New York Paper - Low-temperature Brittleness in Silicon Steels (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Norman B. Pilling
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
825 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

Practical limitations to the usefulness of silicon steels are the hardness and brittleness silicon imparts to iron, making iron-silicon alloys of more than 8 per cent. silicon content unusable except where castings can be employed. In the use of commercial silicon steel, in thin rolled sheets, as in transformer construction, when the silicon content exceeds 4.2 per cent. the sheet is too brittle for satisfactory shaping by punching or similar operations. When such a brittle steel is sheared, it frequently breaks along a haphazard path in advance of the cutting tool. In Fig. 1 is shown a slightly enlarged view of the sheared edge of a 14-mil enameled sheet of nominally 4 per cent. silicon steel. In 5 in. along the sheared edge, only 44 per cent. was actually cut; the rest was torn, with the path of fracture varying widely from the path of travel between the shears. This is probably an extreme case of such brittle-ness, but a shearing or punching test is not necessary to reveal brittle-ness of this order; narrow strips will break when bent between the fingers. In Fig. 2, the proportion of actual cut edge is greater, but secondary fractures branch off at about 30" from the line of shearing in advance of the cut. Deprived of the support of adjacent parts of the sheet, the tips of the angles are bent out of the plane of the sheet by the shears, leaving a peculiar flared effect, like the set of the teeth on a saw. An end-on
Citation

APA: Norman B. Pilling  (1923)  New York Paper - Low-temperature Brittleness in Silicon Steels (with Discussion)

MLA: Norman B. Pilling New York Paper - Low-temperature Brittleness in Silicon Steels (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1923.

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