Cold work tool steels are specialized high-carbon steels enhanced with alloy additions including tungsten, manganese, chromium, and molybdenum. This article examines their composition, properties, and industrial applications, with particular focus on their hardenability and wear resistance characteristics. These steels offer excellent dimensional stability during heat treatment and provide cost-effective solutions for various tooling applications, operating effectively at temperatures up to 200°C. The comprehensive analysis covers different steel classifications, their constitutional properties, and specific industrial applications.
Cold work tool steels represent a significant portion of tool steel production due to their cost-effectiveness and excellent dimensional stability during heat treatment. Their balanced composition of high carbon content and carefully selected alloy additions makes them particularly suitable for short-run applications where minimal distortion is crucial.
In the annealed condition, these steels comprise ferrite and carbide, primarily Fe3C, with additional carbide formers present. Using O1 steel as an example, the manganese and chromium content in the matrix substantially increases depth hardening capabilities, enabling complete hardening in sections up to 40mm diameter.
The O series demonstrates exceptional versatility through its various grades:
Table 1. Cold work tool steel types, according to the US UNS, AISI and SAE classification.
Tool Steel Type | Prefix | Specific Types |
Cold Work | W = Water Hardening | W1, W2, W5 |
O = Oil Hardening | O1, O2, O6, O7 | |
A = Medium Alloy Air Hardening | A2, A4, A6, A7, A8, A9, A10, A11 | |
D = High Carbon, High Chromium | D2, D3, D4, D5, D7 |
Contemporary tools manufactured from cold-work steels must meet increasingly stringent requirements driven by modern production facilities and optimized manufacturing processes. Operating at temperatures up to 200°C, these steels maintain high wear resistance while providing appropriate toughness for specific applications.
Figure 1: Tempering diagram of high chromium cold work steel X210CrW12
The alloy composition critically determines the material properties suitable for specific applications. Manufacturers carefully control the proportions of chromium, molybdenum, tungsten, and vanadium while minimizing undesirable elements to achieve optimal performance.
These steels serve in numerous applications including: Gauges, blanking dies, drawing and piercing dies, shears, forming rolls, lathe centers, mandrels, broaches, reamers, taps, threading dies, plastic molds, and knurling tools. They also find use in wire cutting operations, rolling cutters, shaping wheels for the steel tube industry, and screw manufacturing equipment.
Table 2. The common properties of cold work tool steels.
Type | Properties |
Water Hardening Tool Steels (W series) |
|
Oil Hardening Tool Steels (O series) |
|
Medium Alloy Air Hardening Steels (A series) |
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High Carbon High Chromium Steels (D series) |
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