RI 3081 New Manganese-Silicon Alloys For The Deoxidation Of Steel (6e3d8623-a2ba-40e3-87a2-ebe894d835ef)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
C. H. Herty G. R. Fitterer
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
18
File Size:
2961 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1931

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Manufacturers and consumers of steel have come to realize during the past few years that cleanliness is of great importance in steels which must meet rigid specifications for various physical properties. Of equal importance is the consistent production of steel which is uniform in these properties. For maximum utility steels should be uniform not only from heat to heat, but also from ingot to ingot and within each ingot. In the manufacture of killed steels such as the higher carbon forging grades, uniformity as indicated by the usual chemical analysis in easy to obtain, provided that a normal top discard is taken, as is always the case in steels poured with hot—top practice. No such uniformity, however, holds true for the nonmetallic matter, which consists for the most part of the products of deoxidation of the steel.For a large tonnage of steels which go into articles manufactured by deep—drawing processes, killed steel has never been successfully applied because with the present deoxidation practice, low—carbon killed steel is almost invariably extremely dirty. To obtain the desired qualities for deep drawing, the steel is rimmed, — that is to say, deoxidized with manganese and perhaps a small amount of aluminum, — the resultant product being of high purity in the skin of the ingot, but very badly segregated at the center of the ingot, particularly in the upper—central section. This segregation necessitates a very heavy top discard, and one of the major segregates is carbon which renders the steel too hard to draw properly. If clean, low—carbon killed steel could be made successfully, much better ingot yields would be obtained than by the present rimming steel practice. Furthermore, banded structures and outside and inside seams, which are undoubtedly due in a large measure to blowholes in the ingot, are defects which are very difficult to control in rimmed steel. These defects would be minimized by clean killed steel."
Citation

APA: C. H. Herty G. R. Fitterer  (1931)  RI 3081 New Manganese-Silicon Alloys For The Deoxidation Of Steel (6e3d8623-a2ba-40e3-87a2-ebe894d835ef)

MLA: C. H. Herty G. R. Fitterer RI 3081 New Manganese-Silicon Alloys For The Deoxidation Of Steel (6e3d8623-a2ba-40e3-87a2-ebe894d835ef). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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