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In addition to the descriptive steel grade naming system indicated above, within EN 10027-2 is defined a system for creating unique steel grade numbers. While less descriptive and intuitive than the grand names they are easier to tabulate and use in data processing applications.
The SAE steel grades system is a standard alloy numbering system (SAE J1086 – Numbering Metals and Alloys) for steel grades maintained by SAE International. In the 1930s and 1940s, the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) and SAE were both involved in efforts to standardize such a numbering system for steels.
Alloy 20 is an austenitic stainless steel containing less than 50% iron developed for applications involving sulfuric acid. Its corrosion resistance also finds other uses in the chemical , petrochemical , power generation , and plastics industries.
The following Powder Metallurgy steels contain very high levels of Chromium, which at 18–20% produces a steel matrix that is highly corrosion resistant. They also contain relatively high levels of vanadium (3.0% to 4.0%), producing a high volume of vanadium carbides in the steel matrix, associated with excellent abrasion-resistant edge holding.
Chemical composition of a few common martensitic stainless steel grades from EN 10088-1 (2005) standard Chemical composition (main alloying elements) in wt% EN. Steel designation. EN. Number. AISI. Number Number: C: Cr: Mo: Others: Remarks: X12Cr13 1.4006 410 0.12 12.5 — — Base grade, used as stainless engineering steel X20Cr13 1.4021 420 0 ...
Steel mill with two arc furnaces. 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.
SVCM steel is a kind of shock-resisting steel. [5] SVCM steel is an alloy of carbon, silicon, chromium, magnesium, nickel, molybdenum and lead. [6] SVCM+ in addition is quenched and tempered achieving a high hardness (HRC 59). [6] SCVM+ has better torsional properties than chromium-vanadium steel (Cr-V). [7]
The larger the gauge number, the thinner the metal. Commonly used steel sheet metal ranges from 30 gauge to about 7 gauge. Gauge differs between ferrous metals and nonferrous metals such as aluminum or copper. Copper thickness, for example, is measured in ounces, representing the weight of copper contained in an area of one square foot.