ISSN 2594-5300
47th Steelmaking Seminar - International — vol. 47, num.47 (2016)
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Nearly one third of the globally produced structural flat and long structural products are in the 0.11 to 0.16% carbon range. By definition, numerous steelmakers globally define this approximate carbon range as peritectic in their melting grade family within their organization. The metallurgical consequence is the result of numerous global structural specifications which allow carbon to wide carbon ranges resulting in quality issues. For example, such specifications as ASTM A588 set no minimum carbon and a 0.15 to 0.19%C maximum depending on the specific grade designated within the specification. This peritectic region is specifically challenging in production compared to less than 0.10%C because of solidification issues and a higher propensity for slab or billet cracking during continuous casting. During hot rolling, rejects and/or deviates are increased as well. The relative steelmaking operational cost of production is compared between peritectic and non-peritectic carbon compositions for a given specification.
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Continuous casting, Peritectic, Solidification, Stress-strain
Stress-strain
Como citar
Jansto, Steven G..
PRODUCTION COMPARISON OF MICROALLOYED PERITECTIC AND LOW CARBON STRUCTURAL FLAT AND LONG PRODUCTS
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p. 153-162.
In: 47th Steelmaking Seminar - International,
Rio de Janeiro,
2016.
ISSN: 2594-5300
, DOI 10.5151/1982-9345-27608