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Iron and Steel and their Alloys

Iron and Steel and their Alloys. Metals and Welding. Four Raw Products. Coke (Coking Coal) Iron Ore Limestone Oxygen. Coke. Made from bituminous coal (soft) Baked at 2100 º F for 17-18 hours in air tight ovens then quenched with water 90% carbon Rapid burning (helps to heat)

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Iron and Steel and their Alloys

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  1. Iron and Steel and their Alloys Metals and Welding

  2. Four Raw Products • Coke (Coking Coal) • Iron Ore • Limestone • Oxygen

  3. Coke • Made from bituminous coal (soft) • Baked at 2100º F for 17-18 hours in air tight ovens then quenched with water • 90% carbon • Rapid burning (helps to heat) • Carbon combines with Oxygen to act as a reducing agent for the Iron Oxide

  4. Limestone • Calcium carbonate • Removes impurities • Ends up in slag

  5. Limestone Quarry

  6. Iron Ore

  7. Iron Ore • Iron Oxides (up to 50% iron) • Also held in compounds with Oxygen, Silicon, Sulfur, and other impurities • Low grade ore is upgraded (beneficiation)to form a pellet type material (up to 66% iron) • Fine grains combined to for sinter

  8. An Ore Mine

  9. Oxygen • Oxygen supports combustion • Combines with carbon and other impurities • Carried out in slag or gasses

  10. Blast Furnace • Limestone, Iron Ore, and Coke are “charged” in alternate layers in the furnace. • Coke is burned and Oxygen is forced through the base of the furnace (3500 degrees F) • Slag is drawn off of the high notch • Molten iron is drawn off of the lower notch • Molten iron (Pig Iron) is poured into molds or sent directly to refining

  11. Blast Furnace

  12. Production of 1 ton of Pig Iron Iron Ore + Coke + Limestone + Air  (1.93) (0.96) (0.48) (3.93) Pig Iron + Slag + Gases + Flue Dust (1.0) (0.55) (5.68) (0.09)

  13. Pig Iron

  14. Refining of Pig Iron • While Pig Iron is still molten, it must be refined using one of four processes: • Open Hearth Process • Bessemer • Electric Furnace • Basic Oxygen Process

  15. Open Hearth Furnace • 200-400 tons per “heat” • Charge consists of pig iron, scrap iron, limestone and some iron ore • 1 “Heat” requires 8-10 hours • Hearth heated by a gas flame sweeping across • Was once the major process used in steel production • Can use up to 50% scrap iron

  16. Open Hearth Furnace

  17. Bessemer Converter • Early production of steel • Now obsolete in U.S. – method used to develop modern processes • 25 tons of pig iron and scrap per heat • Heat requires only 20 minutes • Could use up to 10% scrap iron • A jet of air causes impurities to be burned out

  18. Bessemer Converter

  19. Electric Furnace • Electric Arc used to heat and remove impurities • 35% of total production in the U.S. • Used for making stainless steel, carbon tool steel, and high alloy steels and for recycling scrap • Up to 100 tons per heat • Time for each heat determined by the amount of scrap included in the charge

  20. Electric Furnace

  21. Electric Arc Furnace

  22. Basic Oxygen Process • Source of most of the steel produced today • Uses oxygen blown into the furnace through a water cooled lance • Exothermic reaction – no heating required • Up to 200 tons per heat • Heat requires 45-60 minutes • Scrap iron can be added to the charge • Automatic process controlled by a computer • Results in clean product with very tight specifications

  23. Basic Oxygen Process

  24. Steel Casting – Rimmed Steel • Molten steel poured into cast iron ingot molds • Oxygen during cooling process combines with carbon to become carbon monoxide • Escapes to atmosphere or moves to the core • Outer 3 inches (rim) is almost pure steel and is not as hard as the core • Carbon content of the core is higher (harder) • Rim used for wire, plate, sheet, electrodes

  25. Steel Casting – Killed Steel • Molten steel is deoxidized in the ladle or ingot by adding aluminum, silicon, titanium, calcium or zirconium in various combinations and quantities • Produces a uniform premium grade steel • Majority of steel produced

  26. Steel Casting – Continuous • Relatively new – becoming more common • More efficient • No need to reheat for shaping/finishing • Reduced waste • Molten metal flows into mold and water cooled • Metal rolled and cut to desired length

  27. Continuous Casting

  28. Shaping of Steel • Cast – continuous or ingot molds • Forged – pressed or pounded • Rolled – hot or cold (most common)

  29. Hot Rolled • Rolled in hot condition • Surface is scale covered • Grain structure is elongated and fiber like • Size tolerance is wide

  30. SlabMill

  31. BilletMill Billet - Cross sectional area 36 square inches maximum with 1.5 inch minimum thickness and width at least twice thickness.

  32. BloomMill Bloom - Cross sectional area 36 square inches minimum, usually square or rectangular.

  33. Other Hot Rolled Mill Products • Structural Shapes – Channel, I-beams, angle • Bars – Rounds, squares, hexagons, flat • Rods – 3/8 in. diameter round and smaller • Plate – 3/16 in. thickness and higher; substantial width • Sheet – thickness less than 3/16 in. (gauge) with substantial width • Strip – up to ¼ in. thick and 12 in. wide

  34. Cold Rolled • Rolled cold • Increased strength and hardness • Smooth, shiny surface with no scales • Close size tolerance

  35. Steel Classification • Numerical Index • Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) • American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) • First two digits are the type of steel • 2nd digit generally gives approximate amount of predominate alloying element • The last two digits generally indicate the approximate middle of the carbon range

  36. Steel Classification • Prefix Letter – Production process used to make steel (or the quality of the steel) • Suffix Letter – Specific use or restrictions of the steel

  37. Wrought Iron • Low Carbon Steel (practically pure iron) from Bessemer converter or Byers process • Ductile and corrosion resistant • Mixed with slag and rolled into long strands • Weldable, but not strong

  38. Metal Identification AG 221 – Metals and Welding

  39. Metal Identification - Rationale • Metal ID is important for all metal workers • Machinists, welders, etc. • Imagine starting a welding job without knowing what metal you are working with. What problems might result?

  40. Useful methods for ID • 1st step – Separate known’s from unknown’s • What color is it? • (i.e., Aluminum, Copper, Brass, Stainless) • How heavy/dense is it? • (i.e., aluminum vs. stainless) • What is the surface appearance? • (i.e., roughness, from molds, part numbers)

  41. Useful methods for ID • How was the part used? • Mechanical and physical requirements of the job • (i.e., drill bit – hard enough to last but not brittle) • How was the part made? • Forge marks, cast marks, rolling, stamping, etc. • Fracture appearance • Texture of grain structure, color of new and old break, uniformity of grain structure, degree of bending before break

  42. Useful methods for ID • Magnetic Test • Some alloys are non-magnetic • Chip Test • Observe how chip separates • File Test • Observe relative ease of filing • Oxy-acetylene test • With neutral welding flame – test heat conductivity, speed of melting, color change

  43. Spark Testing • Observe sparks at grinding wheel under subdued light • Grinding wheel should be clean • Pressure of metal should be medium and uniform • Compare known samples to unknown samples

  44. Spark Testing Lines: Length and color Sparklers: Number Appendages: Present or not

  45. Spark Testing (cont’d) • Accurate method of identification • Sparks occur relative to oxidation of the heated metal particles • Iron does not oxidize rapidly therefore the spark lines are long and fade out with cooling • High carbon steels have a spark with short lines and many explosions

  46. Spark Testing (cont’d) • Observe: • Color • Length of spark lines • Number of explosions • Explosion shape • Refer to text (pages 65-71) for specific characteristics of each metal type

  47. Spark Testing

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