Weathering steel
10995387 · 2021-05-04
Assignee
Inventors
- James W. Watson (Brownsburg, IN, US)
- Tao WANG (Manila, AR, US)
- Eric YOUNG (Richwood, OH, US)
- Chad BAUDENDISTEL (Charlotte, NC, US)
Cpc classification
C21D9/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22C38/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C21D8/021
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C21D9/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22D11/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A weathering steel made by preparing a molten melt producing an as-cast carbon alloy steel strip with a corrosion index of at least 6.0 comprising, by weight, 0.02%-0.08% carbon, <0.6% silicon, 0.2%-2.0% manganese, <0.03% phosphorus, <0.01% sulfur, <0.01% nitrogen, 0.2%-0.5% copper, 0.01%-0.2% niobium, 0.01%-0.2% vanadium, 0.1%-0.4% chromium, 0.08%-0.25% nickel, <0.01% aluminum, and the remainder iron and impurities. The molten melt is solidified and cooled into a cast strip 4 mm in thickness in a non-oxidizing atmosphere. The strip is hot rolled in an austenitic temperature range above Ar.sub.3 to between 10% and 50% reduction, cooled at above 20° C./s and coiled below 700° C. to form a steel strip with a microstructure comprising bainite and acicular ferrite with more than 70% niobium in solid solution. Then, age hardening the strip resulting in a yield strength of at least 550 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%.
Claims
1. A hot rolled weathering thin cast steel strip comprising: a carbon alloy steel strip cast at a cast thickness less than or equal to 4 mm comprising, by weight, between 0.02% and 0.08% carbon, less than 0.6% silicon, between 0.2% and 2.0% manganese, less than 0.03% phosphorus, less than 0.01% sulfur, less than 0.01% nitrogen, between 0.2% and 0.5% copper, between 0.01% and 0.2% niobium, between 0.01% and 0.2% vanadium, between 0.1% and 0.4% chromium, between 0.08% and 0.25% nickel, less than 0.01% aluminum, and a remainder of the steel strip, by weight, is iron and impurities, with a corrosion index of at least 6.0 having a microstructure comprising bainite and acicular ferrite with more than 70% niobium in solid solution wherein the carbon alloy steel strip is hot rolled to a hot roll thickness of between a 10% and 50% reduction of the cast thickness.
2. The steel strip of claim 1 where the steel strip is an age hardened steel strip having a yield strength of at least 550 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%.
3. The steel strip of claim 1 where the steel strip is an age hardened steel strip having a yield strength of at least 700 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%.
4. The steel strip of claim 1 where the cast thickness is less than or equal to 2 mm.
5. The steel strip of claim 1 where the cast thickness is less than or equal to 3 mm.
6. The steel strip of claim 1 where the cast thickness is within a range of 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm.
7. A hot rolled and age hardened weathering thin cast steel strip comprising: a carbon alloy steel strip cast at a cast thickness less than or equal to 4 mm comprising, by weight, between 0.02% and 0.08% carbon, less than 0.6% silicon, between 0.2% and 2.0% manganese, less than 0.03% phosphorus, less than 0.01% sulfur, less than 0.01% nitrogen, between 0.2% and 0.5% copper, between 0.01% and 0.2% niobium, between 0.01% and 0.2% vanadium, between 0.1% and 0.4% chromium, between 0.08% and 0.25% nickel, less than 0.01% aluminum, and a remainder of the steel strip, by weight, is iron and impurities, with a corrosion index of at least 6.0 having a microstructure comprising bainite and acicular ferrite with more than 70% niobium in solid solution wherein the carbon alloy steel strip is hot rolled to a hot rolled thickness of between a 10% and 50% reduction of the cast thickness and is age hardened.
8. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 156 MPa after age hardening.
9. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in tensile strength of at least 110 MPa after age hardening.
10. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 165 MPa after age hardening.
11. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in tensile strength of at least 83 MPa after age hardening.
12. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 83 MPa after age hardening.
13. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in tensile strength of at least 51 MPa after age hardening.
14. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 156 MPa and an average increase in tensile strength of at least 110 MPa after age hardening.
15. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 165 MPa and an average increase in tensile strength of at least 83 MPa after age hardening.
16. The steel strip of claim 7 where the steel strip exhibits an average increase in yield strength of at least 83 MPa and an average increase in tensile strength of at least 51 MPa after age hardening.
17. A coiled hot rolled weathering thin cast steel strip comprising: a carbon alloy steel strip cast at a cast thickness less than or equal to 4 mm comprising, by weight, between 0.02% and 0.08% carbon, less than 0.6% silicon, between 0.2% and 2.0% manganese, less than 0.03% phosphorus, less than 0.01% sulfur, less than 0.01% nitrogen, between 0.2% and 0.5% copper, between 0.01% and 0.2% niobium, between 0.01% and 0.2% vanadium, between 0.1% and 0.4% chromium, between 0.08% and 0.25% nickel, less than 0.01% aluminum, and a remainder of the steel strip, by weight, is iron and impurities, with a corrosion index of at least 6.0 having a microstructure comprising bainite and acicular ferrite with more than 70% niobium in solid solution wherein the carbon alloy steel strip is hot rolled to a hot rolled thickness of between a 10% and 50% reduction of the cast thickness and is coiled.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In order that the invention may be described in more detail, some illustrative examples will be given with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(6) The following description of the embodiments is in the context of high strength thin cast strip with microalloy additions made by continuous casting steel strip using a twin roll caster.
(7) Referring now to
(8) The casting apparatus for continuously casting thin steel strip includes the pair of counter-rotatable casting rolls 12 having casting surfaces 12A laterally positioned to form a nip 18 there between. Molten metal is supplied from a ladle 13 through a metal delivery system to a metal delivery nozzle 17 (core nozzle) positioned between the casting rolls 12 above the nip 18. Molten metal thus delivered forms a casting pool 19 of molten metal above the nip 18 supported on the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12. This casting pool 19 is confined in the casting area at the ends of the casting rolls 12 by a pair of side closure plates, or side dams 20 (shown in dotted line in
(9) The ladle 13 typically is of a conventional construction supported on a rotating turret 40. For metal delivery, the ladle 13 is positioned over a movable tundish 14 in the casting position to fill the tundish 14 with molten metal. The movable tundish 14 may be positioned on a tundish car 66 capable of transferring the tundish 14 from a heating station (not shown), where the tundish 14 is heated to near a casting temperature, to the casting position. A tundish guide, such as rails 39, may be positioned beneath the tundish car 66 to enable moving the movable tundish 14 from the heating station to the casting position.
(10) The movable tundish 14 may be fitted with a slide gate 25, actuable by a servo mechanism, to allow molten metal to flow from the tundish 14 through the slide gate 25, and then through a refractory outlet shroud 15 to a transition piece or distributor 16 in the casting position. From the distributor 16, the molten metal flows to the delivery nozzle 17 positioned between the casting rolls 12 above the nip 18.
(11) The side dams 20 may be made from a refractory material such as zirconia graphite, graphite alumina, boron nitride, boron nitride-zirconia, or other suitable composites. The side dams 20 have a face surface capable of physical contact with the casting rolls 12 and molten metal in the casting pool 19. The side dams 20 are mounted in side dam holders (not shown), which are movable by side dam actuators (not shown), such as a hydraulic or pneumatic cylinder, servo mechanism, or other actuator to bring the side dams 20 into engagement with the ends of the casting rolls 12. Additionally, the side dam actuators are capable of positioning the side dams 20 during casting. The side dams 20 form end closures for the molten pool of metal on the casting rolls 12 during the casting operation.
(12)
(13) At the start of the casting operation, a short length of imperfect strip is typically produced as casting conditions stabilize. After continuous casting is established, the casting rolls 12 are moved apart slightly and then brought together again to cause this leading end of the cast strip 21 to break away forming a clean head end of the following cast strip 21. The imperfect material drops into a scrap receptacle 26, which is movable on a scrap receptacle guide. The scrap receptacle 26 is located in a scrap receiving position beneath the caster and forms part of a sealed enclosure 27 as described below. The enclosure 27 is typically water cooled. At this time, a water-cooled apron 28 that normally hangs downwardly from a pivot 29 to one side in the enclosure 27 is swung into position to guide the clean end of the cast strip 21 onto the guide table 30 that feeds it to the pinch roll stand 31. The apron 28 is then retracted back to its hanging position to allow the cast strip 21 to hang in a loop beneath the casting rolls 12 in enclosure 27 before it passes to the guide table 30 where it engages a succession of guide rollers.
(14) An overflow container 38 may be provided beneath the movable tundish 14 to receive molten material that may spill from the tundish 14. As shown in
(15) The sealed enclosure 27 is formed by a number of separate wall sections that fit together at various seal connections to form a continuous enclosure wall that permits control of the atmosphere within the enclosure 27. Additionally, the scrap receptacle 26 may be capable of attaching with the enclosure 27 so that the enclosure 27 is capable of supporting a protective atmosphere immediately beneath the casting rolls 12 in the casting position. The enclosure 27 includes an opening in the lower portion of the enclosure 27, lower enclosure portion 44, providing an outlet for scrap to pass from the enclosure 27 into the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. The lower enclosure portion 44 may extend downwardly as a part of the enclosure 27, the opening being positioned above the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. As used in the specification and claims herein, “seal,” “sealed,” “sealing,” and “sealingly” in reference to the scrap receptacle 26, enclosure 27, and related features may not be a complete seal so as to prevent leakage, but rather is usually less than a perfect seal as appropriate to allow control and support of the atmosphere within the enclosure 27 as desired with some tolerable leakage.
(16) A rim portion 45 may surround the opening of the lower enclosure portion 44 and may be movably positioned above the scrap receptacle 26, capable of sealingly engaging and/or attaching to the scrap receptacle 26 in the scrap receiving position. The rim portion 45 may be movable between a sealing position in which the rim portion 45 engages the scrap receptacle 26, and a clearance position in which the rim portion 45 is disengaged from the scrap receptacle 26. Alternately, the caster or the scrap receptacle 26 may include a lifting mechanism to raise the scrap receptacle 26 into sealing engagement with the rim portion 45 of the enclosure 27, and then lower the scrap receptacle 26 into the clearance position. When sealed, the enclosure 27 and scrap receptacle 26 are filled with a desired gas, such as nitrogen, to reduce the amount of oxygen in the enclosure 27 and provide a protective atmosphere for the cast strip 21.
(17) The enclosure 27 may include an upper collar portion 43 supporting a protective atmosphere immediately beneath the casting rolls 12 in the casting position. When the casting rolls 12 are in the casting position, the upper collar portion 43 is moved to the extended position closing the space between a housing portion 53 adjacent the casting rolls 12, as shown in
(18) The casting rolls 12 are internally water cooled as described below so that as the casting rolls 12 are counter-rotated, shells solidify on the casting surfaces 12A, as the casting surfaces 12A move into contact with and through the casting pool 19 with each revolution of the casting rolls 12. The shells are brought close together at the nip 18 between the casting rolls 12 to produce a thin cast strip product 21 delivered downwardly from the nip 18. The thin cast strip product 21 is formed from the shells at the nip 18 between the casting rolls 12 and delivered downwardly and moved downstream as described above.
(19) A strip thickness profile sensor 71 may be positioned downstream to detect the thickness profile of the cast strip 21 as shown in
(20) Currently disclosed is a high strength weathering thin cast strip produced using a twin roll caster and overcoming the shortcomings of conventional light gauge steel products. The currently claimed invention utilizes the elements such as niobium (Nb), vanadium (V), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), or molybdenum (Mo), or a combination thereof, without the purposeful addition of phosphorus. The residual amount of phosphorus present in the steel composition may be clue to, for example, from scrap metal used to charge an electric arc furnace. The currently disclosed high strength thin cast strip and method to produce thereof combine several attributes to achieve a high strength light gauge cast strip by microalloying with these elements.
(21) The currently disclosed high strength weathering thin cast strip is produced by hot rolling without the need for cold rolling to further reduce the strip to the desired thickness. Thus, the high strength thin cast strip overlaps both the light gauge hot rolled thickness ranges and the cold rolled thickness ranges desired. Strip thicknesses may be less than 4 mm, less than 3 mm, less than 2.5 mm, or less than 2.0 mm, and may be in a range of 0.5 mm to 2.0 mm. The strip may be hot rolled in an austenitic temperature range above Ar.sub.3 to between 10% and 50% reduction. The strip may be cooled at a rate 20° C. per second and above, and still form a microstructure that is a majority and typically predominantly bainite and acicular ferrite with more than 70% niobium in solid solution and having a yield strength of at least 550 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%.
(22) After hot rolling, the hot rolled steel strip may be coiled below 700° C. The thin cast steel strip may also be further processed by age hardening the steel strip by batch annealing at a temperature greater than 450° C. in less than 50 hours. The age hardened steel may have a yield strength of at least 700 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%. Alternatively, the thin cast steel strip may also be further processed by age hardening the steel strip by in-line annealing at a temperature between 450° C. and 800° C. in less than 30 minutes. The age hardened steel may have a yield strength of at least 700 MPa and a total elongation of at least 8%.
(23) For example, a steel composition was prepared by the currently disclosed method comprising 0.05% by weight carbon, 0.37% by weight copper, 0.044% by weight niobium, 0.033% by weight vanadium, 0.42% by weight silicon, 0.16% by weight chromium, 0.16% by weight nickel, 1.65% by weight manganese, 0.002% by weight aluminum and a residual amount of 0.017% by weight phosphorus. The cast strip was hot rolled at a temperature 1150° C. to a reduction between 10% and 50%. The hot rolled cast strip was coiled at coiling temperatures between 465° C. and 500° C. and age hardened. This composition produced a calculated corrosion index of 6.3 following the procedure of ASTM G101, Standard Guide for Estimating the Atmospheric Corrosion Resistance of Low Alloy Steels.
(24) Further, examples of yield strengths, tensile strengths, and percent elongations achieved with the currently disclosed method are shown in
(25) While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the foregoing drawings and description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character, it being understood that only illustrative embodiments thereof have been shown and described, and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the invention described by the following claims are desired to be protected. Additional features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the description. Modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.