Steels are now used for a wide variety of conditions entailing heat and corrosion under both static and dynamic stresses, such as aero engine valves, furnace conveyers, retorts, oil cracking units and gas turbines. Three important properties are necessary in material used at elevated temperatures:
1. Resistance to oxidation and to scaling.
2. Retention of strength at the working temperature.
3. Structural stability as regards carbide precipitation, spheroidisation, sigma formation and temper embrittlement.
Steels are now used for a wide variety
of conditions entailing heat and corrosion under both static and
dynamic stresses, such as aero engine valves, furnace conveyers,
retorts, oil cracking units and gas turbines. Three important
properties are necessary in material used at elevated temperatures:
1. Resistance to oxidation and to scaling.
2. Retention of
strength at the working temperature.
3. Structural stability as
regards carbide precipitation, spheroidisation, sigma formation and
temper embrittlement.
Other properties may also be important in particular
applications, such as specific resistance and temperature
coefficient for electrical purposes, coefficient of expansion for
constructional units and resistance to penetration by products of
combustion in many furnace applications. In the case of gas turbine
steels additional characteristics have to be considered; internal
damping capacity and fatigue strength, notch sensitivity and impact
strength (hot and cold), machining and welding characteristics,
especially as large rotors may have to be built of small sections
welded together.
The scale which forms on iron is porous and loosely adherent, but
it is rendered adherent and protective by the addition of certain
elements to the steel. These are usually chromium, silicon and
aluminium, and they are characterised by their great affinity for
combining with oxygen, but the reaction is rapidly stifled by the
formation of the inert oxide films.
The resistance of mild steel to oxidation is vastly improved by
forming an aluminium-iron alloy on the surface. This is done by
heating at 1000°C in contact with powdered aluminium (calorising) or
by metal-Spraying the steel surface with aluminium, coating with
bitumastic paint to prevent oxidation and heating to 780°C
(aluminising).
Improved creep strength may be attained by
- raising the softening temperature by
the solution of alloying elements;
- judicious use of precipitation
hardening at the working temperature without readily over-ageing.
Second phase hardening is critically dependent on the degree and
uniformity of the dispersion achieved and creep rate is related to
a critical range of particle spacing;
- controlled degree of work-hardening in the
appropriate temperature ranges which often reduces the extent of
the primary creep stage;
- variations in the process of manufacture;
deoxidisers and particles in the crystal boundary can have a
marked effect on creep properties;
- vacuum melting permits the use of advantageous compositions
which cannot be melted by conventional methods. lt also improves
ductility in the transverse direction.
Mechanical properties, are improved by the
addition of various elements.
Cobalt, tungsten and molybdenum
cause the steels to withstand the action of tempering. High alloy
austenitic steels have no change points and therefore do not harden
by air cooling, but their resistance to wear resistance is not
great. A sufficiency of elements such as silicon and chromium raise
the Ac, point to temperatures above those reached in service and
prevent the steel from air hardening on cooling.
Steels with high nickel content should not be used at high
temperatures in contact with gases containing sulphur dioxide or
other sulphur compounds, since intercrystalline films of nickel
sulphide are formed.
In high chromium steels the carbides coalesce into large
particles which have less obstructive action on grain growth of the
ferrite at temperatures above 700°C. The excessive grain growth
reduces still further the toughness which these steels possess.
Grain growth also occurs in the austenitic steels above 1000°C,
but no trouble arises since they remain tough and ductile even in
the coarse grained condition. When heated in the range 500-900°C
austenitic steels precipitate carbides along the boundaries of the
austenite and as a result intercrystalline cracks are liable to
develop if the steel is stressed continuously in tension in this
temperature range. With certain compositions both ferritic and
austenitic steels are embrittled by the formation of sigma
phase.