Department of Mechanical Engineering The University of Lahore

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DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL

ENGINEERING
THE UNIVERSITY OF LAHORE

ASSIGNMENT OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS

“CLASSIFICATION OF STEEL”

SECTION C

SUBMITTED TO: DR.SALEEM SHUJA & MR.NAZIR


AHMED

FAHAD M.YASIN 01093009


MIRZA EHSAN ELAHI 01093055
MIRZA ABU BAKAR BAIG 01093096
RAZA SAIF 01093061
CLASSIFICATION OF STEELS

When the presence of carbon in the iron is below 2% then it is


termed as steels. And if the % carbon varies between 2%-6.8%
then they are termed as cast irons. Steels are generally classified
on various criteria’s
1) Amount of carbon
2) Amount of alloying elements of carbon
3) Amount of deoxidation
4) Usage

CLASSIFICATION ON THE BASIS OF AMOUNT OF


CARBON

1) Low carbon steels

Steels containing carbon percentage less than 0.3 are categorized


in to this section. Properties of these steels are
a. Soft in nature
b. Ductile
c. Malleable
d. High toughness (when compared to other types)
e. Easily welded
f. Low hot hardness temperature
g. Non hardenable by using heat treatment
APPLICATIONS

Some of the most common applications of these steels are


a. Due to high toughness these are generally used for producing
nails, rivets, gears etc.
b. Due to its cheap cost it is used for making form tools and also
wood working tools.
c. Steels having carbon percentage between 0.15 to 0.30 are
preferred to use in construction of structures, buildings

2) Medium carbon steels

The steels having carbon percentage between 0.3 to 0.6 comes


under this category. These steels have all the intermediate
properties of both the low carbon steels and high carbon steels.
These steels are not as hard as high carbon steels and not as
ductile as that of low carbon steels. These steels have little wear
resistance and also have relatively high hot hardness. Some of
the most common
applications of these steels are

APPLICATIONS

1) Used in automobiles for the manufacturing of axles, lock


washers, springs, wheels spokes, crank pins, cylinder liners,
2) These steels finds application in developing tires of a railway
wagon, and it is even used for rails
3) These steels are used for making form dies.
4) Wires can also be drawn from these steels
3)High carbon steel

High carbon steels have the carbon percentage in the range of


0.6 to 2%. These steels are otherwise called as tool steels. As due
to high hardness and wear resistance these steels are used for
making tools. Some of the properties of these steels are
1) High hardness
2) Brittle in nature
3) High wear resistance
4) Low toughness
5) Hardness can be improved by heat treatment
6) High hardenability

APPLICATIONS

1) Forging dies for forging industry


2) Hammers clips, vice jaws, drills, and many other machine shop
components
3) In automobiles for the manufacture of balls and races for ball
bearings
CLASSIFICATION ON THE BASIS OF ALLOYING
ELEMENT

Steels are also classified on the basis of alloying element being


added to the steels. The steels are classified in to two types

1- LOW ALLOY STEELS

Some of the most commonly used alloying elements are Nickel,


Chromium, Manganese, Tungsten, Molybdenum, and Vanadium. If
the percentage of alloying elements present in the steels
constitutes less than 10% then those steels are categorized as
low alloy steels.

2-HIGH ALLOY STEELS

All the steels, which contain alloying agents(Nickel, Chromium,


Manganese, Tungsten, Molybdenum, and Vanadium) greater than
10%, then they are categorized as high alloy steels.

CLASSIFICATION ON THE BASIS OF


DEOXIDATION

Deoxidized steel is steel that has a certain degree


of oxygen removed from the melt during the steelmaking process.
There are three types, ranging from fully deoxidized to slightly
deoxidized: killed, semi-killed and rimmed.
Types
Deoxidizing agents are added to the melt either before or after it
is tapped. Note that none of the various types are better than the
other, but that each is useful in its own regard
Killed
Killed steel is steel that has been completely deoxidized by the
addition of an agent before casting, so that there is practically no
evolution of gas during solidification. They are characterized by a
high degree of chemical homogeneity and freedom from gas
porosity. The steel is said to be "killed" because it will quietly
solidify in the mould, with no gas bubbling out. It is marked with a
"K" for identification purposes.
Common deoxidizing agents
include aluminium, ferrosilicon and manganese. Aluminium reacts
with the dissolved gas to form aluminium oxide. Aluminium also
has the added benefit of forming pin grain boundaries, which
prevent grain growth during heat treatments. For steels of the
same grade a killed steel will be harder than rimmed steel.
The main disadvantage killed steels is that it suffers from
deep pipe shrinkage defects. To minimize the amount of metal
that must be discarded because of the shrinkage, a large vertical
mold is used with a "hot top" refractory riser. Typical killed-steel
ingots have a yield of 80% by weight.
Commonly killed steels include alloy steels,stainless steels, heat
resisting steels, steels with a carbon content greater than 0.25%,
steels used for forgings, structural steels with a carbon content
between 0.15 and 0.25%, and some special steels in the lower
carbon ranges.It is also used for any steel castings. Note that as
the carbon content decreases the greater the problems with non-
metallicinclusions.
Semi-killed
Semi-killed steel is mostly deoxidized steel, but the carbon
monoxide left leaves blowhole type porosity distributed
throughout the ingot. The porosity eliminates the pipe found in
killed steel and increases the yield to approximately 90% by
weight. Semi-killed steel is commonly used for structural steel
with a carbon content between 0.15 to 0.25% carbon, because it
is rolled, which closes the porosity. It is also used
fordrawing applications.
Rimmed
Rimmed steel, also known as drawing quality steel, has little to no
deoxidizing agent added to it during casting which causes carbon
monoxide to evolve rapidly from the ingot. This causes small blow
holes in the surface that are later closed up in the hot
rolling process. Another result is the segregation of elements;
almost all of the carbon, phosphorus, and sulfur move to the
center of the ingot, leaving an almost perfect "rim" of pure iron on
the outside of the ingot. This gives the ingot an excellent surface
finish because of this iron rim, but also form the most segregated
composition. Most rimmed steel has a carbon content below
0.25% carbon, a manganese content below 0.6%, and is not
alloyed with aluminum, silicon, and titanium. This type of steel is
commonly used for cold-bending, cold-forming, cold-heading and,
as the name implies, drawing. Due to the non-uniformity of
alloying elements it is not recommended for hot-
working applications

CLASSIFICATION ON THE BASIS OF USAGE

On the basis of form of the tool and usage these are classified in
to
1) Boiler steels

Carbon is less than 0.25%


Used in construction of boilers
2) Case hardening steels

Steels having carbon percentage less than 0.2% are classified


under this category. These steels are in general used for case
carburizing, hardening

3) Corrosion and heat resistance steels

High chromium steels, stain less steels comes under this


category. These steels are highly resistant to corrosion and can
sustain high temperatures, as they are heat resistant. Due to
these reasons these steels are used where corrosion should be
minimum.

4) Deep drawing steels

Carbon percentage in these steels is generally less than 1%.


These steels are used in forging processes and are used for
developing the automobile bodies, refrigerators.

5) Electrical steels

Steels, which have good electrical conductivity, come under this


category. Silicon and carbon percentage in these steels are
maintained as low as possible in general these contribute to
0.05% of total volume.

6) Free cutting steels

Steels having phosphorous, Silicon, lead etc comes under this


category. These steels are highly machinable and are in general
used for the generation of bolts, nuts, screws, etc.

7) Machinery steels
Carbon content in these steels is around 0.3 to o.55%. These
steels are used for the manufacturing of automobile parts or any
machine components.

8) Structural steels

These steels are in general used for structural applications like


construction of ships, cars, buildings, monuments etc.

9) Tool steels

As the name indicates these steels are used for manufacturing


tools, some of the tools, which manufactured by the steels are
HSS tools, Plain carbon steel tools. Plain carbon steel tools are
used predominantly where heat generation is very low as their
cost is very low when compared to all other types of tools. HSS is
used in the cases where heat generation is high. It can sustain up
6000C.

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