| Accelerated
Cooling |
Cooling
a plate with water immediately following the final
rolling operation. Generally the plate is water
cooled from about 1400F to approximately 1100F.
|
| Alloy
Steel |
Steel
is considered to be an alloy steel when either
(1) the maximum of the range given for the content
of alloying elements exceeds one or more of the
following percentages: manganese 1.65, silicon
0.60, copper 0.60; or (2) a definite range or
definite minimum quantity of those elements considered
alloys is specified. For example, chromium, molybdenum
and nickel. |
| Annealing
|
A thermal
cycle involving heating to, and holding at, a
suitable temperature and then cooling at a suitable
rate, for such purposes as reducing hardness,
improving machinability, facilitating cold-working,
producing a desired microstructure, or obtaining
desired mechanical or other properties.
alternatively:
This
term is often used to define a heat treatment
process that produces some softening of the structure.
True annealing involves heating the steel to austenite
and holding for some time to create a stable structure.
The steel is then cooled very slowly to room temperature.
This produces a very soft structure, but also
creates very large grains, which are seldom desirable
because of poor toughness. |
| Austenitizing
|
The
process of forming the austenite phase by heating
a ferrous alloy into the transformation range
(partial austenitizing above the lower critical
temperature) or above this range (complete austenitizing
above the upper critical temperature).
|
| Bainite
|
A decomposition
product of austenite consisting of an aggregate
of ferrite and carbide. In general, it forms at
temperatures lower than those where very fine
pearlite forms, and higher than those where martensite
begins to form on cooling. |
Brinell
Hardness
(HB)
|
A measure
of hardness determined by the Brinell hardness
test, in which a hard steel ball under a specific
load is forced into the surface of the test material.
The number is derived by dividing the applied
load by the surface area of the resulting impression.
|
| Camber
|
As it
relates to plates, camber is the horizontal edge
curvature in the length, measured over the entire
length of the plate. |
| Continous
Casting |
The
most popular technique for solidifying steel.
Involves pouring steel into an intermediate tundish
before entering a water-cooled copper mold. A
solidifying steel strand is drawn through a machine
where it continues to cool before exiting the
machine. |
| Corrosion
|
The
gradual degradation of steel caused by atmosphere,
moisture or other agents. Can also lead to cracking
of various forms, e.g., stress corrosion cracking,
hydrogen induced cracking and sulfide stress cracking.
|
| Critical
Range (Temperatures) |
Synonymous
with "transformation range," which is
the preferred term. See Austenitizing.
|
| Decarburization
|
The
loss of carbon from the surface of steel as a
result of heating in a medium that reacts with
the carbon. |
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|
| Deoxidation
|
A process
used during melting and refining of steel to remove
and/or chemically combine oxygen from the molten
steel to prevent porosity in the steel when it
is solidified. |
| Ductility
|
The
ability of a material to deform plastically without
fracturing, usually measured by elongation or
reduction of area in a tension test, or, for flat
products such as sheet, by height of cupping in
an Erichsen test. |
| Elastic
Limit |
The
greatest stress a steel can see without permanent
deformation. |
| Elongation
|
A measure
of ductility, determined by the amount of permanent
extension achieved by a tension test specimen,
and expressed as a percentage of that specimen's
original gauge length (as: 25 percent in 2 inches).
|
| End-Quench
Hardenability Test (Jominy Test)
|
A method
for determining the hardenability of steel by
water-quenching one end of an austenitized cylindrical
test specimen and measuring the resulting hardness
at specified distances from the quench end.
|
| Ferrite
|
The
room temperature form of alpha iron, one of the
two major constituents of steel (cementite) in
which it acts as the solvent to form solid solutions
with such elements as manganese, nickel, silicon
and, to a small degree, carbon. |
| Flame
Hardening |
A hardening
process in which the surface is heated by direct
flame impingement and then quenched. |
| Hardenability
|
The
property of steel that determines the depth and
distribution of hardness induced on cooling after
austenitizing. |
| Hardness
|
The
resistance of a material to plastic deformation.
Usually measured in steels by the Brinell, Rockwell
or Vickers indentation-hardness test methods.
|
| Heat
Affected Zone |
Portion
of the base plate that was heated during a thermal
cutting or welding operation. |
| Ingot
Casting |
A technique
for solidifying molten steel by pouring it into
cast iron ingot molds. |
| Martensite
|
A microconstituent
or structure in hardened steel, characterized
by an acicular or needle-like pattern, and having
the maximum hardness of any of the decomposition
products of an austenite. |
| Microstructure
|
The
metallurgical structure for a steel determined
by polishing and etching samples and examining
them at high magnifications using light or electron
optical methods. Examples include ferrite, pearlite,
bainite and martensite. |
| Normalizing
|
A thermal
treatment consisting of heating to a suitable
temperature above the transformation range and
then cooling in still air. Usually employed to
improve toughness or machinability, or as a preparation
for further heat treatment. |
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|
| Pearlite
|
A microconstituent
of iron and steel consisting of a lamellar aggregate
of ferrite and cementite (a compound of iron and
carbonÜFe3C). |
| Preheating
|
A process
to heat plate prior to thermal cutting or welding
to prevent hard areas or cracking. |
| Quench
Cracking |
Occurs
in medium carbon and alloy steels during quenching
& tempering heat treatment. Proper part design,
heat treating and quenching practices will prevent
this problem. |
| Quenching
& Tempering |
A thermal
process used to increase the hardness and strength
of steel. It consists of austenitizing, then cooling
at a rate sufficient to achieve partial or complete
transformation to martensite. Tempering involves
reheating to a temperature below the transformation
range and then cooling at any rate desired. Tempering
improves ductility and toughness, but reduces
the quenched hardness by an amount determined
by the tempering temperature and time.
also
see Tempering |
Rockwell
Hardness
(HRB or HRC) |
A measure
of hardness determined by the Rockwell hardness
tester, by which a diamond spheroconical penetrator
(Rockwell C scale) or a hard steel ball (Rockwell
B scale) is forced into the surface of the test
material under sequential minor and major loads.
The difference between the depths of impressions
from the two loads is read directly on the arbitrarily
calibrated dial as the Rockwell hardness value.
|
| Sperodized
Annealing |
A prolonged
heating of the steel in a controlled-atmosphere
furnace at or near the lower critical point, followed
by retarded cooling in the furnaces, to produce
a lower hardness than can be obtained by regular
annealing. |
| Stainless
Steel |
Stainless steels are
commonly divided into five groups: martensitic stainless
steels, ferritic stainless steels, austenitic stainless
steels, duplex (ferritic-austenitic) stainless steels,
and precipitation-hardening stainless steels. Stainless
steels are available in the form of plate, sheet,
strip, foil, bar, wire, semi-finished products,
pipes, tubes, and tubing. Please
click here to obtain more information on Stainless
Steel. |
| Stress
Relieving |
A thermal
cycle involving heating to a suitable temperature,
usually 1000-1200F, holding long enough to reduce
residual stresses from either cold deformation
or thermal treatment, and then cooling slowly
enough to minimize the development of new residual
stresses. |
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|
| Tempering
|
The
carbon trapped in the martensite transformation
can be released by heating the steel below the
A1 transformation temperature. This release
of carbon from nucleated areas allows the structure
to deform plastically and relive some of its internal
stresses. This reduces hardness and increases
toughness, but it also tends to reduce tensile
strength. The degree of tempering is dependant
on temperature and time; temperature having the
greatest influence.
also
see Quenching & Tempering |
| Tensile
Strength |
The
maximum tensile stress in pounds per square inch
that a material is capable of sustaining, as developed
by a tension test. |
| Tension
Test |
A test
in which a machined or full-section specimen is
subjected to a measured axial load sufficient
to cause fracture. The usual information derived
includes the elastic properties, ultimate tensile
strength, and elongation and reduction of area.
|
| Thermal
Cutting |
A process
for cutting plate steel to size using an oxy-fuel,
plasma or laser heat source. Oxidation or burning
of steel is initiated by melting with the heat
source and then a stream of high parity oxygen
continues the reaction.
|
| Thermal
Treatment |
Any
operation involving the heating and cooling of
a metal or alloy in the solid state to obtain
the desired microstructure or mechanical properties.
|
| Tool
Steel |
Steel
with a higher carbon and alloy content. Used to
make tools for cutting, forming or otherwise shaping
a material into a part or component for a definite
use. |
| Toughness
|
An indication
of a steel's capacity to absorb energy, particularly
in the presence of a notch or a crack.
|
| Transformation
Ranges |
Those
ranges of temperatures within which austenite
forms during heating and transforms during cooling.
|
| Transformation
Temperature |
The
temperature at which a change in phase occurs.
The term is sometimes used to denote the limiting
temperature of a transformation range.
|
| Yield
Point |
The
minimum stress at which a marked increase in strain
occurs without an increase in stress, as indicated
by a sharp knee in the stress-strain curve.
|
| Yield
Strength |
The
stress at which a material exhibits a specified
deviation from the proportionality of stress to
strain. The deviation is expressed in terms of
strain, and in the offset method, usually a strain
of 0.2 percent is specified.
|
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