深拉伸用钢:第一部分
非铁合金的热机械处理(TMT):第一部分
DataPLUS 模块提供上万种金属材料和非金属材料的腐蚀数据、焊接性能、尺寸与公差信息以及涂层信息。 点击这里了解更多。
Overview of Total Materia database 2022 年 1月 12日
Overview of Total Materia database 2022 年 1月 13日
在使用Total Materia几个月之后,以及深刻体验过所有潜在功能之后,我非常感谢你们的卓越工作和持续稳定的升级服务。 Total Materia始终是用来达成这一目的唯一工具。
M. Manfredini Bonfiglioli Industrial Gearmotors 博洛尼亚, 意大利
我们的目标很简单,就是让 Total Materia成为全球工程师在材料领域的首选一站式解决方案
Prof. Dr. Viktor Pocajt, CEOKey to Metals AG
High-strength low-alloy (HSLA) steels, or microalloyed steels, are designed to provide better mechanical properties and/or greater resistance to atmospheric corrosion than conventional carbon steels. They are not considered to be alloy steels in the normal sense because they are designed to meet specific mechanical properties rather than a chemical composition; HSLA steels have yield strengths greater than 275 MPa, or 40 ksi.
The chemical composition of a specific HSLA steel may vary for different product thicknesses to meet mechanical property requirements. The HSLA steels in sheet or plate form have low carbon content (C=0.05-0.25 [wt.%]) in order to produce adequate formability and weldability, and they have manganese content up to 2.0%. Small quantities of chromium, nickel, molybdenum, copper, nitrogen, vanadium, niobium, titanium, and zirconium are used in various combinations.
HSLA steels can be divided into six categories:
The wide applications of HSLA steels include oil and gas pipelines, heavy-duty highway and off-road vehicles, construction and farm machinery, industrial equipment, storage tanks, mine and railroad cars, barges and dredges, snowmobiles, lawn mowers, and passenger car components. Bridges, offshore structures, power transmission towers, light poles, and building beams and panels are additional uses of these steels.
The choice of a specific high-strength steel depends on a number of application requirements including thickness reduction, corrosion resistance, formability, and weldability. For many applications, the most important factor in the steel selection process is the favorable strength-to-weight ratio of HSLA steels compared with conventional low-carbon steels. This characteristic of HSLA steels has lead to their increased use in automobile components.
The development of high strength steels is shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Development of High Strength Steels
As shown in Figure 1, in the seventies, the hot rolling and normalizing was replaced by thermo-mechanical rolling. The latter process enables materials up to X70 to be produced from steels that are microalloyed with niobium and vanadium and have reduced carbon content. By this method, it has become possible to produce higher strength materials like X80, having a further reduced carbon content and excellent field weldability. Additions of molybdenum, copper and nickel enable the strength level to be raised to that of grade X100, when the steel is processed to plate by thermo-mechanical rolling plus modified accelerated cooling.
Natural gas is attracting attention as a source of clean energy because it emits less carbon dioxide than that of petroleum or coal. Furthermore, many long-distance pipelines have been constructed to transport natural gas. In view of these facts, high-strength line pipes X80 up to a strength grade of API 5L X120 are being developed for the purpose of enhancing the transport efficiency of a pipeline by high pressure operation and reducing pipe laying costs by the use of thinner- wall pipes.
In order to arrest running shear fracture and prevent brittle fracture, excellent low-temperature toughness is required of the base metal and the heat affected zone (HAZ) of a welded joint of such a high strength line pipe. In addition, the line pipe is required also to be excellent in weldability in order to improve pipeline construction efficiency. Pipelines constructed in permafrost or seismic regions are subject to a large bending moment caused by ground deformation, and for this reason, large uniform elongation or a low yield ratio has come to be required of a line pipe these years for the purpose of preventing ductile fracture.
The use of X80 line pipe in the construction of the first Ruhrgas X80 pipeline led to a material saving of about 20,000 t, compared with X70 pipes (Fig. 2), through a reduction of the wall thickness from 20.8 mm for X70 to 18.3 mm for X80. This resulted also in a reduction of the pipe laying costs, because of reduced pipe transportation costs and greatly reduced welding costs, as thinner walls meant reduced welding times. The use of materials with still higher strength, such as X100 or X120, could lead to further material savings, as Figure 2 further illustrates.
Figure 2: Possible material savings through use of high-strength material
The Nippon Steel Corporation has succeeded in developing an innovative technology to improve HAZ toughness called Super-High HAZ Toughness Technology with a Fine Microstructure Imparted by Fine Particles (HTUFF)®. By the developed technology, the coarsening of austenite (γ) grains is prevented, and as a result, the microstructure near a welding fusion line (FL) is made remarkably fine.
For improving uniform elongation and yield ratio, it is effective to form a dual-phase microstructure by applying a thermo-mechanical control process (TMCP). On the basis of these technologies, Nippon Steel has developed a new UOE pipe of an X60 to X80 class having excellent HAZ toughness and large uniform elongation called "Tough-Ace". This pipe was used for the Sakhalin pipeline project. Two types of X100 line pipes, namely a high HAZ toughness type and a high uniform elongation type, have also been developed with good results of deformability and the mechanical properties.
Date Published: Sep-2007
输入搜索词:
搜索项
全文 关键字
标题 摘要
The Total Materia database contains many thousands of structural steel materials across a large range of countries and standards.
Where available, full property information can be viewed for materials including chemical composition, mechanical properties, physical properties, advanced property data and much more.
Using the Advanced Search page, it is possible to search for materials by general application by using the Full Text Search function of Advanced Search.
It maybe that you need to further narrow the search criteria by using the other fields in the Advanced Search page e.g. Country/Standard.
Then click Submit.
Total Materia A list of materials will then be generated for you to choose from.
After clicking a material from the resulting list, a list of subgroups derived from standard specifications appears.
From here it is possible to view specific property data for the selected material and also to view similar and equivalent materials in our powerful cross reference tables.
For example, by clicking on the chemical composition link on the subgroup page it is possible to view chemical composition data for the material.
Other critical property data for structural steels can also be viewed including mechanical property data covering yield stress, tensile stress, elongation and impact data.
For you’re a chance to take a test drive of the Total Materia database, we invite you to join a community of over 150,000 registered users through the Total Materia Free Demo.