solution can order (Figure 2.2, e).
Many alloys contain more of the alloying elements than the host
metal can dissolve. Then the surplus must separate out to give regions that
have a high concentration of the alloying element. In a few alloys these
regions consist of a solid solution based on the alloying element. (The
lead–tin alloy system, on which most soft solders are based, the lead can
only dissolve 2 % tin at room temperature and any surplus tin will sepa-
rate out as regions of tin containing 0.3 % dissolved lead.) In most alloy
systems, however, the surplus atoms of the alloying element separate out
as chemical compounds. An important example of this is in the alumin-
ium-copper system where surplus copper separates out as the compound
CuAl2. CuAl2 is hard and is not easily cut by dislocations. And when it is
finely dispersed throughout the alloy it can give very big increases in
strength. Other important compounds are Ni3Al, Ni3Ti, Mo2C and TaC (in
super-alloys) and Fe3C (in carbon steels).
Phases
Metal crystals, amorphous metals, solid solutions, and solid com-
pounds are all phases. A phase is a region of material that has uniform
physical and chemical properties. Water is a phase – any one drop of wa-
ter is the same as the next. Ice is another phase – one splinter of ice is the
66
same as any other. But the mixture of ice and water in your glass at dinner
is not a single phase because its properties vary as you move from water
to ice. Ice + water are two-phase mixture.
Grain and phase boundaries. A pure metal, or a solid solution, is
single-phase. It is certainly possible to make single crystals of metals or
alloys but it is difficult and the expense is only worth it for high-
technology applications such as single-crystal turbine blades or single-
crystal silicon for microchips. Normally, any single-phase metal is poly-
crystalline – it is made up of millions of small crystals, or grains, “stuck”
together by grain boundaries (Figure 2.3).
67
properties of their own. Two phases which have different chemical compo-
sitions but the same crystal structure are illustrated in Figure 2.4, a. Pro-
vided they are oriented in the right way, the crystals can be made to match
up at the boundary. Then, although there is a sharp change in chemical
composition, there is no structural change, and the energy of this coherent
boundary is low (typically 0.05 J·m–2). If the two crystals have slightly dif-
ferent lattice spacings, the boundary is still coherent but has some strain
(and more energy) associated with it (Figure 2.4, b). The strain obviously
gets bigger as the boundary grows sideways: full coherency is usually pos-
sible only with small second-phase particles. As the particle grows, the
strain builds up until it is relieved by the injection of dislocations to give a
semi-coherent boundary (Figure 2.4, c). Often two phases which meet at
the boundary are large, and differ in both chemical composition and crystal
structure. Then the boundary between them is incoherent; it is like a grain
boundary across which there is also a change in chemical composition
(Figure 2.4, d). Such a phase boundary has a high energy – comparable
with that of a grain boundary – and around 0.5 J·m–2.
Shapes of grains and phases. Grains come in all shapes and sizes,
and both shape and size can have a big effect on the properties of the
polycrystalline metal (a good example is mild steel – its strength can be
doubled by a ten-times decrease in grain size). Grain shape is strongly
affected by the way in which the metal is processed. Rolling or forging,
for instance, can give stretched-out (or “textured”) grains; and in casting
the solidifying grains are often elongated in the direction of the easiest
heat loss. But if there are no external effects like these, then the energy of
the grain boundaries is the important thing. This can be illustrated very
nicely by looking at a “two-dimensional” array of soap bubbles in a thin
glass cell. The soap film minimises its overall energy by straightening out;
and at the corners of the bubbles the films meet at angles of 120° to bal-
ance the surface tensions. Of course a polycrystalline metal is three-
68
dimensional, but the same principles apply: the grain boundaries try to
form themselves into flat planes, and these planes always try to meet at
120°. A grain shape does indeed exist which not only satisfies these con-
ditions but also packs together to fill space. It has 14 faces, and is there-
fore called a tetrakaidecahedron. This shape is remarkable, not only for
the properties just given, but because it appears in almost every physical
science (the shape of cells in plants, of bubbles in foams, of grains in met-
als and of Dirichlet cells in solid-state physics).
If the metal consists of two phases then we can get more shapes.
The simplest is when a single-crystal particle of one phase forms inside a
grain of another phase.
Then, if the energy of the interphase boundary is isotropic (the
same for all orientations), the second-phase particle will try to be spheri-
cal in order to minimise the interphase boundary energy.
Naturally, if coherency is possible along some planes, but not along
others, the particle will tend to grow as a plate, extensive along the low-
energy planes but narrow along the high-energy ones. Phase shapes get
more complicated when interphase boundaries and grain boundaries meet.
The particle is shaped by two spherical caps which meet the grain
boundary at an angle θ. This angle is set by the balance of boundary tensions
2γαβ · cosθ = γgb, (2.1)
where γαβ is the tension (or energy) of the interphase boundary;
γgb is the grain boundary tension (or energy).
In some alloys γαβ can be ≤ γgb / 2 in which case θ = 0. The second
phase will then spread along the boundary as a thin layer of β. This “wet-
ting” of the grain boundary can be a great nuisance – if the phase is brittle
then cracks can spread along the grain boundaries until the metal falls
apart completely. A favorite scientific party trick is to put some alumin-
ium sheet in a dish of molten gallium and watch the individual grains of
aluminium come apart as the gallium whizzes down the boundary.
The second phase can, of course, form complete grains. But only if
γαβ and γgb are similar will the phases have tetrakaidecahedral shapes
where they come together. In general, γαβ and γgb may be quite different
and the grains then have more complicated shapes.
75
a b c
76
It is possible sufficiently accurately determine the carbon content in
according to the structure of the steel. In hypoeutectoid steels such crite-
rion is the amount of perlite, in hypereutectoid steel – a thickness of the
cementite network. The cementite network allows us to estimate the car-
bon content of only approximately. A necessary condition for determining
the composition of the steel on the structure, it is a slow cooling from the
austenite region, as at high cooling rate the relation between structural
components may change significantly.
The structure of steel with granular pearlite (obtained in steel with a
carbon content above 0.6 %) the carbon content can be determined by
methods of quantitative metallography, but Uniform distribution of grains
of cementite in the structure of the steel annealed at granular perlite makes
it impossible to determine the carbon content in steel with the same cer-
tainty as can be done in the presence of the structure of lamellar pearlite.
Description of the structure of the annealed carbon steels with the
different carbon content. In alloys with the low carbon content ferrite and
pearlite are present in the form of grains. In alloys with the average carbon
content ferrite located around pearlite in the form of almost continuous
network along the boundaries of former austenite grains. At a further in-
crease of carbon content network is becoming more intermittent, until,
finally, it does not remain only a few small areas of ferrite. When the car-
bon content in the steel is 0.8 % it has purely pearlitic structure. Above
0.8 % C structure of the steel consists of pearlite and hypereutectoid (sec-
ondary) cementite, which appears as a fine network along the boundaries
of austenitic grains. The more the carbon content in steel the thicker a ce-
mentite network. When the carbon content is more than 1.7 % in the
structure appears ledeburite.
The mechanical properties are strongly dependent on both the car-
bon content and on the type of heat treatment. Both the yield strength and
tensile strength increase linearly with carbon content. This is what we
would expect: the Fe3C acts as a strengthening phase, and the proportion
of Fe3C in the steel is linear in carbon concentration. The ductility, on the
other hand, falls rapidly as the carbon content goes up because the α-Fe3C
interfaces in pearlite arc good at nucleating cracks.
Properties of the structural components of the annealed steel in a
relatively equilibrium state are listed in the Table 2.3.
Consider a eutectoid steel that is cooled from a high temperature
where it is fully austenitic to a temperature below 727 °C, and isother-
mally held for different times at the temperature. The isothermal hold will
transform the austenite into pearlite, which is a mixture of ferrite (α-Fe)
77
and cementite (iron carbide Fе3С). Experiments show that transformation
(conversion) kinetics at a fixed temperature exhibit an S-shaped curve.
Table 2.3 – Mechanical properties of of the structural components of the annealed steel
Mechanical properties
Constituent
Hardness HB σu, МPа ψ, % δ, %
Ferrite 50–90 186–245 60–75 40–50
Cementite 750–820 30 – –
Lamellar pearlite 190–230 843–882 10–15 9–12
Granular pearlite 160–190 637–686 18–25 18–25
The different iron-carbon phases (e.g. coarse and fine pearlite, up-
per and lower bainite, etc.) that form under different isothermal conditions
are also displayed on this diagram. The physical appearance of some of
the phases as revealed under a microscope is shown in the photomicro-
graphs of Figure 2.9.
Hardenability
It is known that carbon steels could be strengthened by quenching
and tempering. To get the best properties we must quench the steel past
the nose of the C-curve. The cooling rate that just misses the nose is called
the critical cooling rate (CCR). If we cool at the critical rate, or faster, the
steel will transform to 100 % martensite. The CCR for a plain carbon steel
depends on two factors – carbon content and grain size. Adding carbon
decreases the rate of the diffusive transformation by orders of magnitude:
the CCR decreases from ≈105 °C·s–1 for pure iron to ≈200 °C·s–1 for 0.8 %
carbon steel (Figure 2.11).
82
Figure 2.12 – The Jominy end-quench test for hardenability
After cooling, shallow flats are ground along the specimen length
along which the hardness is measured, to develop a hardness distribution
curve (hardenability curve). Because a distribution of cooling rates is
achieved along the length of the specimen (whose one end is cooled), the
hardness variation along the specimen length becomes a measure of cool-
ing rate. The maximum hardness occurs at the quenched end where nearly
100 % martensite forms. Away from the quenched end, cooling rate pro-
gressively decreases, thus allowing more time for diffusion of carbon to
form softer phases (e.g., pearlite). The steel with a high hardenability will
exhibit high hardness to relatively large distances from the quenched end.
The hardenability of plain carbon steels increases with increasing
carbon content. Likewise, alloying elements such as Ni, Cr, and Mo in
alloy steels improve the hardenability by delaying the diffusion-limited
formation of pearlite and bainite, thus aiding martensite formation.
84
Fewer lenses nucleate and grow, and eventually the transformation
stops. In other words, provided we keep the temperature constant, the dis-
placive transformation is self-stabilizing (Figure 2.14, 2.15). The volume
of martensite produced is a function of temperature only, and does not
depend on time. To get more martensite we must cool the iron down to a
lower temperature (which gives more driving force). Even at this lower
temperature, the displacive transformation will stop when the extra driv-
ing force has been used up in straining the lattice. In fact, to get 100 %
martensite, we have to cool the iron down to ≈ 350 °C (see fig. 2.15).
Note that the temperature at which martensite starts to form is labelled Ms
(martensite start); the temperature at which the martensite transformation
finishes is labelled Mf (martensite finish).
This may seem a strange result – after all, only 68 % of the volume
of the b.c.c. unit cell is taken up by atoms, whereas the figure is 74 % for
f.c.c. Even so, the largest holes in b.c.c. (diameter 0.0722 nm) are smaller
than those in f.c.c. (diameter 0.104 nm).
86
The martensite is thus grossly oversaturated with carbon and some-
thing must give. The carbon atoms make room for themselves by stretch-
ing the lattice along one of the cube directions to make a body-centred
tetragonal unit cell. Dislocations find it very difficult to move through
such a highly strained structure, and the martensite is very hard as a result.
Recrystallization annealing
Recrystallization annealing used for relieve internal stresses, reduce
the hardness, and increase the ductility of strain-hardened metal.
Recovery (when elastic distortions of the crystal lattice are elimi-
nated) and recrystallisation (when new grains are formed and begin to
grow) takes place with increasing annealing temperature during the sof-
tening. In result of this processes the metal regains its high ductility.
Heating is performed at temperature higher than the critical point of
recrystallization (often about 600–720 °С).
88
Plastic deformation, which distorts the crystal lattice and breaks up
the blocks of initial equiaxed grains to produce a fibrous structure or thin
plates, increases the free energy level of a metal (Figure 2.16).
a b
90
Highly cold-worked metals recrystallize faster, and the recrystalli-
zation temperature decreases with increasing degree of cold-working.
Pure metals recrystallize faster than alloys, and alloying raises the recrys-
tallization temperature. The recrystallization temperature Tcr is defined as
the temperature at which the cold-worked structure fully recrystallizes in
1 h. For pure metals Tcr ~ 0.3Tm (Tm is the absolute melting temperature),
but for alloys Tcr ~ 0.7Tm. High-melting-point metals have a high Tcr.
Many deformation processes use hot-working to shape parts; hot-working
is done above Tcr.
The new stress-free recrystallized grains continue to grow if a high
temperature is maintained for a long period. This is because there is a dis-
tribution of grain sizes in the recrystallized material, and the need to de-
crease the grain boundary area provides the driving force for grain growth
(or grain coarsening). Grain coarsening occurs by competitive dissolution
of small grains and growth of larger grains in the distribution through
mass transport via atomic diffusion.
The onset of recrystallization is about 150 °C for aluminium,
200 °C for copper, 450 °C for iron and 620 °C for nickel.
As the temperature is further increased from the recrystallization
temperature so the crystals grow until they have completely replaced the
original distorted cold-worked structure. The hardness, tensile strength
and percentage elongation change little during this phase, the only change
being that the grains grow.
Full annealing
Full annealing consists in heating a hypoeutectoid steel 30–50 °C
above the critical point Ac3, holding it at this temperature, and then slowly
cooling (at a rate of 30–200 °C/h, depending on the composition).
The rate of heating for annealing rolled stock or forgings in heavy
charges is as high as the given furnace can provide. The holding time at
91
the annealing temperature for these conditions is taken as one-half to one
hour per ton of the charge. Measures should be taken to prevent heavy
scaling and decarburization of the steel in annealing.
Slow cooling is required in annealing to enable the austenite to de-
compose at low degrees of supercooling so as to form a pearlite + ferrite
structure in hypoeutectoid steel, a pearlite structure, in eutectoid steel, and
a pearlite + cementite structure in hypereutectoid steel.
The higher the austenite stability, the slower the cooling must be to
ensure austenite decomposition in the high temperature range. Thus, alloy
steels, in which austenite is very stable, should be cooled much slower (30
to 100 °C/h) after annealing than carbon steel (150 to 200 °C/h).
The form in which the excess ferrite or cementite precipitates in
hypo- and hypereutectoid steels depends on the cooling rate. At high rates,
the excess components precipitate in the form of a network on the grain
boundaries of the prior austenite. Retarded cooling facilitates ferrite pre-
cipitation as separate clusters.
The formation of separate ferrite regions in the structure of a steel is
undesirable since, in subsequent heating for hardening, it is difficult to
equalize the carbon content throughout the austenite and soft spots may
remain after hardening.
Due to phase recrystallization, grains of a steel are also refined after
full annealing.
Complete phase recrystallization of hypereutectoid steel (full anneal-
ing) is required only in cases when hot-working (rolling or forging) was
finished at high temperatures and the steel is, consequently, coarse-grained.
If hot-working is finished at a normal temperature (slightly above Ac3)
incomplete annealing will be sufficient to ensure the required properties.
Hypoeutectoid hot-worked steel (rolled stock, sheet, forgings, etc.)
as well as castings of carbon and alloy steels may undergo full annealing.
Annealing reduces the tensile strength, yield point, and hardness of
rolled (or forged) steel while elongation and reduction of area are increased.
When cast steel is annealed, its strength is also increased because a
fine-grained structure is obtained and the Widmanstatten structure is
eliminated.
Full annealing considerably improves the machinability and form-
ability of steel.
Incomplete annealing
Incomplete annealing consists in heating steel to a temperature
somewhat above the critical point Ac1 holding it at this temperature, and
92
then slowly cooling it. Incomplete annealing is used to relieve internal
stresses and to improve the machinability of steel. It is associated with
only partial recrystallization; excess ferrite of hypoeutectoid steel or ex-
cess cementite of hypereutectoid steel does not pass over into the solid
solution and is not recrystallized. Incomplete annealing is applied chiefly
to eutectoid and hypereutectoid steels in which heating above point Ac1
causes practically complete recrystallization.
Sometimes under conditions of excessively high heating tempera-
tures and slow cooling, a cementite network appears in hypereutectoid
steels. In this case, incomplete annealing will not ensure a high toughness
and proper grain refinement. Prior to incomplete annealing, it will be nec-
essary to eliminate the cementite network by heating above point Acm fol-
lowed by rapid cooling (hardening or normalization).
Isothermal annealing
In this operation, steel is heated as for ordinary annealing and then
cooled comparatively rapidly (in air or by a blast in a furnace) to a tem-
perature below point Ar1 (usually 50 to 100 °C below in accordance with
the character of the TTT-curve for austenite decomposition). The steel is
held isothermally at this temperature during a certain period of time to
provide for complete austenite decomposition. This is followed by com-
paratively rapid cooling.
The main advantage of isothermal annealing is that it reduces the
time required for heat treatment of the steel. This is especially true for al-
loyed steels which must be cooled very slowly to obtain the required re-
duction in hardness. Isothermal annealing produces good results in treat-
ing relatively small charges of rolled stock or small forgings.
Large forgings or charges of rolled stock have different cooling
conditions on the surface and in the core so that the annealed structure
will not be uniform when passing over to isothermal holding. Therefore,
this type of annealing is not applied in such cases.
Normalizing of steel
This process consists in heating steel to a temperature from 40 to
50 °C above point Ac3 (Acm), holding at this temperature for a short time,
and subsequent cooling in air. Normalizing is used to eliminate coarse-
grained structures obtained in previous working (rolling, forging, or
stamping, to increase the strength of medium-carbon steels to a certain
extent (in comparison with annealed steel), to improve the machinability
of low-carbon steels, to improve the structure In welds, to reduce internal
stresses, to eliminate the cementite network in hypereutectoid steels, etc.
Normalized carbon steel consists of pearlite and ferrite in hypoeu-
tectoid steels and of pearlite and cementite in hypereutectoid steels.
More rapid cooling (in air), used in normalizing, causes the austen-
ite to decompose at lower temperatures. This increases the dispersity of
the ferrite-cementite mixture (pearlite) and increases the amount of eutec-
toid. Therefore, normalized steel has a higher strength and harder than
annealed steel.
Cooling in air employed in normalizing alloy steels, in which the
austenite is very stable, results in austenite decomposition at high degrees
of supercooling. It is even possible to obtain a hardened steel structure,
i.e., martensite, in this case. After being normalized, such steels will be
94
very hard and must undergo high-temperature tempering at 550–650 °C to
enable them to be machined.
It is essential to note that two heat-treating operations, normalizing
and high tempering, require less time than annealing. Therefore, these two
operations are often substituted for annealing in the treatment of alloy steels.
Normalizing is frequently applied as a final heat treatment for items
which are to operate at relatively high stresses.
Normalizing is extensively used for improving the properties of
steel castings. Normalized castings have a higher yield point, tensile
strength, and impact strength than annealed castings.
1 Metals
Essentially, metals are based on metallic chemical elements and, in
general, have high electrical conductivities, high thermal conductivities
can be ductile and thus permit products to be made by being bent into
shape, and have a relatively high stiffness and strength. Thus the body-
work of a car is generally made of metal which is bent into the required
shape and has reasonable stiffness and strength so that it retains that
shape. The core of an electric cable is made of a metal to give the high
electrical conductivity required.
Engineering metals are generally alloys, alloys being metallic mate-
rials formed by mixing two or more elements. For example, mild steel is
an alloy of iron and carbon, stainless steel an alloy of iron, chromium,
carbon, manganese and possibly other elements. The reason for adding
elements to the iron is to improve the properties since pure metals are very
weak materials. The carbon improves the strength of iron, chromium in
the stainless steel improves the corrosion resistance.
Metals are also classified as follows:
102
a) Ferrous alloys. These are iron-based alloys, e.g. steels and cast
irons.
b) Non-ferrous alloys. These are not iron-based alloys, e.g. alumin-
ium-based and copper-based alloys.
2 Polymers (plastics)
Essentially, polymers are based on large organic molecules, i.e.
carbon containing molecules. They can be classified as:
a) Thermoplastics soften when heated and become hard again when
the heat is removed. The term implies that the material becomes “plastic”
when heat is applied. Thus thermoplastic materials can be heated and bent
to form required shapes, thermosets cannot. Thermoplastic materials are
generally flexible and relatively soft. Polythene is an example of a ther-
moplastic, being widely used as films or sheets for such items as bags,
“squeezy” bottles, and wire and cable insulation.
b) Thermosets do not soften when heated, but char and decompose.
Thennosets are rigid and hard. Phenol formaldehyde, known as Bakelite,
is a thermoset. It is widely used for electrical plug casings, door knobs and
handles.
The term elastomer is used for polymers which by their structure al-
low considerable extensions that are reversible, e.g. rubber bands.
In general, polymers have low electrical conductivity and low
thermal conductivity, hence their use for electrical and thermal insulation.
Compared with metals, they have lower densities, expand more when
there is a change in temperature, are generally more corrosion resistant,
have a lower stiffness, stretch more and are not as hard. When loaded they
tend to creep, i.e. the extension gradually changes with time. Their proper-
ties depend very much on the temperature so that a polymer which may be
tough and flexible at room temperature may be brittle at 0 °C and show
considerable creep at 100 °C.
3 Ceramics
Ceramics are based on inorganic compounds and were originally
just clay-based materials. They tend to be brittle, relatively stiff, stronger
in compression than tension, hard, chemically inert and bad conductors of
electricity and heat. The non-glasses tend to have good heat and wear re-
sistance and high-temperature strength. Ceramics include:
a) Glasses: soda line glasses, borosilicate glasses, pyroceramics.
103
b) Domestic ceramics: porcelain, vitreous china, earthenware,
stoneware, cement.
Examples of domestic ceramics and glasses abound in the home in
the form of cups, plates and glasses.
c) Engineering ceramics: alumina, carbides, nitrides.
Because of their hardness and abrasion resistance, such ceramics
are widely used as the cutting edges of tools.
d) Natural ceramics: rocks.
4 Composites
Composites are materials composed of two different materials
bonded together. For example, there are composites involving glass fibres
or particles in polymers, ceramic particles in metals (cermets), and steel
rods in concrete (reinforced concrete). Wood is a natural composite con-
sisting of tubes of cellulose in a polymer called lignin. Composites made
with fibres embedded, all aligned in the same direction in some matrix,
will have properties in that direction markedly different from properties in
other directions. Composites can be designed to combine the good proper-
ties of different types of materials while avoiding some of their drawbacks.
If the above classification was solely in terms of properties it would
be deemed rather crude. Within each group there is a large variation in
properties and there are no clear property boundaries between them.
Consider steel and alloys a more detailed.
One way of modifying the properties of a metal is alloying. An al-
loy is a metallic material made by mixing two or more elements. The eve-
ryday metallic objects around you will be made, almost invariably, from
alloys rather then the pure metals themselves. Pure metals do not always
have the appropriate combinations of properties needed; alloys can, how-
ever, be designed to have them.
Making alloys is rather like baking a cake. The basic ingredients of
flour, sugar, fat, eggs and water are mixed together and then cooked. The
result is a cake which has a texture and properties quite different from those
of the individual ingredients. The type of cake produced depends on the rela-
tive amounts of the ingredients and the way it is cooked. In making alloys,
the ingredients are mixed and heated and the resulting alloy can have proper-
ties quite different from those of the ingredients. The properties will depend
on the relative amounts and nature of the ingredients as well as how they are
“baked”. An alloy is a particular mixture of components and so has a particu-
lar chemical composition, e.g. one carbon steel may be 99.0 % iron com-
bined with 1.0 % carbon while another is 99.5 % iron with 0.5 % carbon.
104
The coins in your pocket are made of alloys. Coins need to be made
of a relatively hard material which does not wear away rapidly, i.e. the
coins have to have a life of many years. Coins made of, say, pure copper
would be very soft; not only would they suffer considerable wear but they
would bend in your pocket. The copper-looking British coins are made of
an alloy of copper with 2.5 % by weight of zinc and 0.5 % of tin, the term
coinage bronze being used for the alloy. The silver-looking British coins
are made of an alloy of copper with 25 % by weight of nickel, the term
cupro-nickel being used for the alloy.
Pure metals tend to be soft with high ductility, low tensile strength
and low yield strength. Because of this they are rarely used in engineering.
Alloying can produce harder materials with higher tensile strength, higher
yield stress and a reduction in ductility. Such materials are more useful in
engineering. There are, however, some circumstances in which the proper-
ties of pure metals are useful. They are where high electrical conductivity
is required (alloying reduces conductivity); where good corrosion resis-
tance is required (alloying can result in less corrosion resistance); and
where very high ductility is required.
We can think of the structure of alloys in terms of the constituent
metals, say A and B, being mixed in the liquid state. Then when the mix-
ture solidifies, there is the possibility that solid alloy will have a crystal
structure in which some of the atoms in the crystal structure of A have
been replaced by atoms of В (substitutional solid solution). Alternatively,
because there are spaces between the atoms of A in its crystal structure,
some atoms of A, if small enough, might lodge in these spaces (interstitial
solid solution). Another possibility is that elements A and В combine to
form a chemical compound. With a compound there will be a particular
structure for that compound with atoms of A and В assuming specific po-
sitions, rather than just popping into any gap. Another possibility is that
when the liquid mixture cools A and В separate out, with В forming its
own crystal structure independent of A. The structure then becomes a mix-
ture of two types of crystals.
105
structure changes to a face-centred cubic one, known as austenite. Iron
atoms have a diameter of 0.256 nm (1 nanometre = 10–9 m); carbon atoms
are much smaller with a diameter of 0.154 nm. The face-centred cubic
structure is a more open structure than the body-centred structure; the
face-centred structure of austenite has voids which can accommodate
spheres up to 0.104 nm in diameter while the body-centred cubic structure
voids between the atoms which are 0.070 nm in diameter. Thus, carbon
atoms can be more easily accommodated within austenite, without severe
distortion of the lattice, than ferrite. Austenite can take up to 2.0 % of car-
bon while ferrite can only take 0.2 %. Thus when iron containing carbon
is cooled from the austenite state to the ferrite state, there is a reduction in
the amount of carbon that can be accommodated within the iron and so
some of the carbon atoms come out of the crystals and form a compound,
another crystal structure, between iron and carbon called cementite. Ce-
mentite is hard and brittle. The result can be a structure consisting of
purely ferrite grains mixed with grains which have a laminated structure
of ferrite and cementite. Such a laminated structure is termed pearlite.
Pure cementite is harder than pearlite, which in turns is harder than pure
ferrite. Thus the structure, and hence the properties, of the iron alloy is
determined by the amount of carbon present.
The percentage of carbon alloyed with iron has a profound effect on
the properties of the alloy. The terms used for the alloys produced with
different percentages of carbon are: wrought – iron 0 to 0.05 % carbon;
steel – 0.05 to 2 % carbon; cast iron – 2 to 4.5 % carbon.
The term carbon steel is used for those steels in which essentially
just iron and carbon are present. The term alloy steel is used where other
elements are included.
106
Figure 3.1 – Classification of steels
Carbon steels are grouped according to their carbon content with
the designations being roughly: mild steel – 0.10 to 0.25 % carbon; me-
dium-carbon steel – 0.20 to 0.50 % carbon; high-carbon steel – more than
0.50 % carbon.
Mild steel has a structure consisting predominantly of ferrite, me-
dium-carbon steels tend to have about equal amounts of ferrite and pear-
lite, while high-carbon steels have predominantly pearlite with some free
cementite occurring at high carbon contents.
Increasing the percentage of carbon, within the range considered,
increases the amount of pearlite at the expense of the softer ferrite, and
hence:
1 Increases the tensile strength;
2 Increases the hardness;
3 Decreases the percentage elongation;
4 Decreases the impact strength.
Mild steel is a general purpose steel and is used where hardness and
tensile strength are not the most important requirements but ductility is
often required. Typical applications are sections for use as joists in build-
ings, bodywork for cars and ships, screws, nails, wire. Medium-carbon
steel is used for agricultural tools, fasteners, dynamo and motor shafts,
crankshafts, connecting rods, gears. With such steels the lower ductility
puts a limit on the types of processes that can be used. Medium-carbon
steels are capable of being quenched and tempered to develop reasonable
toughness with strength. High-carbon steel is used for withstanding wear,
where hardness is a more necessary requirement than ductility. It is used
for machine tools, saws, hammers, cold chisels, punches, axes, dies, taps,
drills, razors. The main use of high-carbon steel is mainly as a tool steel.
High-carbon steels are usually quenched and tempered at about 250 °C to
develop their high strength with some slight ductility.
II As to the method of manufacture, they are classified as:
a) Ordinary and improved quality steels. These are smelted either
in converters (acid or basic) or in large open-hearth furnaces. In composi-
tion, these are carbon steels with the carbon content from 0.6 to 0.65 %.
The manufacturers of these steels guarantee either their specified me-
chanical properties or chemical composition. They contain slightly more
harmful impurities than the higher quality grades (sulphur up to 0.055 %
and phosphorus up to 0.05–0.085 %).
b) Quality steels, smelted in basic open-hearth furnaces. Here,
stricter conditions are observed in regard to the composition of the charge
and smelting and pouring procedures. Much higher requirements are
108
specified for these steels than the ordinary quality grades in respect to
their chemical composition, presence of nonmetallic inclusions and other
defects, as well as to their mechanical properties.
c) High-quality steels, smelted in acid or basic open-hearth fur-
naces or in electric furnaces. The composition of these steels is main-
tained within narrow limits; they contain only very small amounts of
harmful impurities (sulphur and phosphorus) and almost no nonmetallic
inclusions, their mechanical properties are strictly specified. These steels
are poured into ingot moulds of the smallest permissible size.
III As to their purpose, all steels may be classified into the follow-
ing groups:
a) Structural steels with the sub-groups:
- Engineering (or constructional) steels designed for structural mem-
bers and steel structures. This sub-group includes ordinary quality carbon
steels possessing good weldability and satisfactory mechanical properties
in the as-received condition, i.e., without additional heat treatment.
- Engineering steels designed for the manufacture of components of
industrial equipment. The main requirements made to these steels are high
strength under static and dynamic loads and good fabrication properties
(pronounced hardenability, minimum strain, satisfactory machinability,
etc.). It is also important that their mechanical and fabrication properties
vary within narrow limits in different melts or batches of the same steel.
This is necessary to provide machine parts of uniform quality in cases
when an established manufacturing process is strictly conformed to. This
is a vital factor for mass production plants.
Carbon, alloy, quality, and high-quality grades find applications as
engineering steels. Ordinary quality carbon steels are also used for low-
stress applications. Most engineering steels undergo heat treatment.
b) Tool steels intended for the manufacture of cutting and measur-
ing tools, as well as dies. Tool steels must have a high hardness and wear
resistance. They must have the high strength required by the cutting edge
of a tool to prevent its destruction by the high stresses due to metal cutting
and to prevent breakage in those parts of the tool that are subject to large
torque and bending stresses, as well as ample toughness to withstand im-
pacts and vibration. Steel designed for the manufacture of hot-forging dies
must have satisfactory mechanical properties at high temperatures.
This sub-group includes carbon steels (over 0.65–0.75 % C) and
quality and high-quality alloy steels with a high carbon content.
c) Steels with special physical properties which suit their applica-
tion. These include magnetic and nonmagnetic steels, steel with a definite
109
coefficient of expansion, stainless and heat-resistant steels, etc. In their
chemical composition, these special-purpose grades are quality and high-
quality alloy steels.
110
1) Steels of Group I are supplied with their mechanical properties
guaranteed (БСт0, БСт3, БСт4, БСт5, БСт6, Ст0, Ст1, Ст2, Ст3, Ст4,
Ст5, Ст6 and Ст7).
Normally these steels do not undergo heat treatment and they are
utilised in the as-received condition. The mechanical properties of these
steels are determined by the treatment they are subject to by the user.
2) Steels of Group II are supplied with their chemical composition
guaranteed (Б09, Б16, Б23, БЗЗ, М12кп, М18, M21, M26, etc.).
Ordinary steels are made either by the open-hearth (M) or Bessemer
(Б) processes. In comparison with open-hearth steel, Bessemer steel has a
higher gas saturation, contains more sulphur and phosphorus, and, at the
same carbon content, has lower ductility and higher strength and hardness.
Bessemer steels have a greater susceptibility to ageing and cold-shortness.
They may be recommended only or statically loaded structures.
In respect to the degree of deoxidation, ordinary quality steels may
be classified as killed, semi-killed, and rimmed.
Killed steels are deoxidised in their manufacture and have a low gas
content. They are used in making machine parts subject to dynamic loads.
Rimmed steels are among the cheaper varieties since the losses in their
manufacture are insignificant (a rimmed steel ingot does not have a pipe). At
the same time, they possess essential disadvantages which include: 1) high
gas saturation, 2) lower impact strength, and 3) high tendency to ageing.
3) Steels of Group III are of improved quality. They are produced,
as a rule, in open-hearth furnaces and are degasified and deoxidised. They
are supplied with guaranteed composition and mechanical properties.
Ordinary and improved steels are extensively employed in con-
struction and general engineering.
For example, rolled bars, structural shapes, sheets, and plates of
steels Ст3, М18кп, and БСт4 are widely used for construction compo-
nents and trusses. These same steels are expediently used in engineering
for manufacturing various less important machine parts (bushings, liners,
levers, rods, yokes, etc.), not subject to heat treatment, as well as parts to
be carburized, such as wrist pins of low-power engines, gears, worms, etc.
Steels Ст5, M26, M31, and БСт5 are used for reinforcement and various
machine parts (shafts, pivots, nuts, washers, etc.), not subject to heavy
loads in operation.
Improved steels are widely employed for welded (M16C) and rivet-
ted (МСт3 мост) bridge structures, in ship-building (Ст1С, Ст2C, Ст3С,
Ст4С), for prestressed concrete constructions, etc.
111
Quality carbon structural steels
Table 3.1 lists the composition of quality carbon hypoeutectoid
steels and their mechanical properties. These steels are used as bar stock,
forgings, sheet, plate and other semifinished products.
Table 3.1 – Composition and mechanical properties of quality carbon steels
Carbon δ, %, ψ, %,
Steel grade σ , MPa σu, MPa a, kg⋅m/sm3
content, % y minimum minimum
08кп ≤0.06 200 330–410 35 60 –
10 0.05–0.10 220 360–450 32 55 –
15 0.07–0.13 240 400–490 29 55 –
20кп 0.17–0.24 250 430–530 27 55 –
20 0.17–0.24 260 440–540 26 55 –
25 0.22–0.29 280 480–580 24 50 10
30 0.27–0.34 300 520–620 22 50 10
35 0.32–0.39 320 560–660 21 45 9
40 0.37–0.44 340 600–720 19 45 9
45 0.42–0.49 360 640–760 17 40 8
50 0.47–0.55 380 680–800 15 40 7
55 0.52–0.60 400 710–830 13 35 –
60 0.57–0.65 420 730–850 12 35 –
65 0.62–0.70 430 760–880 11 35 –
70 0.67–0.75 440 780–900 10 30 –
75 0.72–0.80 900 1100 8 30 –
80 0.77–0.85 950 1100 8 30 –
85 0.82–0.90 1000 1150 7 30 –
112
shafts, stops, pins, etc.), as well as for welded structures, in the form of
plates or pipe. Steel Grades 20, 25, 30, 40, 45, and 50 have a higher ten-
sile strength but lower fabrication properties, weldability, and ductility (in
comparison to low-carbon steels). Their machinability, however, is higher.
Steels 20 and 25 have found application for small machine parts
which are not subject to high stresses (bolts, nuts, screws, washers, etc.)
while steels 30 and 35 are for machine parts subject to moderate stresses
(cross-members, tie-rods, bolts, nuts, etc.). Steels 20, 25, 30, and 35 are
ordinarily used in the as-normalized condition.
Steels 40 and 45 are used in making machine parts requiring high
strength (connecting rods, gears, pivots, shafts, bushings, tractor crawler
pins, etc.). They are used either as-normalized or after hardening followed
by high-temperature tempering (structural improvement). Steels grade 50,
55, and 60 are used, after hardening and tempering or after normalizing,
for manufacturing such machine parts as gears, tyres, flat springs, snap
rings, various other springs, leaf springs, mill rolls, etc. Coil and leaf
springs of steel 65 and 70 are hardened by heating to 830–840 °C, quench-
ing in oil, and tempering at 350–450 °C.
Due to the low stability of the supercooled austenite, carbon steels
have a high critical cooling rate and a low hardenability. Carbon steels are
usually quenched in water. However, even in this case, through or full
hardening can be achieved only for parts up to 15 or 20 mm in diameter
(or thickness). Therefore carbon steels possess high mechanical properties
after structural improvement only in small cross-sections and can be rec-
ommended only for small parts.
Carbon steels with a higher manganese content have higher harde-
nability. They include steels grade 15Г, 20Г, ЗОГ, 40Г, 50Г, 60Г, 65Г, and
70Г, which contain from 0.8 to 1.0 % Mn, and steels 10Г2, 30Г2, 35Г2,
40Г2, 45Г2, and 50Г2 which contain from 1.4 to 1.8 % Mn. The addition
of manganese to the steel increases the stability of the supercooled austen-
ite, lowers the critical cooling rate, and increases hardenability.
Oil is the quenching medium used in many cases for hardening
steels alloyed with manganese. Such steels must be carefully heated as
they are very sensitive to overheating.
After high-temperature tempering, steels 50Г to 70Г and 30Г2 to
50Г2 should be quenched in water or oil to prevent temper brittleness.
An increase in the manganese content increases the wear resistance,
tensile strength (σu), yield point (σy) and proportional limit (σp) of steel
while the relative elongation (δ) and the reduction of area (ψ) are de-
creased. In addition to their higher strength in comparison to steels 10, 15,
113
and 20, steels 16Г and 20Г also have better weldability. Steels with in-
creased manganese content have almost the same applications as steels
with a normal content. Steels 60Г and 65Г are used for coil and leaf
springs. Springs of these steels are ordinarily hardened and then tempered
to troostite. The same steels are employed to make machine parts subject
to highly intensive abrasive wear (teeth of horse and tractor rakes, elevator
chain links, etc.).
Frequently, steels Grade 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 15Г,
50Г, and 50Г2 are applied in the form of cold drawn bars held within
close tolerances. Their strength is increased by work hardening but the
ductility of the steel is reduced.
Maximum strengthening is obtained for small cross-sections (wire,
sheets, etc.). Cold working is the most highly productive and most eco-
nomical method for obtaining machine parts with smooth accurate sur-
faces. In many cases it can eliminate labor-consuming machining opera-
tions (turning axles, bolts, etc., in lathes).
116
Chromium steels are extensively applied in many fields of industry.
Those used contain from 0.15 to 0.5 % carbon and from 0.7 to 1.0 %
chromium (15X, 15ХА, 20Х, 20ХА, 30Х, 30ХА, 35Х, 38ХА, 40Х, 45Х,
45ХА, 50Х, and 50XA).
The most widely used of this series are the carburizing steel 15X
(15XA) and steel 40X (38XA) which usually undergoes structural im-
provement treatment.
Steels 15X and 15XA find application in the automobile and tractor
industry for valve tappets, wrist pins, idler studs, etc. In the machine tool
industry, they are used for gears operating at high speeds and medium
loads, claw clutches, bushings, worms, and other parts subject to carburiz-
ing, cyaniding, etc.
Steels 40X and 38XA are usually subject to structural improvement
(high tempering) and are used for shafts and worms operating under me-
dium loads, bushings, clutches and other components of machine tools
and fixtures. In the automobile and tractor industries, they are applied for
steering knuckles, axle shafts, transmission main shafts and many others.
Heat treating procedures and mechanical properties of steels 15X
and 40X are listed in Table 3.4.
Table 3.4 – Mechanical properties of chromium and chromium-vanadium structural steels
Heat treatment Mechanical properties (minimum)
Steel Hardening temperature, °C
Tempering σu, σy ,
grade First Second δ, % ψ, % a, kg⋅m/sm2
temperature MPa MPa
hardening hardening
15X 860 780 200 700 500 10 45 7
15XA 860 780 200 700 500 11 50 8
38XA 860 – 550 950 800 12 50 9
40X 850 – 500 1000 800 9 45 6
15ХФ 860 780 200 750 550 12 50 8
40ХФА 880 – 650 900 750 10 50 9
50ХФА 860 – 475 1300 1100 10. 45 –
The more chromium in a steel the higher its hardenability will be.
Chromium-carbon steels (30Х, 35Х, 40X, and 45X) are hardened by
quenching in oil. This reduces warping to a great extent. Carburized steels
(15X and 20X) are usually quenched in water. After high tempering, steels
40X and 38XA are quenched in oil or water to prevent temper brittleness.
The addition of 0.1 to 0.2 % V to chromium steels (steels 15ХФ,
40ХФ and 50ХФА) reduces the susceptibility to overheating, improves
the mechanical properties, especially the impact strength, and increases
the resistance to softening on heating. Carburized steel 15ХФ is used for
117
gears, camshafts, wrist pins, etc. After carburizing, the steel retains a suf-
ficiently fine grain, both in the core and the case. Subsequent heat treat-
ment usually consists of single quenching, directly after carburizing, in
water (after precooling).
The heat treatment of steel 40ХФ consists in quenching in oil fol-
lowed by high tempering (see table 3.4). It is used for crankshafts, bush-
ings, bolts, cross-members, spindles, shafts, etc. Steel 50ХФА is used for
critical springs. Hardening is followed by a medium tempering.
Antifriction bearing steels are a special group of chromium struc-
tural steels. The compositions of these steels are listed in Table 3.5.
Table 3.5 – Chemical compositions and applications of chromium steels
for antifriction bearings
Chemical composition1, %
Steel grade Applications
C Cr
Balls up to 13.5 mm and rollers up
ШХ6 1.05–1.15 0.4–0.7
to 10 mm in diameter
Balls from 13.5 to 22.5 mm and rollers
ШХ9 1.0–1.1 0.9–1.2
from 10 to 15 mm in diameter
Balls over 22.5 mm and rollers
ШХ15 0.95–1.05 1.3–1.65
from 15 to 30 mm in diameter
1
0.17–0.35 % Si, 0.2–0.4 % Mn, ≤ 0.02 % S, and ≤ 0.027 % P.
Spring leaves of steels 55C2 and 60C2 are quenched in oil. This is
followed by tempering at 460 °C (420–520 °C). After this treatment, the
steel will acquire the mechanical properties listed in Table 3.7.
Table 3.7 – Mechanical properties of steels for leaf and coil springs after heat treatment
Mechanical properties (minimum)
Steel grade
σu, MPa σy, MPa δ, % ψ, %
55С2 1300 1200 25 30
60С2А 1600 1400 20 20
119
Table 3.8 – Mechanical properties of chromium-silicon
Mechanical properties (minimum)
Steel grade
σu, MPa σy, MPa δ, % ψ, % a, kg⋅m/sm2
ЗЗХС 950 800 13 50 8
40XC 1250 1100 12 40 5
122
Steels with boron. The amount of boron which may be added to
structural steels ranges from 0.001 to 0.005 %.
Boron increases the density of the ingot and improves the ability to
undergo hot plastic deformation.
Boron increases the hardenability of structural steel. The strength
(σu, σy) is also increased while ample ductility and toughness (δ, ψ, a) are
retained.
The favorable effect of small boron additions on the properties en-
ables steels with high mechanical properties to be developed on the basis
of low-alloy chromium-manganese and chromium grades.
The boron steels 20ХГР (0.17–0.24 % C, 0.8–1.15 % Cr, 0.7–
1.0 % Mn, and 0.002–0.005 % B) and 35XPA (0.3–0.38 % C, 0.8–
1.1 % Cr and 0.002–0.005 % B) have been recommended in the Russia to
replace the molybdenum steels 20XHM and 35XMA which are employed
in the automobile industry for various types of gears.
After carburizing, quenching from 860–880 °C in oil, and temper-
ing at 200 °C, steel 20ХГР will acquire the following mechanical proper-
ties: σu = 1000 MPa; σy = 800 MPa; δ = 9 %; ψ = 50 %; a = 8 kg⋅m/sm2.
Steel 40XP is used after hardening at 860 °C followed by tempering at
540 °C. After structural improvement, this steel develops the following prop-
erties: σu = 1000 MPa; σy = 800 MPa; δ = 12 %; ψ = 50 %; a = 9 kg⋅m/sm2.
The carburized steels 20ХГНР and 15X2H2TPA have found appli-
cations in the manufacture of large heavily-loaded machine parts.
It is necessary to note that boron increases the susceptibility of a
steel to overheating, as well as the deformation (warping) in hardening.
As a rule, carburized boron steels must be inherently fine-grained.
The use of coarse-grained steels often leads to the forming of hardening
cracks.
Another feature to be noted is that boron is effective only when
added to fully killed steels.
Nickel steels. Nickel, when added to a steel, substantially increases
the austenite stability and thereby reduces the critical cooling rate and in-
creases the hardenability. Nickel increases the strength and hardness char-
acteristics without any appreciable reduction in ductility and toughness.
The improvement in mechanical properties is based on the strengthening
of the ferrite and the formation of more dispersed structures after harden-
ing. Due to the high cost of nickel and the more effective application of
chromium-nickel steels, straight nickel steels find limited use.
Chromium-nickel steels have a high hardenability (through-
hardening can be achieved in parts over 75–100 mm in diameter or thick-
123
ness) and very high mechanical properties as well. They are extensively
employed for large machine parts of complex form operating under vibrat-
ing and dynamic loads.
The most widely used in the Soviet Union are the carburized steels
12XH3A and 12X2H4A (Table 3.10) which are found in such heavily
loaded components as gears, shafts, ball-joint pins, spindles of precision
machine tools, axles, rollers, etc.
Table 3.10 – Heat treatment and mechanical properties of chromium nickel steels
Mechanical properties
Heat treatment
(minimum)
Steel grade Hardening Tempering
σu, σy, δ, ψ, a,
Temperature, °C Quenching Tempera- Cooling
MPa MPa % % kg⋅m/sm2
First Second medium ture, °C medium
Water
12XH3A 860 780 Oil 180 1000 850 12 55 10
or oil
12X2H4A 860 780 Oil 180 Air 1200 1000 10 50 9
Water
37XH3A 820 – Oil 530 1100 900 10 50 6
or oil
18X2H4BA 950 850 Air 160 Air 1200 1050 12 55 11
When larger tools are hardened (of a diameter over 30 mm) the
layer with a high hardness is so thin, even upon quenching in water, that
the tools are not fit for cutting purposes.
Great disadvantages of carbon steels are their narrow range of hard-
ening temperatures and the necessity for rapid quenching in water or
aqueous alkali solutions (salts).
This leads to considerable deformation and warping and even to the
formation of cracks.
Therefore, tools of complex form with sharp changes in section and
with a large length-to-diameter ratio should not be made of carbon steels.
Warping and crack forming may be reduced somewhat by quenching in
water only to 200–250 °C with subsequent retarded cooling in oil. Stepped
quenching (martempering) is advisable for small-size tools (see ta-
ble 3.12). Good results may be obtained in applying induction hardening
to certain types of tools.
Advantages of carbon steels are their cheapness, low hardness
(HB 170–180), good machinability and formability in the annealed state,
and the fact that they retain a tough unhardened core due to their low
hardenability. This last factor improves their resistance to breakage under
vibration and impacts.
Carbon steels are only applicable for tools operating at low cutting
speeds since their hardness is substantially reduced at temperatures above
190–200 °C.
127
Table 3.12 – Heat treating procedures for cutting-tool steels
Steel Annealing Hardening Hardness after Tempering Hardness after
Applications
grade temperature, °C Temperature, °C Quenching medium quenching HRC temperature, °C tempering HRC
Aqueous solution Lathe and planer
У10
770–790 of alkalis (salts) 63–65 single-point tools,
У12
750–770 or water followed by oil 150–160 61–62 drills, files,
(У10А,
780–800 Molten salt (150–160 °C) 61–63 round threading
У12А)
790–810 Oil 61–62 dies, taps, etc.
835–850 Oil 62–65 Drills, reamers,
X 770–790 160–180 61–63
840–850 Molten salt (150–160 °C) 61–64 taps, etc.
850–870 Oil 62–64 Milling cutters,
reamers, core
9XC 780–800 170–190 61–62
860–875 Molten salt (150–200 °C) 61–63 drills, broaches,
threading dies, etc.
820–840 Oil 63–65 Milling cutters,
ХВГ 770–790 170–185 62–63 reamers, taps,
830–850 Molten salt (150–160 °C) 62–64
broaches, etc.
Note. Holding time at 150–160 °C, oil, for tools up to 5–12 mm in diameter – 1–2 minutes.
Alloy steels for cutting tools are of the eutectoid and hypereutectoid
type. After hardening, they acquire high hardness and wear resistance but
not particularly high resistance to self-tempering. They are applicable only
in cases when the cutting edges are not heated above 200–225 °C.
Compared to carbon steels, the alloyed grades have somewhat more
wear resistance and less susceptibility to overheating. They harden deeper
and their tendency to deform and warp is less since they are quenched in
oil and retain a larger amount of austenite.
Alloy steels may be recommended for tools having a tendency to
warp in hardening (long thin taps, reamers, etc.) and for large-size tools
(for example, taps and reamers) over 35 or 40 mm in diameter. Such large
tools made of carbon steels would have a hardened layer too thin for prac-
tical purposes.
The most extensively used of these steels for cutting tools are
grades 9XC and ХВГ. Steel 9XC has an increased hardenability. Either
stepped or isothermal quenching (martempering or austempering) may be
applied, and this steel retains its high hardness at temperatures up to 225–
250 °C. Thus its cutting properties are 10 to 15 per cent higher than those
of carbon steel. No appreciable deformation is observed after martemper-
ing or austempering tools made of steel 9XC.
Disadvantages of this grade are the tendency to decarburize in heat-
ing and the high hardness (HB 217–247) in the annealed state which im-
pairs machinability.
Due to the presence of tungsten carbides in steel ХВГ, it has higher
hardness and wear resistance than steels X and 9XC but is more expensive.
High-speed steels are distinguished for their high red-hardness, i.e.,
their capability to retain their structure (martensite), hardness, and wear
resistance at the high temperatures generated on the cutting edges when
machining at high cutting speeds. High-speed steels are designed for the
manufacture of high-production tools with high wear resistance which
must retain their cutting properties at temperatures up to 600–620 °C. The
composition of some high-speed steels is given in Table 3.13.
Table 3.13 – Compositions of high-speed steels
Chemical composition, %
Steel grade
С Cr W V
P18 0.7–0.8 3.8–4.4 17.5–19.0 1.0–1.4
P9 0.85–0.95 3.8–4.4 8.5–10.0 2.0–2.6
If the steel has not been hot worked to a sufficient degree, the pri-
mary (eutectic) and secondary carbides will not be uniformly distributed.
Neither will they be uniform in size and in the form in which they precipi-
tate from the matrix (network, bands or stringers along the direction of
working, etc.).
The mechanical properties of the steel are lowered to a great extent by
this lack of carbide uniformity. It also affects the red-hardness and makes it
difficult to obtain uniform high hardness after quenching. Large blanks usu-
ally undergo additional working to eliminate carbide nonuniformity.
130
When high-speed steel is heated above point A1 (820–860 °C), pear-
lite is transformed into austenite. Further heating above the A1 range will
dissolve the secondary carbides in the austenite to increase its degree of
alloyage. Due to the presence of a considerable amount of excess (pri-
mary) carbides, not dissolved in the austenite, high-speed steel retains its
fine grained structure even when heated to high temperatures (to 1200–
1240 °C for steel P18 and to 1190–1220 °C for steel P9). Heating to
higher temperatures will cause appreciable grain growth. The transforma-
tion of the austenite in cooling depends upon the amount of alloying ele-
ments dissolved in the austenite in heating and upon the cooling rate. The
higher the heating temperature, i.e., the larger the amount of alloying ele-
ments in the austenite, the higher its stability will be in the pearlite range,
as well as in the range of intermediate (bainite) transformation.
High-speed steel usually undergoes isothermal annealing, after
forging, to improve its machinability, reduce the hardness, and to prepare
the structure for hardening. For annealing, the steel is heated to 830–
850 °C, after it is cooled to a temperature of 720–750 °C, which corre-
sponds to the range of pearlite decomposition, and held at this temperature
from 4 to 6 hours to complete the austenite decomposition. After this, the
steel is cooled with the furnace to 600 °C at a rate of 40 to 50 °C per hour
and then, finally, it is cooled in air.
The steel must be hardened and tempered to impart red-hardness to
the tool (Figure 3.3).
133
For this reason, low-alloy steels can be welded, and cutting tools can be run
hot without affecting the solution-hardening contribution to their strength.
The tool steels are an excellent example of how metals can be
strengthened by precipitation hardening. Traditionally, cutting tools have
been made from 1 % carbon steel with about 0.3 % of silicon (Si) and
manganese (Mn). Used in the quenched and tempered state they are hard
enough to cut mild steel and tough enough to stand up to the shocks of
intermittent cutting. But they have one serious drawback. When cutting
tools are in use they become hot: woodworking tools become warm to the
touch, but metalworking tools can burn you. It is easy to “run the temper”
of plain carbon metalworking tools and the resulting drop in hardness will
destroy the cutting edge. The problem can be overcome by using low cut-
ting speeds and spraying the tool with cutting fluid. But this is an expen-
sive solution – slow cutting speeds mean low production rates and expen-
sive products. A better answer is to make the cutting tools out of high-
speed steel. This is an alloy tool steel containing typically 1 % C,
0.4 % Si, 0.4 % Mn, 4 % Cr, 5 % Mo, 6 % W, 2 % V and 5 % Co. The
steel is used in the quenched and tempered state (the Mo, Mn and Cr give
good hardenability) and owes its strength to two main factors: the fine
dispersion of Fe3C that forms during tempering, and the solution harden-
ing that the dissolved alloying elements give.
Interesting things happen when this high-speed steel is heated to
500–600 °C. The Fe3C precipitates dissolve and the carbon that they re-
lease combines with some of the dissolved Mo, W and V to give a fine
dispersion of Mo2C, W2C and VC precipitates. This happens because Mo,
W and V are strong carbide formers. If the steel is now cooled back down
to room temperature, we will find that this secondary hardening has made
it even stronger than it was in the quenched and tempered state. In other
words, “running the temper” of a high-speed steel makes it harder, not
softer; and tools made out of high-speed steel can be run at much higher
cutting speeds (hence the name).
134
Snap gauges, scales, rules and other flat, long measuring tools are
usually made of steel plate grades 15 and 15X. They are carburized and
quenched to obtain a working surface of the required high hardness and
wear resistance.
Die steels. Dies for blanking, heading, and drawing operations,
draw plates for wire drawing, and other tools for the cold working of met-
als are made of steels which possess sufficient toughness in addition to
their high hardness and wear resistance (Table 3.14).
Small dies of simple form are frequently made of the carbon steels
У10А and У12А (see table 3.11) which are easily machinable in the an-
nealed condition.
This facilitates die manufacture. Larger and more complex dies are
made of the alloy steels grade X, 9XC, and others (see table 3.11) which
have increased hardenability and are oil-quenched.
The application of carburizing, cyaniding, and chromizing will pro-
vide satisfactory results in increasing the wear resistance of alloy steel
dies which operate in difficult conditions but are not subject to large im-
pact loads.
Cold cutting and working dies, requiring high wear resistance and
increased toughness (complex punches and dies, deep drawing lower dies
for sheet metal, profiled rolls of complex form, thread rolling dies, etc.)
are made of high-chromium steel of the carbidic (cementitic) class,
Grades X12, X12M, Х12Ф1, and Х12Ф. High-chromium steels possess a
very high hardenability (up to 300–400 mm), exceptional wear resistance,
and undergo almost no dimensional changes after quenching.
Cast high-chromium steel has a eutectic structure. This is broken up
in subsequent hot working to form separate carbides. Even with low re-
duction in forging these carbides become arranged in bands or lines along
the direction of metal flow and this impairs the quality of the steel.
In annealed steels of the X12M and Х12Ф type, the carbide phase
comprises complex carbides such as (Cr, Fe)7C3. Steel X12, with an in-
creased carbon content, also contains carbides of the cementite type
(Fe, Cr)3C. Annealed steel X12M may contain up to 13–16 % carbides.
When the steel is heated above the eutectoid temperature, the car-
bides dissolve and alloy the austenite with chromium. Upon heating to
1100–1200 °C most of the vanadium (for steel Х12Ф) and molybdenum
(for steel X12M) is also dissolved. The stability of the supercooled austen-
ite depends to a considerable extent upon the heating temperature in hard-
ening. The higher the heating temperature, the more the austenite will be-
come alloyed and the higher its stability will be.
135
Table 3.14 – Chemical compositions of certain die steels
Chemical composition, %
Steel grade
С Mn Si Cr W V Ni Other elements
Steels for cold-working dies
Х12Ф1 1.2–1.4 ≤0.35 ≤0.4 11–12.5 – 0.7–0.9 – –
Х12Ф 1.4–1.6 ≤0.35 ≤0.4 11–12.5 – 0.2–0.4 – –
X12M 1.45–1.7 ≤0.35 ≤0.4 11–12.5 – 0.15–0.3 – Mo 0.4–0.6
X12 2.0–2.3 ≤0.35 ≤0.4 11.5–13 – – – –
4XB2C 0.35–0.44 0.2–0.4 0.6–0.9 1.0–1.3 2.0–2.5 – – –
6XB2C 0.55–0.65 0.2–0.4 0.5–0.8 1.0–1.3 2.2–2.7 – – –
5ХВГ 0.55–0.7 0.9–1.2 0.15–0.35 0.5–0.9 0.5–0.8 – – –
Steels for hammer dies
5XHB 0.5–0.6 0.5–0.8 0.15–0.35 0.5–0.8 0.4–0.6 – 1.4–1.8 –
5XHCB 0.5–0.6 0.3–0.6 0.6–0.9 1.3–1.6 0.4–0.6 – 0.8–1.2 –
5XHC 0.5–0.6 0.3–0.6 0.6–0.9 1.3–1.6 – – – Mo 0.15–0.3
5XHT 0.5–0.6 0.5–0.8 ≤ 0.35 0.9–1.25 – – 1.4-1.8 Ti 0.08–0.15
Steels for press-moulds
3X2B8 0.3–0.4 0.2–0.4 ≤ 0.35 2.2–2.7 7.5–9.0 – ≤ 0.3 Ti 0.2–0.5
4X8B2 0.35–0.45 0.2–0.4 ≤ 0.35 7–9 2.0–3.0 – ≤ 0.3 –
There are two main procedures for heat treating dies of high-
chromium steels:
1 Hardening (heating temperatures: steel X12Ф1 – 1070–1090 °C,
X12M – 1020–1040 °C, and X12 – 1000–l040 °C; quenching in oil) fol-
lowed by low tempering (150–170 °C). The hardness after this treatment
will be HRC 61–63.
Steel acquires high hardness (HRC 61–63) and wear resistance after
this treatment. If increased toughness is required at the expense of hard-
ness (decreased to HRC 57–59) and if the dimensions of the part are to be
reduced in comparison to those obtained after quenching, the tempering
temperature is raised to 200–275 °C.
Dies operating under very heavy impact loads are tempered at 400–
425 °C.
2 Hardening (heating temperatures: steel X12M – 1115–1130 °C and
Х12Ф1 – 1150–1170 °C; quenching in oil or molten salt at a temperature of
400–500 °C) followed by repeated tempering (2 or 3 operations) at 510–
520 °C. The steel is not very hard (HRC 44–52), directly after quenching,
due to the large amount of retained austenite. During repeated tempering,
retained austenite is transformed into martensite and the hardness is in-
creased to HRC 60–61. A single tempering at 510–520 °C will prove suffi-
cient if a sub-zero treatment at 80 °C below zero is applied after quenching.
The first procedure will provide high mechanical properties and
minimum deformation.
Steel, to which the second procedure has been applied, acquires
high red-hardness and wear resistance. This procedure is recommended
for dies operating at 400–500 °C and also for cutting tools (milling cut-
ters). It must be noted, however, that quenching from high temperatures is
associated with large dimensional changes and does not ensure high me-
chanical properties.
Disadvantages of high-chromium steels are their poor machinability
in the annealed state (hardness HB 207–269) and their lowered mechani-
cal properties in instances when carbide inhomogeneity is sharply defined.
Steels with increased toughness, such as Grades 4XB2C, 6XB2C,
5ХВГ, and others, are used in the manufacture of air-hammer chisels,
trimming dies, cold-cutting shear blades, and other tools with thin work-
ing edges. These steels acquire a hardness of HRC 50–55 after quenching
with subsequent tempering at 250–270 °C.
Steels for hammer dies used in the hot working of metals must have
sufficiently high mechanical properties at elevated temperatures; they must
resist softening after repeated heating, have a high hardenability, minimum
deformation upon heat treatment, and no susceptibility to temper brittleness.
137
Steel 5XHCB is usually employed for making large dies (length of
a side > 400 mm), steels 5XHB and 5XHCB for medium-sized dies, and
steel 5XHC for small dies (with the shortest side up to 300 mm in length).
These dies are hardened by heating to 840–870 °C and quenching in oil
(or in air). This is followed by tempering at 520–570 °C to relieve the
stresses and to obtain a homogeneous sorbite structure.
After tempering, the hardness will be within HRC 35–45 (HB 321–430).
The components of die-casting dies for copper and aluminium al-
loys are made of steel 3X2B8; steel 4X8B2 is used for these components
in die casting zinc alloys. These two grades of steel have good thermal
endurance, high mechanical properties at elevated temperatures, and they
are corrosion and erosion resistant. They are employed for heading dies
and for moulds that operate for prolonged periods, at high temperatures.
140
Table 3.15 – Heat treatment and applications of chromium stainless steels
Steels
Heat treatment Applications
grade
Parts requiring high ductility and subject
Hardening: heat to 1000–1050 °C, to impact loads (turbine blades, valves
1X13 quench in water (or oil), of hydraulic presses, cracking plant fittings,
and temper at 700–790 °C bolts, nuts, household appliances, etc.).
Good resistance in air, in water and in steam
Hardening: heat to 1000–1050 °C
The same parts but with higher hardness
2X13 quench in water (or oil),
(3X13 has a hardness of 48 HRC)
and temper at 660–770 °C
Hardening: heat to 1000–1050 °C,
Higher resistance in air, as well
3X13 quench in oil, and temper
as in water and steam
at 200–300°C
Cutting and measuring tools, surgical
Hardening: heat to 1050–1100 °C,
instruments, carburettor needles, and ball
4X13 quench in oil, and temper
bearings (hardness – 50 HRC). Corrosion
at 200–300 °C
resistance tower than for preceding grades
Ball bearings, high-quality knives, bushings,
X18 Ditto globe valves, and other parts subject to wear
and requiring increased corrosion resistance
Consequently, the higher the carbon content, the lower the corro-
sion resistance will be. The corrosion resistance of a part is increased by
heat treatment and polishing. Machine parts made on automatic screw
machines and thereby requiring improved machinability (screws, nuts, and
other threaded parts) are made of steel X14 ≤ 0.15 % C, 13–15 % Cr, and
0.2–0.4 % S) which contains more sulphur than the other grades. Its resis-
tance to atmospheric corrosion is quite satisfactory.
Acid-resistant steels are highly resistant to corrosion under the ac-
tion of various aggressive media. They include ferritic steels with a high
chromium content (X17, X25, and X28) and austenitic chromium-nickel
steels (Table 3.16).
The most important of the acid-resistant steel series are the austen-
itic chromium-nickel steels listed in Table 3.16. Their structure in the
equilibrium state consists of two phases ((austenite + carbides (Cr,
Fe)23C6). Only alloys containing less than 0.04 % С have structures free of
excess carbides. After hardening (heating to 1100–1150 °C and quenching
in water), these steels acquire a single-phase structure.
Due to the low rate of chromium diffusion at temperatures below
500 °C, the austenite is stable and no carbides precipitate from it. The
hardened steel has a comparatively low strength but high ductility. Its me-
chanical properties are: σu = 550–580 MPa, σy = 200–220 MPa, δ = 45–
40 % and ψ = 60–55 %.
141
Table 3.16 – Compositions and applications of chromium-nickel acid-resistant steels
Steels Chemical composition, %
Certain applications and characteristics
grade С Mn Cr N1 Ti
1X18H9 ≤ 0.14 ≤ 2 17–20 8–11 –Floats and fairing of seaplanes, fuel tanks,
nonmagnetic parts of ship navigation
instruments, devices exposed to sea-water
and weak alkalis. Heat treatment
2X18H9 0.15–0.25 ≤ 2 17–20 8–11 –
is applied, after welding and other
fabricating processes involving heating,
to prevent intercrystalline corrosion
Used in the following industries: nitrogen
(acid tanks, absorption towers, etc.), paint
1X18H9T ≤ 0.12 ≤ 2 17–20 8–11 < 0.8 and varnish (autoclaves, mixers, etc.),
coal (pumps and devices operating in
acidic waters), and dairy (cans and flasks)
143
Steels X6C, X9C2, X6CM, and X10C2M contain large amounts of
chromium and silicon. They are known as silchrome steels. These steels
are of the martensitic class and require a preliminary heat treatment to im-
prove their machinability (high tempering at 820–850 °C). Final heat
treatment consists of hardening by heating to 1040–1100 °C, quenching,
and then tempering at 750–850 °C to stabilise the structure which is a fer-
rite-carbide mixture.
Silchromes are susceptible to temper brittleness and grain growth.
Molybdenum may be added, as in steel X6CM, to eliminate temper brit-
tleness.
Heat-resistant steels retain sufficient strength and scale resistance
at high temperatures. Such steels must resist creep well and possess high
short-time and rupture strengths.
Heat resistance depends upon the strength of the interatomic bonds
and upon the structure of an alloy. Alloying increases the heat resistance
of alloys having the same base by increasing the intensity of interatomic
attraction and raising the recrystallisation temperature.
These changes impede the development of plastic deformation at
elevated temperatures. This resistance to plastic deformation is also in-
creased by the formation of a heterogeneous structure and by breaking up
the blocks of mosaic structure.
The heat resistance of steels and alloys is improved by alloying
elements that increase their tendency to age, and thereby they are hard-
ened by the precipitation of microscopic particles that impede plastic de-
formation at high temperatures.
Austenitic steels are more heat resistant than ferritic grades be-
cause, in the former, such processes as recovery and recrystallisation take
place at higher temperatures. Larger grain size also increases heat resis-
tance.
Nickel-base alloys are extensively used as heat-resistant materials.
Iron-base heat-resistant alloys may be classified into the following
two groups:
1 Austenitic-carbidic steels (ЭИ69, ЭИ388, ЭИ481, ЭИ590, and
ЭИ374) whose high heat resistance is associated with the strengthening of
the austenite by the formation of highly dispersed carbide phases in age-
ing. In steel ЭИ69 the carbide phase consists principally of Cr23C3; in
steels ЭИ388 and ЭИ481 it consists of Cr23C6 and VC.
2 Austenitic-intermetallic steels (ЭИ696) achieve their high heat re-
sistance by the formation of intermetallic phases Fe2Ti and Ni3Ti or the
intermediate α’-phase during ageing or operation at high temperatures.
144
Heat-resistant alloys ЭИ437, ЭИ617, and others are of the nickel-
base type. The nickel forms a solid solution with the chromium, tungsten,
and molybdenum. During ageing, aluminium, titanium, and boron form
excess intermetallic phases. In the initial period of solid solution decom-
position, an intermediate α'-phase is formed on the basis of the compound
Ni3(Al, Ti, Cr). It has a face-centred cubic lattice, coherently bound to the
solid solution. The stable phases, nickel titanide (Ni3Ti) with a hexagonal
lattice and Ni3Al are formed after prolonged ageing at high temperatures
(800–900 °C). Carbides and borides may also be formed in addition to
these phases. Nickel-base alloys acquire their high heat resistance due to
precipitation hardening, associated with the formation of intermetallic
phases, and by the alloying of the solid solution with molybdenum and
tungsten. These alloying elements increase the intensity of interatomic
attraction and impede the softening of the alloy at high temperatures. The
heat treating procedures given in Table 3.18 provide for maximum heat
resistance of these alloys.
Table 3.18 – Heat treatment of heat-resistant alloys
Grade Heat treatment
ЭИ388 Quenching from 180 °С in water and ageing at 800 °С for 8–10 hours
ЭИ481 Quenching from 1140-1200 °С and double ageing: 1) at 690 °С for 16 hours
and 2) at 780–800 °С for 10 to 16 hours
ЭИ696 Quenching from 1100–1200°С and ageing at 700–800 °С
ЭИ437 Quenching from 1080 °С in air and ageing at 700 °С
ЭИ617 Double quenching: 1) from 1200 °С (holding time 2 hours) in air, and 2) from
1050 °С (holding time 4 hours) in air, followed by ageing at 800 °С for 16 hours
145
Heat-resistant alloys are very difficult to work and to machine.
The first group of certain heat-resistant alloys includes iron-base al-
loys hardened by heat treatment and “hot-cold working”.
Timken alloys 16–25–6 and 19-9DL are used in the manufacture of
turbo-superchargers and gas turbine rotors after a reduction of 22–25 % at
650–760 °C (hot-cold working). This procedure increases the tensile
strength and the yield point. No additional heat treatment is required by
these alloys.
Alloys A-286 and Discaloy-24 which contain small additions of ti-
tanium and aluminium, are hardened by heat treatment.
Cobalt-nickel-chromium-iron alloys are intended for service at
higher temperatures. They are usually employed in the solution treated or
solution treated and aged condition. The strength properties of these alloys
are improved by the addition of molybdenum, tungsten, and niobium. Ti-
tanium and aluminium, which form intermetallic compounds, may be
added to provide greater response to heat treatment.
Development of the high-strength heat treatable nickel-base alloys
such as Inconel X, 550; Inco 700; M-252; and Waspaloy was based on the
necessity for new alloys to replace, in part, the cobalt-base alloys (such as
S-816) since cobalt is very expensive.
The fourth group lists the cast and wrought cobalt-base alloys
which have been extensively used for aircraft gas turbine guide vanes and
buckets.
Cast alloys, which contain more carbon and have coarser grain
structure, are more heat resistant than the wrought alloys.
Alloys of molybdenum with titanium, niobium, vanadium, and co-
balt have exceptionally high heat-resisting properties. When reliable
methods are found for protecting molybdenum alloys from gas corrosion,
they will lead among materials designed for high-temperature service.
Scale-resistant alloys with high electrical resistivity. This group in-
cludes scale-resistant alloys and steels with high electrical resistivity in-
tended for making round and flat heating elements of electrical appliances
(for example, furnaces). Ferritic steels, containing chromium and alumin-
ium which sharply increase the scale resistance and electrical resistivity
(X13Ю4-fechral, 1Х17Ю5, 0Х17Ю5, 0Х25Ю5, and 1Х25Ю5), are ex-
tensively employed for this purpose, as well as chromium-nickel alloys
(of the nichrome type) such as X15H60 and X20H80. The resistivity of
these alloys ranges from 1.15 (for X20H80) to 1.3 (for Х13Ю4) ohm-
sq mm per m and they have a scale-resistance from 850 °C (for Х13Ю4)
to 1100–1150 °C (for 1Х25Ю5 and X20H80).
146
3.2 Non-ferrous alloys
The term non-ferrous alloy is used for all alloys where iron is not
the main constituent, e.g. alloys of aluminium, of copper, of magnesium,
etc. The following are some of the general properties and uses of non-
ferrous alloys in common use in engineering.
Aluminium alloys – Low density, good electrical and thermal con-
ductivity, high corrosion resistance. Tensile strengths of the order of 150
to 400 MPa, tensile modulus about 70 GPa. Used for metal boxes, cook-
ing utensils, aircraft bodywork and parts.
Copper alloys – Good electrical and thermal conductivity, high cor-
rosion resistance. Tensile strengths of the order of 180 to 300 MPa, tensile
modulus about 20 to 28 GPa. Used for pump and valve parts, coins, in-
strument parts, springs, screws.
Magnesium alloys – Low density, good electrical and thermal con-
ductivity. Tensile strengths of the order of 250 MPa and tensile modulus
about 40 GPa. Used as castings and forgings in the aircraft industry where
weight is an important consideration.
Nickel alloys – Good electrical and thermal conductivity, high corro-
sion resistance, can be used at high temperatures. Tensile strengths between
about 350 and 1400 MPa, tensile modulus about 220 GPa. Used for pipes
and containers in the chemical industry where high resistance to corrosive
atmospheres is required, food processing equipment, gas turbine parts.
Titanium alloys – Low density, high strength, high corrosion resis-
tance, can be used at high temperatures. Tensile strengths of the order of
1000 MPa, tensile modulus about 110 GPa. Used in aircraft for compres-
sor discs, blades and casings, in chemical plant where high resistance to
corrosive atmospheres is required.
Zinc alloys – Low melting points, good electrical and thermal con-
ductivities, high corrosion resistance, tensile strength about 300 MPa, ten-
sile modulus about 100 GPa. Used for car door handles, toys, car carburet-
tor bodies – components that in general are produced by pouring the liquid
metal into dies.
As an example of a non-ferrous alloy, consider copper alloys. Pure
copper is a soft material with low tensile strength. For many engineering
purposes it is alloyed with other metals. The exception is where high elec-
trical conductivity is required. Pure copper has a better conductivity than
the alloys. The following indicates the names given to the various types of
copper alloys:
- Copper with zinc – Brasses;
147
- Copper with tin – Bronzes;
- Copper with tin and phosphorus – Phosphor bronzes;
- Copper with tin and zinc – Gunmetals;
- Copper with aluminium – Aluminium bronzes;
- Copper with nickel – Cupro-nickels;
- Copper with zinc and nickel – Nickel silvers;
- Copper and silicon – Silicon bronze;
- Copper and beryllium – Beryllium bronze.
Brasses with between 5 and 20 % zinc are called gilding metals
and, as the name implies, are used for architectural and decorative items to
give a “gilded” or golden color. Cartridge brass is copper with 30 % zinc.
One of its main uses is for cartridge cases, items which require high duc-
tility for the deep drawing process used to make them. The term common
or basis brass is used for copper with 37 % zinc. This is a good alloy for
general use with cold-working processes and is used for fasteners and
electrical connectors. It does not have the high ductility of those brasses
with less zinc. Copper with 40 % zinc is called Muntz metal.
The changes in the properties of brasses when the amount of zinc is
changed arises from changes in the structure. Brasses with between 0 and
35 % zinc form one type of structure, termed alpha, 5 % and 45 % there is
a mixture of this alpha structure and another structure termed beta. It is
this change in structure, i.e. the way the atoms of copper and zinc are
packed together, that is responsible for the abrupt changes in properties of
brass at 35 % zinc.
148
2) Refractory rare metals – titanium, zirconium, hafnium, vana-
dium, niobium, tantalum, tungsten, molybdenum, and rhenium.
3) Scattered metals – indium, thallium, gallium, germanium, haf-
nium, selenium, tellurium, and rhenium. The metals of this group are of
prime importance in semiconductor engineering. According to their prop-
erties, selenium and tellurium should be considered to be metalloids.
4) Rare-earth metals (Lanthanide series) which include lanthanum
and fourteen elements from cerium to lutetium, inclusively.
5) Radioactive rare metals. These include the naturally occurring
radioactive elements (polonium, francium, radium, actinium, protoactin-
ium, thorium, and uranium), artificially produced metals (technetium,
promethium, and astatine), and the transuranium elements (neptunium,
plutonium, americium, and others). The radioactive properties of these
metals determine their fields of application (nuclear fuel, flaw detection,
etc.) and, especially, their processing techniques.
General characteristics of certain rare metals. Brief characteristics
follow for the more extensively used rare metals in industry.
Most interesting of these are the refractory group which are becom-
ing more and more important in modern engineering and especially in its
newest fields-nuclear and jet aircraft engineering.
Tungsten (W) – [Specific gravity – 19.3, Melting point –
3400 ± 50 °C] – Wire, sheets, and forgings, used in the production of in-
candescent lamps, X-ray apparatus, high-vacuum amplifiers, radio appara-
tus, etc.; also used as an alloying element in steel.
Characteristic features of tungsten are its high melting point, low
thermal coefficient of expansion (4.44 · 10–6), high electrical resistivity
(0.055 ohm-mm2/mm), and good corrosion resistance upon being exposed
to the atmosphere and certain acids (hydrochloric, sulphuric, nitric, and
others). Tungsten easily oxidises when heated above 400–500 °C. The
mechanical properties depend on preceding treatment. Tungsten wire has
the following properties: σu = 1100–4150 MPa, δ = 0–4 % and
E = 350 000–380 000 MPa.
Tungsten alloys have found certain applications. An alloy, for in-
stance, containing 20–25 % Mo has a linear coefficient of thermal expansion
near to that of refractory glass and this alloy is used in electrical high-
vacuum engineering in cases when a high electrical resistivity is required.
Alloys of tungsten with copper or with silver (5 to 40 %) obtained by pow-
der metallurgy techniques, display high resistance to wear and electrical ero-
sion in conjunction with good electrical and thermal conductivity. They are
widely used for electrical contacts which operate under severe conditions.
149
Molybdenum (Mo) – [Specific gravity – 10.2, Melting point –
2622 ± 10 °C] – Wire and strip used in the production of incandescent
lamps, in electrical high-vacuum engineering, for making electrical heat-
ing elements of high-temperature furnaces, and also as an alloying ele-
ment in steel.
Molybdenum has a high melting point, low thermal coefficient of
expansion (6.35 · 10–6) and a high electrical resistivity (0.0517 ohm-
mm2/mm).
Depending on the purity, extraction method, and preceding working
and heat treatment, the mechanical properties of molybdenum may vary in
wide ranges.
The mechanical properties listed in Table 3.19 refer to molybdenum
after undergoing cold reduction (35–90 %) and recrystallization. The duc-
tility increases with the degree of reduction.
Table 3.19 – Mechanical properties of molybdenum
Mechanical properties
Production method
σu, MPa σy, MPa ψ, %
Smelting 490–540 340–370 8–72
Powder-metallurgy 530–540 380–450 8–72
150
vacuum engineering, as well as for the production of copper- and magne-
sium-base alloys; deoxidant and alloying element in steel, etc.
Pure zirconium is soft; it has high ductility and good resistance to
attack in a number of corrosive media. Impurities and absorbed gases
make zirconium brittle. Zirconium can be worked, both hot and cold, with
ease, its machinability is fair, and it can be arc-welded in an argon atmos-
phere. The mechanical properties may vary in wide ranges depending on
the method of production and previous treatment (σu = 200–450 MPa and
δ = 20–30 %). Zirconium alloys with Co, Nb, Si, Ti, V, and others have
higher strengths (σu up to 600–1000 MPa and δ = 1–24 %).
Zirconium and its alloys have a low thermal-neutron-capture cross-
section. This, in conjunction with their high corrosion resistance to radio-
active coolants, is the reason why they have become recognised as a valu-
able structural material for atomic-power reactors.
Additions of Sn, Ni, Fe, and Cr, which have no practical influence
on its thermal-neutron-capture cross-section, increase the corrosion resis-
tance of zirconium in water at high temperatures and pressures.
Tantalum (Та) – [Specific gravity – 16.6, Melting point –
2996 ± 50 °C] – Electrodes of vacuum tube amplifiers; anodes, grids, and
other parts of electronic tubes; for chemical apparatus; in the production
of cemented carbides, etc.
Tantalum resembles niobium very closely in its physicochemical,
mechanical, and fabrication properties.
Ductile niobium and tantalum are produced either by powder metal-
lurgy or by an arc-melting process. They are worked cold with intermedi-
ate annealing in a high vacuum.
Niobium (Nb) – [Specific gravity – 8.55, Melting point –
2415 ± l5 °C] – Parts of nuclear reactors (jackets of fuel elements, cooling
tubes); sheets, strips, and tubing for apparatus in the chemical industries.
Because of its high melting point, good corrosion resistance and low
thermal-neutron-capture cross-section (1.1–1.2 Barns), niobium has found
extensive applications as a structural material in nuclear engineering.
Niobium has the following mechanical properties (for as-annealed
sheet): σu =340–420 MPa, δ = 20–30 % and E = 160 000 MPa.
Beryllium (Be) – [Specific gravity – 1.84, Melting point –
1284 °C] – X-ray windows of X-ray tubes as a material penetrable to X-
rays; sound-conducting components of acoustic apparatus; in nuclear reac-
tors as a neutron moderator; the production of copper-base, magnesium-
base, and other alloys.
151
Germanium (Ge) – [Specific gravity – 5.323, Melting point –
980 °C] – Semiconductor electronics.
The most important, so far, of the scattered rare metals are germa-
nium, with semiconductor properties, and rhenium. The letter's high elec-
trical resistivity, high corrosion resistance, and good thermoelectric prop-
erties provide opportunities for extensive applications of rhenium in elec-
trical engineering and radio electronics.
In all probability, the rare-earth metals of the cerium group will
soon be widely employed for alloying (modifying) steel to increase its
strength, ductility, hardenability, etc. For this purpose ferrocerium is
added to steel (0.3 to 2.5 kg per ton) or a mixture of rare earths, called
Misch metal, is introduced.
Cerium is used together with magnesium for inoculating cast iron.
Data are available on the improvement of the heat-resistant properties of
nichrome and magnesium alloys by the addition of rare-earth metals.
Recently, there has been a trend towards the application of rare-
earth metals as special-property materials. Cerium alloys, for example, are
used as a pyrophoric material for cigarette-lighter flints while the rare-
earth elements gadolinium, samarium, promethium, europium, and dys-
prosium are used as control rods of nuclear reactors due to their high
thermal-neutron-capture cross-sections.
152
References
Michael F. Ashby, David R.H. Jones. Engineering materials 1:
An introduction to properties, applications and design. Third edition.
2005. 0-7506-6380-4.
Michael F. Ashby, David R.H. Jones. Engineering materials 2:
An introduction to microstructures, processing and design. Third edition.
2006. 0-7506-6381-2.
Rajiv Asthana, Ashok Kumar, Narendra B. Dahotre. Materials
processing and manufacturing science. 2006. 0-7506-7716-3.
W. Bolton. Materials for engineering. Second edition. 2000. 0-7506-
4855-4.
William F. Hosford, Robert M. Caddell. Metal forming: Mechanics
and metallurgy. 1983. 0-13-577700-3.
Lakhtin Y.M. Engineering physical metallurgy. English translation.
Mir Publishers, 1975. 444 pp.
Novikov I. Theory of heat treatment of metals. English translation.
Mir Publishers, 1978. 435 pp.
153
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