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  2. Steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel

    The carbon content of steel is between 0.02% and 2.14% by weight for plain carbon steel (iron-carbon alloys). Too little carbon content leaves (pure) iron quite soft, ductile, and weak. Carbon contents higher than those of steel make a brittle alloy commonly called pig iron.

  3. Steelmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steelmaking

    Steelmaking is the process of producing steel from iron ore and/or scrap. Steel has been made for millennia, and was commercialized on a massive scale in the 1850s and 1860s, using the Bessemer and Siemens-Martin processes. Two major commercial processes are used. Basic oxygen steelmaking uses liquid pig-iron from a blast furnace and scrap ...

  4. Alloy steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloy_steel

    The boundary between the two is disputed. Smith and Hashemi define the difference at 4.0%, [1]: 393 while Degarmo, et al., define it at 8.0%. [2]: 112 Most alloy steels are low-alloy. The simplest steels are iron (Fe) alloyed with (0.1% to 1%) carbon (C) and nothing else (excepting slight impurities); these are called carbon steels. However ...

  5. Carbon Steel vs. Cast Iron: What’s the Difference Between ...

    www.aol.com/carbon-steel-vs-cast-iron-140000989.html

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  6. Bessemer process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bessemer_process

    One of the investors they attracted was Andrew Carnegie, who saw great promise in the new steel technology after a visit to Bessemer in 1872, and saw it as a useful adjunct to his existing businesses, the Keystone Bridge Company and the Union Iron Works. Holley built the new steel mill for Carnegie, and continued to improve and refine the process.

  7. Pig iron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig_iron

    Pig iron, also known as crude iron, is an intermediate good used by the iron industry in the production of steel. It is developed by smelting iron ore in a blast furnace . Pig iron has a high carbon content, typically 3.8–4.7 %, [ 1 ] along with silica and other dross , which makes it brittle and not useful directly as a material except for ...

  8. Iron ore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_ore

    Metallic iron is virtually unknown on the Earth's surface except as iron-nickel alloys from meteorites and very rare forms of deep mantle xenoliths.Although iron is the fourth-most abundant element in the Earth's crust, composing about 5%, the vast majority is bound in silicate or, more rarely, carbonate minerals, and smelting pure iron from these minerals would require a prohibitive amount of ...

  9. Direct reduced iron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_reduced_iron

    Direct-reduced iron has about the same iron content as pig iron, typically 90–94% total iron (depending on the quality of the raw ore) so it is an excellent feedstock for the electric furnaces used by mini mills, allowing them to use lower grades of scrap for the rest of the charge or to produce higher grades of steel. Hot-briquetted iron ...