US2069205A - Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content - Google Patents

Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2069205A
US2069205A US705282A US70528234A US2069205A US 2069205 A US2069205 A US 2069205A US 705282 A US705282 A US 705282A US 70528234 A US70528234 A US 70528234A US 2069205 A US2069205 A US 2069205A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
nitrogen
chromium
alloys
bath
iron
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US705282A
Inventor
William B Arness
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Rustless Iron & Steel Corp
RUSTLESS IRON AND STEEL Corp
Original Assignee
Rustless Iron & Steel Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Rustless Iron & Steel Corp filed Critical Rustless Iron & Steel Corp
Priority to US705282A priority Critical patent/US2069205A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2069205A publication Critical patent/US2069205A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21CPROCESSING OF PIG-IRON, e.g. REFINING, MANUFACTURE OF WROUGHT-IRON OR STEEL; TREATMENT IN MOLTEN STATE OF FERROUS ALLOYS
    • C21C7/00Treating molten ferrous alloys, e.g. steel, not covered by groups C21C1/00 - C21C5/00

Definitions

  • rustless' ferrous alloy iron and steel of a fine even grain which is strong, durable, heat-resistant and corrosion-resistant; one that possesses high tensile strength, and high impact value; that lends itself to hot and cold working, hardening, polishing, and the like; and that is highly resistant to decarburization and grain growth under the manyconditions of fabrication and use.
  • the invention accordingly consists in the combination of elements, composition of ingredients, and mixture of materials, and in the several steps and therelation of each of the same to one or more of the others as described herein, and the scope of the application of which is indicated in the following claims.
  • alloys are durable, strong, and tough; they may be worked either cold or hot from strip, sheet or bar stock to give products or articles of desired size and shape; they are resistant to the corrosive effects of atmospheric conditions as well as to many acids, .alkalies and salts, and, finally, are resistant to the efiectsof high temperatures, resisting discoloration and scaling while retaining their physical characteristics, strength, toughness and durability.
  • cold working may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the alloy may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the alloy may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the alloy may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the alloy may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the alloy may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain
  • iron of desired carbon content there is added chromium, with or without supplementary amounts of molybdenum, tungsten, vanadium, copper and the like, together with small amounts of nitrogen giving a corrosion-r'esisting alloy iron or steel of an inherently fine grain structure which is especially resistant to decarburization and grain growth.
  • the proportions of ingredients 7 added are such as to give a ferrous alloy analyzing approximately 10% to 30% chromium .06% to 30% carbon, and .0'7% to .20% nitrogen.
  • nascent or atomic nitrogen (provided in any convenient manner as by passing a stream of bottled nitrogen through one or more electric arcs) is introduced into the melting chamber, andin intimate contact with the bath of metal, thus displacing the normal furnace atmosphere in contact with the surface of the bath of metal and providing a nascent nitrogen atmosphere for the further treatment of the metal bath.
  • the nascent nitrogen is introduced by way of the conduit in the lid of the furnace crucible and is permitted to flow through the melting chamber at atmospheric pressure, although under certain conditions the nitrogen atmosphere may be maintained either above or below this pressure.
  • the nascent nitrogen is supplied for a period of from fifteen minutes to one hour or more, depending upon the amount of nitrogen desired in the final product, the percentage of chromium content of the bath (which affects its afiinity for nitrogen), the bath temperature, pressure of the gas, the chemical activity of the gas and the like.
  • the tapped metal analyzes about 17.3% chromium, about .10% carbon, about .09% nitrogen, with the usual small amounts of manganese and silicon.
  • the properties conveyed by the nitrogen content are in some respects similar to the well known properties resulting from the use of a small increased amount of carbon without, however, the attendant undesirable effects of carbon on corrosion resistance.
  • the alloy is of an inherently fine, even grain structure and especially resistant to decarburization, this latter feature becoming increasingly important in alloys of the higher chromium contents and especially those ofa chromium content between 16% and 20%.
  • the alloy more readily lends-it self to welding and, in addition, gives a weld of finer grain and hence one that is more reliable than in heretofore known alloys of theclass indicated;
  • the hot working characteristics of the metal are not adversely affected by the presence of nitrogen, the alloy lending itself to forging, upsetting, swaging and like hot operations, while the cold working characteristics such as beading, spinning and-deep-drawing are somewhat improved for all chromium analyses; the improvement in deep-drawing characteristics being particularly improved for a chromium content of
  • the inherent resistance to decarburization advantage may be taken of higher working temperatures in processing ingots to billets, sheet, strip and bars without resultant decarburization, surface grain growth, and generally coarse structure. (The absence of decarburization and surface grain growth aids materially in producing a smooth bright surface which lends itself to easier polishing, thereby effecting important economies in this costly operation.)
  • alloys of the class indicated such as resistance to corrosive effects of acid, alkaline and salt solutions are fully retained and, as a result of the finer grain structure, are substantially improved ,over heretofore known alloys of the kind described.
  • nitrogen containing rustless irons and steels are produced by maintaining the molten metal in an induction furnace in the presence of nascent nitrogen
  • nitrogen containing rustless irons and steels or other iron-chromium alloys may be similarly produced by subjecting molten chromium containing iron or steel prepared in any well known manner, employing known furnacing methods, to an intimate association with nascent nitrogen; the nitrogen being passed onto or into the molten metal.

Description

Patented Feb. 2, 1937 UNITED STATES PATENT VOFFIC 2,069,205 METHOD or rnonncmc. moN cimoMmM ALLOYS V 'CONTENT OF APPRECIABLE NITROGEN William B. Arness, Baltimore,-Md., assignor, by mesne assignments, to ltustless Iron and Steel Corporation, Baltimore, Md.,'a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Original applicationDecember 3,
1932, Serial No. 645,637.
Divided and this application January 4, 1934, Serial No. 705,282 7 Claims. (01. 75-127) larly to corrosion-resisting or rustless alloy irons and steels of the class indicated, and to an art of producing the same.
Among the objects of my invention are the production ina simple, direct and economical manner of rustless' ferrous alloy iron and steel of a fine even grain which is strong, durable, heat-resistant and corrosion-resistant; one that possesses high tensile strength, and high impact value; that lends itself to hot and cold working, hardening, polishing, and the like; and that is highly resistant to decarburization and grain growth under the manyconditions of fabrication and use.
The invention; accordingly consists in the combination of elements, composition of ingredients, and mixture of materials, and in the several steps and therelation of each of the same to one or more of the others as described herein, and the scope of the application of which is indicated in the following claims.
As conducive to a clearer understanding of certain features of my invention it may at this point be noted that in heretofore known and/or used corrosion-resisting alloy irons and steels (iron-chromium alloys containing as essential ingredients approximately 10% to 30% chromium, .06%' to 1% carbon and the balance substantially iron) many highly desirable characteristics are achieved. These alloys are durable, strong, and tough; they may be worked either cold or hot from strip, sheet or bar stock to give products or articles of desired size and shape; they are resistant to the corrosive effects of atmospheric conditions as well as to many acids, .alkalies and salts, and, finally, are resistant to the efiectsof high temperatures, resisting discoloration and scaling while retaining their physical characteristics, strength, toughness and durability.
cold working, may be heat-treated to give a fair' range of hardness, strength, and impact resistance, and is not particularlysusceptible to decarburization and grain growth. The alloy, however.
In heretofore known and/or used alloys of the class indicated no one alloy, however, is equally is not qualified: for resistance to severely corrosive conditions, for extreme high temperature duty, and especially for high temperatures in corrosive media; which characterizes the ironchromium alloys of high chromium contents.
Similarly, an iron-chromium alloy having a chromium content near the upper commercial limit for rustless ferrous alloys (about 27 to 30%) although highly resistant to corrosion, and re-' duction, in an inexpensive and eflicient manner,
of a corrosion resistant alloy iron or steel of an inherently-uniform fine grained texture; one
that is less subject to decarburization and grain growth, brittleness and fatigue; one that is of improved workability over a wider range of hot and cold working conditions, and over a wider range of chromium contents of the class of alloys described above; and one that, for the ferritic alloys, lends itself to increased maximum hardening by heat-treatment and hardening by heattreatment throughout a wider range of chromium content giving an article or product of greater strength which is more durable and of a higher impact value than in heretofore known and/or used alloys of the class indicated.
Referring now more particularly to the practice of my invention, to iron of desired carbon content there is added chromium, with or without supplementary amounts of molybdenum, tungsten, vanadium, copper and the like, together with small amounts of nitrogen giving a corrosion-r'esisting alloy iron or steel of an inherently fine grain structure which is especially resistant to decarburization and grain growth.
Illustrati'vely, the proportions of ingredients 7 added are such as to give a ferrous alloy analyzing approximately 10% to 30% chromium .06% to 30% carbon, and .0'7% to .20% nitrogen. The
particular quantity ofJthe alloying metals togjether with the precise amount of carbon and nitrogen present are largely determinant of the physical characteristics of the alloy as will appear more fully hereinafter.
Thus, 'ill'ustratively, 195 pounds of rustless iron scrap analyzing approximately 17% chromium and .12% carbon, together with '77 pounds of ordinary low carbon scrap iron and 28 pounds of low-carbon ferrochrome analyzing approximately 70% chromium and .10% carbon is charged into the crucible of a 300-pound high-frequency induction furnace. A suitable refractory lid, preferably having associated therewith a conduit by means of which gases may be either introduced or removed from the furnace melting chamber, is then placed on the crucible. Next, the furnace is started by energizing the furnace windings from a suitable source of electrical energy.
The charge of scrap melts down giving a ferrous metal bath containing chromium and a small percentage of carbon. When this melt has been brought to a suitable temperature and a desired condition of refinement, nascent or atomic nitrogen (provided in any convenient manner as by passing a stream of bottled nitrogen through one or more electric arcs) is introduced into the melting chamber, andin intimate contact with the bath of metal, thus displacing the normal furnace atmosphere in contact with the surface of the bath of metal and providing a nascent nitrogen atmosphere for the further treatment of the metal bath.
Preferably, the nascent nitrogen is introduced by way of the conduit in the lid of the furnace crucible and is permitted to flow through the melting chamber at atmospheric pressure, although under certain conditions the nitrogen atmosphere may be maintained either above or below this pressure. The nascent nitrogen is supplied for a period of from fifteen minutes to one hour or more, depending upon the amount of nitrogen desired in the final product, the percentage of chromium content of the bath (which affects its afiinity for nitrogen), the bath temperature, pressure of the gas, the chemical activity of the gas and the like.
After final adjustment of bath temperature and alloy content (as by adding a small amount of low-carbon ferrochrome with or without supplementary additions of molybdenum, tungsten, vanadium and. copper, together with small amounts of manganese and silicon) the heat is poured into suitable molds.
The tapped metal analyzes about 17.3% chromium, about .10% carbon, about .09% nitrogen, with the usual small amounts of manganese and silicon.
The properties conveyed by the nitrogen content are in some respects similar to the well known properties resulting from the use of a small increased amount of carbon without, however, the attendant undesirable effects of carbon on corrosion resistance.
As indicated above, the alloy is of an inherently fine, even grain structure and especially resistant to decarburization, this latter feature becoming increasingly important in alloys of the higher chromium contents and especially those ofa chromium content between 16% and 20%.
Flowing from these inherent structural characteristics are many practical advantages. Objectionable grain growth and decarburization of the rustless irons and steels of the higher chromium contents are appreciably decreased. The metal is more ductile, more" workable'and lends itself to hardening by heat-treatment over a wider range of chromium content than in heretofore known rustless irons and steels. Cold forming operations, especially deep-drawing, are considerably improved while hot forming operations may be successfully carried out over a wider range of temperatures. Likewise, the tensile strength of the alloy may be appreciably increased throughout a broader chromium range. So, also, may the'impact resistance of the lower chromium alloys be increased.
Furthermore, as a result of the fine grain structure and increased resistance to grain growth mentioned above, the alloy more readily lends-it self to welding and, in addition, gives a weld of finer grain and hence one that is more reliable than in heretofore known alloys of theclass indicated;
The hot working characteristics of the metal are not adversely affected by the presence of nitrogen, the alloy lending itself to forging, upsetting, swaging and like hot operations, while the cold working characteristics such as beading, spinning and-deep-drawing are somewhat improved for all chromium analyses; the improvement in deep-drawing characteristics being particularly improved for a chromium content of In fact, as a result of the inherent resistance to decarburization advantage may be taken of higher working temperatures in processing ingots to billets, sheet, strip and bars without resultant decarburization, surface grain growth, and generally coarse structure. (The absence of decarburization and surface grain growth aids materially in producing a smooth bright surface which lends itself to easier polishing, thereby effecting important economies in this costly operation.)
In addition to the many highly beneficial characteristics outlined above, the heat-resisting characteristics of the metal are considerably improved over heretofore known and/or used alloys of the class indicated since resistance to objectionable grain growth is inherently bettered as more particularly pointed out above.
Other characteristics of alloys of the class indicated, such as resistance to corrosive effects of acid, alkaline and salt solutions are fully retained and, as a result of the finer grain structure, are substantially improved ,over heretofore known alloys of the kind described.
While in the above illustrative embodiment of my invention the production of rustless irons and steels containing. 10% to 30% chromium and .03% to .20% nitrogen is described, it will be understood that iron-chromium alloys, or other alloy irons and steels, of the same or higher nitrogen contents may be likewise produced without departing from the teachings set forth above.
Likewise, while in the embodiment illustratively set forth above nitrogen containing rustless irons and steels are produced by maintaining the molten metal in an induction furnace in the presence of nascent nitrogen, it will be under-' stood that nitrogen containing rustless irons and steels or other iron-chromium alloys may be similarly produced by subjecting molten chromium containing iron or steel prepared in any well known manner, employing known furnacing methods, to an intimate association with nascent nitrogen; the nitrogen being passed onto or into the molten metal.
Thus it will be seen that there has been provided in this invention an alloy rustless iron or steel, together with an art of producing the same, in which the various objects hereinbefore noted together with many thoroughly practical advantages are successfully achieved. It will be seen that the physical characteristics of rustless ferrous alloys are greatly improved; that these improved characteristics permit many savings in manufacture and use heretofore unrealized; and that the useful field of application of these alloys is appreciably broadened.
As many possible embodiments may be made of my invention and as many changes may be made in the embodiment hereinbefore set forth. it is to be understood that all matter described herein is to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
I claim:
1. In the production of iron-chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen contents, the art which includes preparing and maintaining a bath of ferrous metal containing chromium in intimate contact with nascent or atomic nitrogen gas introduced into the presence of said bath.
2. In the production of iron-chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen contents, the art which includes preparing abath of metal containing chromium, and passing nascent nitrogen'gas into intimate contact with said bath.
3. In the production of iron-chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen contents, the art which includes preparing a chromium containing bath of metal, and passing nascent nitrogen gas over the surface of said bath.
4. In the production of rustless irons and steels of high nitrogen contents the art which includes, maintaining a bath of ferrous metal containing chromium in intimate contact with an atmosphere including nascent nitrogen gas introduced into the presence of said bath.
5. In the production of'rustless irons and steels of high nitrogen contents, the art which includes, preparing a bath of ferrous metal containing chromium and introducing and maintaining nascent nitrogen gas in intimate contact with said bath until a desired amount of nitrogen is taken up by the bath to achieve a rustless iron or steel of desired nitrogen content.
6. In the production of iron-chromium alloys of high nitrogen contents, the art which includes, preparing a bath of ferrous metal containing chromium, passing nitrogen gas through one or more electric arcs forming thereby nascent or atomic nitrogen, and introducing said nascent nitrogen into intimate contact with said bath of metal.
7. In the production of rustless irons and steels of high nitrogen contents, the art which includes, preparing a bath of ferrous metal containing chromium, preparing nascent nitrogen by passing nitrogen gas through an electric arc, and introducing said nascent nitrogen into the presence of said bath of metal whereby a desired nitrogen content is quickly achieved.
. WILLIAM B. ARNESS.
US705282A 1932-12-03 1934-01-04 Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content Expired - Lifetime US2069205A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US705282A US2069205A (en) 1932-12-03 1934-01-04 Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US64563732A 1932-12-03 1932-12-03
US705282A US2069205A (en) 1932-12-03 1934-01-04 Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2069205A true US2069205A (en) 1937-02-02

Family

ID=27094742

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US705282A Expired - Lifetime US2069205A (en) 1932-12-03 1934-01-04 Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2069205A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2537103A (en) * 1946-03-19 1951-01-09 Armco Steel Corp Production of nitrogen-bearing stainless steel
US3248210A (en) * 1961-12-13 1966-04-26 Allegheny Ludlum Steel Melting process
US3257197A (en) * 1963-04-17 1966-06-21 Union Carbide Corp Method for adding nitrogen to molten metals
US3650313A (en) * 1968-10-09 1972-03-21 Inst Po Metalloznanie I Tekno Method for the production of castings from alloys of metals and gases
US3936297A (en) * 1972-05-08 1976-02-03 Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc. Method of producing austenitic stainless steel

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2537103A (en) * 1946-03-19 1951-01-09 Armco Steel Corp Production of nitrogen-bearing stainless steel
US3248210A (en) * 1961-12-13 1966-04-26 Allegheny Ludlum Steel Melting process
US3257197A (en) * 1963-04-17 1966-06-21 Union Carbide Corp Method for adding nitrogen to molten metals
US3650313A (en) * 1968-10-09 1972-03-21 Inst Po Metalloznanie I Tekno Method for the production of castings from alloys of metals and gases
US3936297A (en) * 1972-05-08 1976-02-03 Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc. Method of producing austenitic stainless steel

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3726724A (en) Rail steel
US3567434A (en) Stainless steels
CN106756511A (en) A kind of bimetal saw blade backing D6A broad hot strips and its production method
US2791500A (en) High strength aircraft landing gear steel alloy elements
CN111088448B (en) Cobalt-based high-temperature alloy strip foil and preparation method thereof
US2696433A (en) Production of high nitrogen manganese alloy
US2069205A (en) Method of producing iron chromium alloys of appreciable nitrogen content
US3994754A (en) High elastic-limit, weldable low alloy steel
JP2002167652A (en) Thin sheet material excellent in high strength-high fatigue resisting characteristic
CN114000027B (en) UNS N08120 forged ring and manufacturing method thereof
US2537103A (en) Production of nitrogen-bearing stainless steel
US2949355A (en) High temperature alloy
US2624669A (en) Ferritic chromium steels
US2430671A (en) Alloy process
KR19980073737A (en) High toughness cr-mo steel
US2200545A (en) Rustless iron manufacture
JPS59136418A (en) Preparation of high toughness and high strength steel
US2204585A (en) Method of producing cast steels
US2316948A (en) Aluminum-treated cast steel
US2336237A (en) Alloy process
US4022586A (en) Austenitic chromium-nickel-copper stainless steel and articles
US2624668A (en) Ferritic chromium steels
US2237379A (en) Alloy
US2118693A (en) Method of rolling stainless steel and product thereof
US3929423A (en) Hot work forging die block and method of manufacture thereof