Steel

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Steel

The term ‘steel’ usually refers to plain carbon steel, defined as alloys of iron and carbon that do not contain more than 2% carbon and are malleable in block and or ingot form.

Steel will have chemical composition containing:

  • Carbon: 0.16-0.25%
  • Manganese: 1.5-16%
  • Silicon: 0.1-0.5%

Density And Thermal Properties

Density at 20ºC (kg/m3) Coefficient of thermal expansion x 10-6 /ºC Thermal Conductivity (W/mK) Specific Heat (J/ kgK)
Pure Iron 7870 12.1 78 455
Wrought low carbon steel 7860 12.2 65 480
Cast low carbon steel 7860 12.2 49 480
Medium carbon steel 7850 12.2 51 485
High carbon steel 7850 11.1 48 490

Source: Newnes Construction Materials Pocket Book

Vitreous enamel

A glazed surface finish produced by the application of a powdered inorganic glass, dry or suspended in water, to sheet steel parts and its subsequent fusion.

Vitreous enamel or porcelain enamel is ceramic made from kaolin, feldspar, and quartz

Stainless Steel

Constituents

The quality of stainless steel is imparted to steels by the presence of at least 12% of chromium in the steel. Oxidation and/ or corrosion produce a dense adherent oxide film which acts as a barrier to further corrosion.

Martensitic steel 13% chromium, and more than 0.1% carbon
Ferritic steel 13-17% chromium, and < 0.08% carbon
Austhentic steel Min 8% nickel, 17-24% chromium, max 0.1% carbon.

Added Elements

Nickel and manganese are important added elements that produce special characteristics such as strength, toughness, and ease of fabrication in stainless steels. Columbium (niobium), molybdenum, phosphorus, selenium, silicon, sulphur, titanium, and zirconium are also used to give special characteristics. [14]

Material Properties

Property
Density 8000 kg/m³
Young’s modulus 195 t/ 190 l kN/mm²
Thermal Conductivity 15 W/ mºC
Co-efficient of thermal expansion 1.6x 10-5/ ºC
Corrosion Resistance Excellent
Melting point 1425 ºC
Recyclability Excellent
Primary embodied energy 150 GJ/ m³

Source: Stacey, Michael; Component Design; Architectural Press; Oxford 2001.

Modulus Elasticity

Stainless Steel E (GPa)
Austenitic 190-205
Ferritic 200-215
Martensitic 215

Fire and Heat Resistance

Special high chromium and nickel-alloyed grades resist scaling and retain strength at high temperatures.

Corrosion Resistance

Lower alloyed grades resist corrosion in atmospheric and pure water environments, while high-alloyed grades can resist corrosion in most acids, alkaline solutions, and chlorine bearing environments, properties which are utilized in process plants.

Impact Resistance

The austenitic microstructure of the 300 series provides high toughness, from elevated temperatures to far below freezing, making these steels particularly suited to cryogenic applications.