Papers - Hardening and Tempering of Steels Containing Carbides of Low Solubility, Especially Vanadium Steels

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 2161 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1935
Abstract
The different influences exerted by the various alloying elements in iron and iron-carbon alloys give rise to a great number of complexities, which are difficult to grasp. It is important therefore to study any systematic relations that may exist between the effects exerted by the various alloying elements, in order to obtain a general classification and thus a clearer conception of the nature of alloy steels. A systematic survey of the alloys of iron, based on an investigation of the binary equilibrium diagrams, was recently published by Wever. Although his work deals little with properties of importance in works practice, its purpose being rather to point out the theoretical agreement among the types of binary equilibrium diagrams and the position of the alloying elements in the periodic system (atomic radii, etc.), the classification proposed nevertheless also suggests relationships among the properties of the alloys in question, even though the alloys may contain carbon in addition to iron and the alloying element. Wever divided the alloys of iron into one group exhibiting an open or enlarged gamma field and another exhibiting a closed or restricted gamma field, with both groups capable of further subdivision depending upon whether a continuous series of solid solutions is formed, or, owing to the separation of compounds, etc., only a limited series. Thus all alloying elements which with iron form a closed gamma field, a "gamma loop," produce alloys that beyond the composition corresponding to the greatest extent of the gamma loop are composed of ferrite alone at all temperatures. Alloys of this composition accordingly are not susceptible to ordinary heat treatment because of the lack of transformations. Steels of this class may thus be divided into steels that contain less than the critical amount of alloying element, and are subject to heat treatment, and those that contain more than the critical amount of alloying element and are not subject to heat treatment. Thus chro-
Citation
APA:
(1935) Papers - Hardening and Tempering of Steels Containing Carbides of Low Solubility, Especially Vanadium SteelsMLA: Papers - Hardening and Tempering of Steels Containing Carbides of Low Solubility, Especially Vanadium Steels. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.