Cleveland Paper - The Influence of Divorcing Appealing on the Mechanical Properties of Low-Carbon Steel

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry M. How Arthur G. Levy
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
35
File Size:
1532 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1913

Abstract

The purpose of the investigation on which this paper is based is to determine whether the structural change which occurs in the slow cooling of steel below the transformation range has an important effect on its engineering properties. We recognize two distinct things which occur in steel when it is brought from above to below the transformation range, first, the transformation proper, that is, the breaking up of the austenite or solid solution of the cementite in the remainder of the iron, and the liberation of its components as undissolved cementite and as ferrite or alpha iron; and second, a structural change consisting in the gradual coalescence of the ferrite and cementite respectively into larger and larger separate masses. Let us distinguish these from each other by speaking of them as " the transformation " and " the structural change " respectively. If the cooling is at all rapid the unevenness of contraction induces severe stress; so that in a sense a slow cooling has a third influence, the prevention of such stress. This transformation from austenite to ferrite plus cementite can complete itself only below the transformation range; and, because this structural change is a change in the structural arrangement of the products of that transformation, it too can complete itself only at temperatures below that range, say below 725°; and of these temperatures it is only those between 600° and 725° that give the metal sufficient mobility to permit this structural rearrangement to progress with ally rapidity. The transformation is now known to be rapid, but the structural change is relatively slow. The transformation, the liberation of the dissolved cementite from the state of solution in the austenite to a free state, leaves the steel structurally in the
Citation

APA: Henry M. How Arthur G. Levy  (1913)  Cleveland Paper - The Influence of Divorcing Appealing on the Mechanical Properties of Low-Carbon Steel

MLA: Henry M. How Arthur G. Levy Cleveland Paper - The Influence of Divorcing Appealing on the Mechanical Properties of Low-Carbon Steel. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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