Unit7 (Cast Iron and Steels) : Plain Carbon Steels Low Carbon Steels (Mild Steels)
Unit7 (Cast Iron and Steels) : Plain Carbon Steels Low Carbon Steels (Mild Steels)
Used for load-bearing applications, crankshaft, bolts, gears, heavy-duty machinery, mining equipment, cranes.
platforms, large mining and earth moving equipment, and pressure vessels and
storage tanks.
Tool Steels
High alloy tool steels are often alloyed with Mo, V, Cr and/or Ni.
Cast Irons
On the Fe-C system, these are to the right of steels, with carbon between 2 & 5.3 %, but more usual 2.5 to 4%. BASIS Cast irons have carbon beyond the limit of solubility of C in . The different types of cast iron are merely the different forms the carbon takes. The carbon can be in the form of cementite, or whitecast iron. If some silicon is added (1 to 2%, maybe 3 %) the carbon will tend to graphitize, and there are various forms the graphite can have. Then, the carbon can also be in the form of graphite (gray, malleable and nodularcast iron)
White cast iron: Rapid solidification of gray iron results in white cast iron. It has white fracture surface. Graphite flakes are not present in this type of cast irons rather; an iron carbide network is present that gives a white fracture surface. The Si content is lower to minimize the graphitizing effect. They are hard and have excellent abrasion resistance. But they also have excessive brittleness and poor machinability. To enhance wear resistance generally Mo, Cr, Ni are added to it. Malleable cast iron White cast iron + annealing treatment During annealing treatment graphite nucleates and grows from the Fe3C to form nodules Malleable cast iron: It is produced by heat treatment of white cast iron in which the iron carbide network decomposes or breaks down into temper carbon. This process is called malleablization which involves two stages of annealing as the first stage of annealing and the second stage of annealing. Because of the absence of hard and brittle carbide phase, iron becomes malleable. Disadvantage of this type of cast iron is its limited section thickness and prolonged annealing cycles.
Spheroidal graphite cast iron or ductile iron: It is produced by adopting special alloy addition and proper cooling rates so that the carbon can be converted to spherical forms which can be used in those fields where carbon in flake form or temper form cant be used. The nodules are formed during solidification and not during heat treatment. It can be of three types namely, ferritic, pearlitic/ferritic, martensitic. It has excellent mechanical properties which can be compared to steels. There is a subclass of ductile iron named as Austempered ductile iron. It has the same nodular or spherical graphite as in ductile iron but the matrix is a combination of bainite and stabilized austenite. Austempering is necessary to get this type of cast iron structure. Here graphite is present in compact form and shape of graphite is controlled by minor alloying addition. Austemperd ductile irons have excellent mechanical properties such has tensile strength, ductility and wear resistance
components, such as ball mill lining tiles, slurry pipe elbows, slurry pump bodies.
If we dont cool as slowly, or we add less silicon, wed have some carbon left in . When the austenite hits the eutectoid temperature it would form pearlite, just like it did when we talked about steels pearliticgray CI.
Grey Irons -Application Grey irons are by far the most produced among all cast irons. Grey irons are used primarily for their low cost and excellent castability. Typical applications include: engine cylinders, pistons, gear box casing, transmission casing, machine tool bases, balance
weight of large cranes, large diameter underground pipework. They are used always under compressive loading conditions. They are unsuitable for taking tensile loads
Cheap to produce, excellent castability, high damping capacity, good metal-metal wear resistance when lubricated, strength much higher in compression than in tension, brittle in tension.
These cast irons are stronger, tougher and much more ductile than grey irons, compatible to nodular irons. They have certain capacity to take shock loading, bending and tension. They are suitable for castings of thin thickness. They are expensive to produce, largely due to the heat treatment. Typical applications include gear box casing, transmission casing, differential casing.
but as before we can end up with a matrix of either ferrite or pearlite. These irons are much stronger and tougher than grey irons. They are produced and used for high specification applications. They are more expensive than grey irons. Typical applications include: gears, crankshafts, pump bodies, pressure valves, rollers.