Patent classifications
C21D1/28
Zinc-plated steel sheet for hot stamping and production method therefor
A zinc-plated steel sheet for hot stamping according to an aspect of the present invention includes a steel substrate and a plated layer provided on a surface of the steel substrate, in which the steel substrate contains, in % by mass, C: 0.10 to 0.5%, Si: 0.7 to 2.5%, Mn: 1.0 to 3%, and Al: 0.01 to 0.5%, with the balance being iron and inevitable impurities, and the steel substrate has, in the inside thereof, an internal oxide layer consists of an oxide containing at least one of Si and Mn having a thickness of 1 μm or more, and a decarburized layer having a thickness of 20 μm or less from an interface with the plated layer toward an internal direction of the steel substrate.
METHOD FOR CONTROLLING AMOUNT OF SILICON ADDED TO DUCTILE CAST IRON, METHOD FOR CASTING DUCTILE CAST IRON, AND CAST PRODUCT
The present disclosure provides a method for controlling an amount of silicon added to ductile cast iron, a method for casting ductile cast iron, and a cast product, which relate to the technical fields of metallurgical and cast iron alloys. The method for controlling an amount of silicon added to ductile cast iron includes smelting ductile cast iron using scrap steel as a raw material. After the scrap steel is melted into molten iron, a copper alloy is added so that the molten iron has a copper equivalent of 0.8% to 1.0%, wherein the copper equivalent is controlled by formula (II). Then, ferrosilicon is added so that the content of silicon added to the molten iron satisfies formula (I).
METHOD FOR CONTROLLING AMOUNT OF SILICON ADDED TO DUCTILE CAST IRON, METHOD FOR CASTING DUCTILE CAST IRON, AND CAST PRODUCT
The present disclosure provides a method for controlling an amount of silicon added to ductile cast iron, a method for casting ductile cast iron, and a cast product, which relate to the technical fields of metallurgical and cast iron alloys. The method for controlling an amount of silicon added to ductile cast iron includes smelting ductile cast iron using scrap steel as a raw material. After the scrap steel is melted into molten iron, a copper alloy is added so that the molten iron has a copper equivalent of 0.8% to 1.0%, wherein the copper equivalent is controlled by formula (II). Then, ferrosilicon is added so that the content of silicon added to the molten iron satisfies formula (I).
STEEL FOR GLASS LINING AND PRODUCTION METHOD THEREFOR
Steel for glass lining, comprising the following chemical elements in mass percent: C: 0.015-0.060%, Si: 0.01-0.50%, Mn: 0.20-1.5%, P: 0.005-0.10%, Al: 0.010-0.070%, Ti: 0.10-0.30%, and the balance of Fe and other inevitable impurities. The microstructure of the steel for glass lining is a ferrite or a combination of a ferrite and a cementite. In addition, also disclosed is a production method for steel for glass lining, comprising the steps of (1) smelting, refining, and continuous casting to obtain a slab; (2) heating, the heating temperature being 1050-1250° C.; (3) hot rolling, the final temperature of hot rolling being controlled to be 800-920° C.; (4) cooling; and (5) thermal treatment. The steel for glass lining has excellent machinability and low temperature toughness, and also has excellent lining performance.
NON-ORIENTED ELECTRICAL STEEL SHEET AND MANUFACTURING METHOD THEREFOR
Disclosed is a non-oriented electrical steel sheet with low magnetic anisotropy, which comprises the following chemical elements in mass percentage: 0<C≤0.005%; Si: 2.0-3.5%; Mn: 0.1-2.0%; at least one of Sn and Sb: 0.003-0.2%; Al: 0.2-1.8%; the balance being Fe and inevitable impurities. Further disclosed is a manufacturing method for the above non-oriented electrical steel sheet with low magnetic anisotropy, which includes the following steps: (1) smelting and casting; (2) hot rolling; (3) normalizing; (4) cold rolling; (5) continuous annealing: rapidly heating a cold-rolled steel sheet from an initial temperature of 350° C.-750° C. to a soaking temperature at a heating rate of 50-800° C./s, and performing soaking and heat preservation; and (6) applying an insulating coating to obtain a finished non-oriented electrical steel sheet. The non-oriented electrical steel sheet is characterized by low iron loss and low magnetic anisotropy at high frequency.
HEAT-RESISTANT CAST STEEL, AND PREPARATION METHOD AND USE THEREOF
The present invention provides a heat-resistant cast steel, and a preparation method and use thereof. Based on the total mass of the heat-resistant cast steel, the heat-resistant cast steel includes the following elements in mass percentage: 0.08 wt %-0.18 wt % of C, 0.10 wt %-0.40 wt % of Si, 0.30 wt %-0.70 wt % of Mn, 9.80 wt %-10.70 wt % of Cr, 3.00 wt %-3.50 wt % of Co, 1.60 wt %-2.00 wt % of W, 0.45 wt %-0.85 wt % of Mo, 0.10 wt %-0.30 wt % of V, 0.02 wt %-0.08 wt % of Nb, 0.010 wt %-0.035 wt % of N, 0.001 wt %-0.010 wt % of B, <0.20 wt % of Ni and 79 wt %-85.5 wt % of Fe. The heat-resistant cast steel can satisfy the use requirements of turbine parts with a working temperature of 635° C. and below 635° C.
Steel compositions having improved anti-coking properties
Special usage steels, particularly those intended to be in contact with combustion fumes, are described. Tubular components produced based on such steels are also described. The steel both is resistant to the coking phenomenon and has improved mechanical performances. The steel contains in percentage by weight from 0.08 to 0.15% carbon, from 0.4 to 0.8% manganese, from 1.5 to 2.5% silicon, from 0.5 to 2% copper, from 8 to 10% chrome, from 0.5 to 3% nickel, from 0.01 to 0.07% nitrogen, from 0.8 to 1.1% molybdenum, with the remainder being iron and impurities.
Steel compositions having improved anti-coking properties
Special usage steels, particularly those intended to be in contact with combustion fumes, are described. Tubular components produced based on such steels are also described. The steel both is resistant to the coking phenomenon and has improved mechanical performances. The steel contains in percentage by weight from 0.08 to 0.15% carbon, from 0.4 to 0.8% manganese, from 1.5 to 2.5% silicon, from 0.5 to 2% copper, from 8 to 10% chrome, from 0.5 to 3% nickel, from 0.01 to 0.07% nitrogen, from 0.8 to 1.1% molybdenum, with the remainder being iron and impurities.
Method for producing silicon steel normalizing substrate
A method for producing a silicon steel normalizing substrate comprises: steelmaking, hot rolling and normalizing steps. The normalizing step uses a normalizing furnace having a nonoxidizing heating furnace section. The nonoxidizing heating furnace section comprises more than 3 furnace zones. An energy investment ratio of the furnace zones used in the nonoxidizing heating furnace section is adjusted, so as to control an excess coefficient α of the nonoxidizing heating furnace section to be within a range of 0.8≦α<1.0.
Method for producing silicon steel normalizing substrate
A method for producing a silicon steel normalizing substrate comprises: steelmaking, hot rolling and normalizing steps. The normalizing step uses a normalizing furnace having a nonoxidizing heating furnace section. The nonoxidizing heating furnace section comprises more than 3 furnace zones. An energy investment ratio of the furnace zones used in the nonoxidizing heating furnace section is adjusted, so as to control an excess coefficient α of the nonoxidizing heating furnace section to be within a range of 0.8≦α<1.0.