Steels: Microstructure and Properties, Third Edition

Chapter 1: Iron and its Interstitial Solid Solutions

1.1 INTRODUCTION

Steel is frequently the gold-standard against which emerging structural materials are compared. What is often not realized is that this is a moving standard, with notoriously regular and exciting discoveries being made in the context of iron and its alloys. This is why steel remains the most successful and cost-effective of all materials, with more than a billion tonnes being consumed annually in improving the quality of life. This book attempts to explain why steels continue to take this pre-eminent position, and examines in detail the phenomena whose exploitation enables the desired properties to be achieved.

One reason for the overwhelming dominance of steels is the endless variety of microstructures and properties that can be generated by solid-state transformation and processing. Therefore, in studying steels, it is useful to consider the behaviour of pure iron first, then the iron-carbon alloys, and finally the many complexities that arise when further solutes are added.

Pure iron is not an easy material to produce. It has nevertheless been made with a total impurity content less than 60 parts per million (ppm), of which 10 ppm is accounted for by non-metallic impurities such as carbon, oxygen, sulphur and phosphorus, with the remainder representing metallic impurities. Iron of this purity can be extremely weak when reasonably sized samples are tested: the resolved shear stress of a single crystal at room temperature can be as low as 10 MN m ?2, while the yield stress of a polycrystalline sample at the same temperature...

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Category: Ferrous Metals and Iron Alloys
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