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  2. High-strength low-alloy steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-strength_low-alloy_steel

    High-strength low-alloy steel (HSLA) is a type of alloy steel that provides better mechanical properties or greater resistance to corrosion than carbon steel.HSLA steels vary from other steels in that they are not made to meet a specific chemical composition but rather specific mechanical properties.

  3. SAE steel grades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAE_steel_grades

    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.

  4. A572 steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A572_steel

    ASTM A572 steel is a common high strength, low alloy (HSLA) structural steel used in the United States. [1] ... A572 Steel Material Properties, Per ASTM Standards [2]

  5. Steel grades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_grades

    non-alloy semi-finished (not finally annealed) E " alloy semi-finished (not finally annealed) K (=D+E) " non-alloy and alloy electrical steel sheet/strip in the semi-processed state N " for normal grain oriented products P: 1.7 T @50 Hz high permeability grain oriented S" conventional grain oriented

  6. Alloy steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloy_steel

    Researches created an alloy with the strength of steel and the lightness of titanium alloy. It combined iron, aluminum, carbon, manganese, and nickel. The other ingredient was uniformly distributed nanometer-sized B2 intermetallic (two metals with equal numbers of atoms) particles. The use of nickel team avoided problems with earlier attempts ...

  7. Ducol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducol

    Ducol or "D"-steel is the name of a number of high-strength low-alloy steels of varying composition, first developed from the early 1920s by the Scottish firm of David Colville & Sons, Motherwell. Applications have included warship hull construction and light armouring, road bridges, and pressure vessels including locomotive steam boilers and ...

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