Dictionary Definition
steel
Noun
1 an alloy of iron with small amounts of carbon;
widely used in construction; mechanical properties can be varied
over a wide range
3 knife sharpener consisting of a ridged steel
rod
Verb
1 get ready for something difficult or unpleasant
[syn: nerve]
2 cover, plate, or edge with steel
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Old English *stēlePronunciation
- /stiːl/
- /sti:l/
-
- Rhymes: -iːl
Homophones
Noun
steelTranslations
metal alloy
- Albanian: çelik
- Arabic:
- Bosnian: čelik
- Breton: dir
- Catalan: acer
- Chinese: 鋼, 钢 (gāng)
- Croatian: čelik
- Czech: ocel
- Danish: stål g Danish
- Dutch: staal
- Esperanto: ŝtalo
- Finnish: teräs
- French: acier
- German: Stahl
- Greek: χάλυβας (xálivas) , ατσάλι (atsáli) (from Medieval Venetian "azzal")
- Hebrew: פלדה
- Hindi: इस्पात (ispāt) , फ़ूलाद (fūlād)
- Hungarian: acél
- Icelandic: stál
- Italian: acciaio
- Japanese: 鋼鉄 (こうてつ, kōtetsu)
- Korean: 강철 (gangcheol)
- Latvian: tērauds
- Lithuanian: plienas g Lithuanian
- Maori: tīra
- Norwegian: stål
- Persian: فولاد
- Polish: stal
- Portuguese: aço
- Romanian: oţel
- Russian: сталь (stal’)
- Serbian:
- Slovak: oceľ
- Spanish: acero
- Swedish: stål
- Telugu: ఉక్కు (ukku)
- Turkish: çelik
- Urdu: اسپات, فولاد
- Welsh: dur
tool used to sharpen or hone knives
- Czech: ocílka
Related terms
Adjective
steel- made of steel
Translations
made of steel
- Danish: stål
- Dutch: stalen
- Finnish: teräksinen, teräsvalmisteinen
- French: d’acier, en acier
- German: stählern
- Greek: χαλύβδινος (xalívðinos) , ατσαλένιος (atsalénios) , ατσάλινος (atsálinos)
- Hungarian: acél
- Italian: di acciaio, d’acciaio, in acciaio
- Polish: stal
- Portuguese: aço
- Russian: стальной (stal’nój)
- Slovak: oceľový , oceľová , oceľové
- Swedish: stål-
Dutch
Pronunciation
- /stel/
- handle (of a broom, a pan)
Verb
steelExtensive Definition
Steel is an alloy consisting mostly of
iron, with a carbon content between 0.2 and
2.04% by weight (C:1000–10,8.67Fe),
depending on grade. Carbon is the most cost-effective alloying
material for iron, but various other alloying elements are used
such as manganese,
chromium, vanadium, and tungsten. Carbon and other
elements act as a hardening agent, preventing dislocations in the iron
atom crystal
lattice from sliding past one another. Varying the amount of
alloying elements and form of their presence in the steel (solute
elements, precipitated phase) controls qualities such as the
hardness, ductility and tensile
strength of the resulting steel. Steel with increased carbon
content can be made harder and stronger than iron, but is also more
brittle. The maximum
solubility of carbon in iron (in austenite region) is 2.14% by
weight, occurring at 1149 °C; higher
concentrations of carbon or lower temperatures will produce
cementite. Alloys with
higher carbon content than this are known as cast iron
because of their lower melting point and castability. Iron can be
found in the crust only in combination with oxygen or sulfur. Typical iron-containing
minerals include Fe2O3—the form of iron oxide
found as the mineral
hematite, and
FeS2—pyrite (fool's
gold). Iron is extracted from ore by removing the oxygen by
combining it with a preferred chemical partner such as carbon. This
process, known as smelting, was first applied to
metals with lower melting points. Copper melts at just
over 1000 °C, while tin melts around 250 °C.
Cast iron—iron alloyed with greater than 1.7% carbon—melts at
around 1370 °C. All of these temperatures could be reached
with ancient methods that have been used for at least 6000 years
(since the Bronze Age).
Since the oxidation rate itself increases rapidly beyond
800 °C, it is important that smelting take place in a
low-oxygen environment. Unlike copper and tin, liquid iron
dissolves carbon quite readily, so that smelting results in an
alloy containing too much carbon to be called steel.
Even in the narrow range of concentrations that
make up steel, mixtures of carbon and iron can form into a number
of different structures, with very different properties;
understanding these is essential to making quality steel. At room
temperature, the most stable form of iron is the body-centered
cubic (BCC) structure ferrite or
α-iron, a fairly soft metallic material that can dissolve only a
small concentration of carbon (no more than 0.021 wt% at
910 °C). Above 910 °C ferrite undergoes a
phase
transition from body-centered cubic to a face-centered
cubic (FCC) structure, called austenite or γ-iron, which is
similarly soft and metallic but can dissolve considerably more
carbon (as much as 2.03 wt% carbon at 1154 °C). As
carbon-rich austenite cools, the mixture attempts to revert to the
ferrite phase, resulting in an excess of carbon. One way for carbon
to leave the austenite is for cementite to precipitate out of the mix,
leaving behind iron that is pure enough to take the form of
ferrite, resulting in a cementite-ferrite mixture. Cementite is a
stoichiometric
phase with the chemical formula of Fe3C. Cementite forms in regions
of higher carbon content while other areas revert to ferrite around
it. Self-reinforcing patterns often emerge during this process,
leading to a patterned layering known as pearlite (Fe3C:6.33Fe) due to
its pearl-like appearance,
or the similar but less beautiful bainite.
Perhaps the most important
polymorphic form is martensite, a chemically
metastable substance with about four to five times the strength of
ferrite. A minimum of 0.4 wt% of carbon (C:50Fe) is needed
to form martensite. When austenite is quenched to form martensite,
the carbon is "frozen" in place when the cell structure changes
from FCC to BCC. The carbon atoms are much too large to fit in the
interstitial vacancies and thus distort the cell structure into a
body-centered tetragonal (BCT) structure. Martensite and austenite
have an identical chemical composition. As such, it requires
extremely little thermal activation
energy to form.
The heat treatment process for most steels
involves heating the alloy until austenite forms, then quenching the hot metal in
water or oil, cooling it so rapidly that the
transformation to ferrite or pearlite does not have time to take
place. The transformation into martensite, by contrast, occurs
almost immediately, due to a lower activation energy.
Martensite has a lower density than austenite, so
that transformation between them results in a change of volume. In
this case, expansion occurs. Internal stresses from this expansion
generally take the form of compression
on the crystals of martensite and tension
on the remaining ferrite, with a fair amount of shear on both
constituents. If quenching is done improperly, these internal
stresses can cause a part to shatter as it cools; at the very
least, they cause internal work
hardening and other microscopic imperfections. It is common for
quench cracks to form when water quenched, although they may not
always be visible.
At this point, if the carbon content is high
enough to produce a significant concentration of martensite, the
result is an extremely hard but very brittle material. Often, steel
undergoes further heat treatment at a lower temperature to destroy
some of the martensite (by allowing enough time for cementite etc.
to form) and help settle the internal stresses and defects. This
softens the steel, producing a more ductile and fracture-resistant
metal. Because time is so critical to the end result, this process
is known as tempering,
which forms tempered steel.
Other materials are often added to the
iron/carbon mixture to tailor the resulting properties. Nickel and manganese in steel add to its
tensile strength and make austenite more chemically stable,
chromium increases
hardness and melting temperature, and vanadium also increases
hardness while reducing the effects of metal
fatigue. Large amounts of chromium and nickel (often 18% and
8%, respectively) are added to stainless
steel so that a hard oxide forms on the metal
surface to inhibit corrosion. Tungsten
interferes with the formation of cementite, allowing martensite to
form with slower quench rates, resulting in high speed
steel. On the other hand sulfur, nitrogen, and phosphorus make steel more
brittle, so these commonly found elements must be removed from the
ore during processing.
When iron is smelted from its ore by commercial
processes, it contains more carbon than is desirable. To become
steel, it must be melted and reprocessed to remove the correct
amount of carbon, at which point other elements can be added. Once
this liquid is cast into ingots, it usually must be
"worked" at high temperature to remove any cracks or poorly mixed
regions from the solidification process, and to produce shapes such
as plate, sheet, wire, etc. It is then heat-treated to produce a
desirable crystal structure, and often "cold worked" to produce the
final shape. In modern steel making these processes are often
combined, with ore going in one end of the assembly
line and finished steel coming out the other. These can be
streamlined by a deft control of the interaction between work
hardening and tempering.
History of steelmaking
Ancient steel
Steel was known in antiquity, and may have been produced by managing the bloomery so that the bloom contained carbon. Some of the first steel comes from East Africa, dating back to 1400 BC. In the 4th century BC steel weapons like the Falcata were produced in the Iberian peninsula. The Chinese of the Han Dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) created steel by melting together wrought iron with cast iron, gaining an ultimate product of a carbon-intermediate—steel by the 1st century AD.Wootz steel and Damascus steel
Wootz steel was produced in India and Sri Lanka from
around 300 BC. Along with their original methods of forging steel,
the Chinese had also adopted the production methods of creating
Wootz
steel, an idea imported from India to China by the
5th century AD. This early steel-making method employed the use of
a wind furnace, blown by the monsoon winds and produced almost pure
steel. Also known as Damascus
steel, wootz is famous for its durability and ability to hold
an edge.
It was originally created from a number of different materials
including various trace
elements. It was essentially a complicated alloy with iron as
its main component. Recent studies have suggested that carbon
nanotubes were included in its structure, which might explain
some of its legendary qualities, though given the technology
available at that time, they were produced by chance rather than by
design.
Crucible
steel was produced in Merv by 9th to 10th
century AD.
In the 11th century, there is evidence of the
production of steel in Song China
using two techniques: a "berganesque" method that produced
inferior, inhomogeneous steel and a precursor to the modern
Bessemer process that utilized partial decarbonization via repeated
forging under a cold blast.
Early modern steel
Blister steel
Blister steel, produced by the cementation process was first made in Italy in the early 16th century CE and soon after introduced to England. It was produced by Sir Basil Brooke at Coalbrookdale during the 1610s. The raw material for this were bars of wrought iron. During the 17th century it was realised that the best steel came from oregrounds iron from a region of Sweden, north of Stockholm. This was still the usual raw material in the 19th century, almost as long as the process was used.Crucible steel
Crucible steel is steel that has been melted in a crucible rather than being forged, with the result that it is more homogeneous. Most previous furnaces could not reach high enough temperatures to melt the steel. The early modern crucible steel industry resulted from the invention of Benjamin Huntsman in the 1740s. Blister steel (made as above) was melted in a crucible in a furnace, and cast (usually) into ingots.. This enabled steel to be produced in large quantities cheaply, so that mild steel is now used for most purposes for which wrought iron was formerly used. This was only the first of a number of methods of steel production. The Gilchrist-Thomas process (or basic Bessemer process) was an improvement to the Bessemer process, lining the converter with a basic material to remove phosphorus. Another was the Siemens-Martin process of open hearth steelmaking, which like the Gilchrist-Thomas process complemented, rather than replaced, the original Bessemer process.Steel industry
Because of the critical role played by steel in infrastructural and overall economic development, the steel industry is often considered to be an indicator of economic progress.The economic boom in China and India has caused a
massive increase in the demand for steel in recent years. Between
2000 and 2005, world steel demand increased by 6%. Since 2000,
several Indian and Chinese steel firms have risen to prominence
like Tata
Steel (which bought Corus Group
in 2007),
Shanghai Baosteel Group Corporation and Shagang
Group. ArcelorMittal
is however the world's largest
steel producer.
The British
Geological Survey reports that in 2005, China was the top
producer of steel with about one-third world share followed by
Japan, Russia and the USA.
In 2008, steel will be traded as
a commodity in the London
Metal Exchange.
Recycling
Steel is the most widely recycled material in North America. The steel industry has been actively recycling for more than 150 years, in large part because it is economically advantageous to do so. It is cheaper to recycle steel than to mine iron ore and manipulate it through the production process to form 'new' steel. Steel does not lose any of its inherent physical properties during the recycling process, and has drastically reduced energy and material requirements than refinement from iron ore. The energy saved by recycling reduces the annual energy consumption of the industry by about 75%, which is enough to power eighteen million homes for one year. Recycling one ton of steel saves 1,100 kilograms of iron ore, 630 kilograms of coal, and 55 kilograms of limestone. 76 million tons of steel were recycled in 2005.In recent years, about three quarters of the
steel produced annually has been recycled. However, the numbers are
much higher for certain types of products. For example, in both
2004 and 2005, 97.5% of structural steel beams and plates were
recycled. Other steel construction elements such as reinforcement
bars are recycled at a rate of about 65%. Indeed, structural steel
typically contains around 95% recycled steel content, whereas
lighter gauge, flat rolled steel contains about 30% reused
material.
Because steel beams are manufactured to
standardized dimensions, there is often very little waste produced
during construction, and any waste
that is produced may be recycled. For a typical two-story house, a
steel
frame is equivalent to about six recycled cars, while a
comparable wooden frame house may require as many as 40–50 trees.
Global demand for steel continues to grow, and
though there are large amounts of steel existing, much of it is
actively in use. As such, recycled steel must be augmented by some
first-use metal, derived from raw materials. Commonly recycled
steel products include cans, automobiles, appliances, and debris from demolished buildings.
A typical appliance is about 65% steel by weight and automobiles are about 66%
steel and iron.
While some recycling takes place through the
integrated steel mills
and the basic
oxygen process, most of the recycled steel is melted
electrically, either using an electric
arc furnace (for production of low-carbon steel) or an induction
furnace (for production of some highly-alloyed ferrous
products).
Contemporary steel
Modern steels are made with varying combinations
of alloy metals to fulfill many purposes. Low alloy
steel is alloyed with other elements, usually molybdenum,
manganese, chromium, or nickel, in amounts of up to 10% by weight
to improve the hardenability of thick sections.
Some more modern steels include tool steels,
which are alloyed with large amounts of tungsten and cobalt or other elements to
maximize solution
hardening. This also allows the use of precipitation
hardening and improves the alloy's temperature
resistance.
Many other high-strength alloys exist, such as
dual-phase
steel, which is heat treated to contain both a ferrite and
martensic microstructure for extra strength. Transformation Induced
Plasticity (TRIP) steel involves special alloying and heat
treatments to stabilize amounts of austentite at room temperature
in normally austentite-free low-alloy ferritic steels. By applying
strain to the metal, the austentite undergoes a phase transition to
martensite without the addition of heat. Maraging
steel is alloyed with nickel and other elements, but unlike
most steel contains almost no carbon at all. This creates a very
strong but still malleable metal. Twinning
Induced Plasticity (TWIP) steel uses a specific type of strain to
increase the effectiveness of work hardening on the alloy. Eglin Steel
uses a combination of over a dozen different elements in varying
amounts to create a relatively low-cost metal for use in bunker
buster weapons. Hadfield steel (after Sir Robert
Hadfield) or manganese steel contains
12–14% manganese which when abraded forms an incredibly hard skin
which resists wearing. Examples include tank
tracks, bulldozer
blade edges and cutting blades on the jaws of
life. A special class of high-strength alloy, the superalloys, retain their
mechanical properties at extreme temperatures while minimizing
creep.
These are commonly used in applications such as jet engine
blades where temperatures can reach levels at which most other
alloys would become weak.
Most of the more commonly used steel alloys are
categorized into various grades by standards organizations. For
example, the
American Iron and Steel Institute has a series of grades
defining many types of steel ranging from standard carbon steel to
HSLA and stainless steel. The American
Society for Testing and Materials has a separate set of
standards, which define alloys such as A36 steel, the
most commonly used structural steel in the United States.
Though not an alloy, galvanized
steel is a commonly used variety of steel which has been hot-dipped
or electroplated in zinc
for protection against corrosion (rust).
Modern production methods
Blast
furnaces have been used for two millennia to produce pig iron, a
crucial step in the steel production process, from iron ore by
combining fuel, charcoal, and air. Modern methods use coke instead
of charcoal, which has proven to be a great deal more efficient and
is credited with contributing to the British Industrial
Revolution. Once the iron is refined, converters are used to
create steel from the iron. During the late 19th and early 20th
century there were many widely used methods such as the Bessemer
process and the Siemens-Martin process. However, basic
oxygen steelmaking, in which pure oxygen is fed to the furnace
to limit impurities, has generally replaced these older systems.
Electric
arc furnaces are a common method of reprocessing scrap metal to
create new steel. They can also be used for converting pig iron to
steel, but they use a great deal of electricity (about
440 kWh per metric ton), and are thus generally only
economical when there is a plentiful supply of cheap
electricity.
Uses of steel
Iron and steel are used widely in the
construction of roads, railways, infrastructure and buildings. Most
large modern structures, such as stadiums
and skyscrapers,
bridges and airports, are supported by a
steel skeleton. Even those with a concrete structure will employ
steel for reinforcing. In addition to widespread use in major
appliances and cars
(despite growth in usage of aluminium, it is still the
main material for car bodies), steel is used in a variety of other
construction-related
applications, such as bolts, nails,
and screws. Other common
applications include shipbuilding, pipeline
transport, mining,
aerospace, white goods
(eg. washing machines), heavy
equipment (eg. bulldozers), office furniture, steel wool,
tools, and armour in the form of personal
vests or vehicle
armour (better known as rolled
homogeneous armour in this role).
Historically
Before the introduction of the Bessemer process
and other modern production techniques, steel was expensive and was
only used where no cheaper alternative existed, particularly for
the cutting edge of knives, razors, swords, and other items where a
hard, sharp edge was needed. It was also used for springs,
including those used in clocks and watches.
Long steel
- As supports in reinforced concrete
- Wires
- Railroad tracks
- Structural steel in modern buildings and bridges
Flat carbon steel
- The inside and outside body of automobiles, trains, and ships.
- Major appliances
- Magnetic cores
Stainless steel
- Cutlery
- Rulers
- Wrist watches
- Surgical equipment
See also
References
Further reading
- Duncan Burn; The Economic History of Steelmaking, 1867-1939: A Study in Competition. Cambridge University Press, 1961 online version
- J. C. Carr and W. Taplin; History of the British Steel Industry Harvard University Press, 1962 online version
- Gernet, Jacques (1982). A History of Chinese Civilization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Harukiyu Hasegawa; The Steel Industry in Japan: A Comparison with Britain 1996 online version
- Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Part 1 & Part 3. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
- H. Lee Scamehorn; Mill & Mine: The Cf&I in the Twentieth Century University of Nebraska Press, 1992 online version
- Warren, Kenneth, Big Steel: The First Century of the United States Steel Corporation, 1901-2001. (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001) online review
External links
commons Steelsteel in Afrikaans: Staal
steel in Arabic: صلب (سبيكة)
steel in Azerbaijani: Polad
steel in Bulgarian: Стомана
steel in Catalan: Acer
steel in Czech: Ocel
steel in Welsh: Dur
steel in Danish: Stål
steel in German: Stahl
steel in Estonian: Teras
steel in Modern Greek (1453-): Χάλυβας
steel in Spanish: Acero
steel in Esperanto: Ŝtalo
steel in Basque: Altzairu
steel in Persian: فولاد
steel in French: Acier
steel in Friulian: Açâr
steel in Irish: Cruach (miotal)
steel in Scottish Gaelic: Stàilinn
steel in Galician: Aceiro
steel in Korean: 강철
steel in Upper Sorbian: Wocl
steel in Croatian: Čelik
steel in Indonesian: Baja
steel in Icelandic: Stál
steel in Italian: Acciaio
steel in Hebrew: פלדה
steel in Georgian: ფოლადი
steel in Swahili (macrolanguage): Chuma cha
pua
steel in Latin: Chalybs
steel in Latvian: Tērauds
steel in Lithuanian: Plienas
steel in Lojban: gasta
steel in Hungarian: Acél
steel in Malay (macrolanguage): Keluli
steel in Mongolian: Ган
steel in Dutch: Staal (metaal)
steel in Japanese: 鋼
steel in Norwegian: Stål
steel in Norwegian Nynorsk: Stål
steel in Occitan (post 1500): Acièr
steel in Polish: Stal
steel in Portuguese: Aço
steel in Romanian: Oţel
steel in Quechua: Asiru
steel in Russian: Сталь
steel in Sicilian: Azzaru
steel in Simple English: Steel
steel in Slovak: Oceľ
steel in Slovenian: Jeklo
steel in Serbian: Челик
steel in Serbo-Croatian: Čelik
steel in Finnish: Teräs
steel in Swedish: Stål
steel in Tamil: உருக்கு (கட்டிடப் பொருள்)
steel in Telugu: ఉక్కు
steel in Thai: เหล็กกล้า
steel in Vietnamese: Thép
steel in Turkish: Çelik
steel in Ukrainian: Сталь
steel in Yoruba: Irin
steel in Chinese: 钢
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Excalibur, Gibraltar, adamant, anneal, assessable stock,
aureate, authorized
capital stock, ax, bear up,
beef up, bite the bullet, blade, blue chip, blue chip stock,
bone, borrowed stock,
brace, brace up, brass, brassy, brazen, brick, bronze, bronzy, brutalize, buck up, buttress, calcify, callous, capital stock, case
harden, cement, cold
steel, common stock, concrete, confirm, convertible preferred
stock, copper, coppery, cornify, corporate stock,
cumulative preferred stock, cupreous, cuprous, cutlery, cutter, cyclical stock, dagger, defensive stock, deferred
stock, diamond, dirk, edge tools, eighth stock,
equities, equity, equity security, fancies, ferrous, ferruginous, firm, flint, floating stock, fortify, fossilize, gilt, gird, glamour issue, gold, gold-filled, gold-plated,
golden, granite, growth stock,
guaranteed stock, harden,
heart of oak, high-flier, horse, hot issue, hypothecated
stock, inactive stock, income stock, indurate, insulate, inure, invigorate, iron, ironlike, issued capital stock,
knife, lapidify, lead, leaden, letter stock, lion, lithify, loaned stock, long
stock, marble, mercurial, mercurous, nails, naked steel, nerve, nickel, nickelic, nickeline, nonassessable
stock, nonvoting stock, oak,
ordinary shares, ossify,
ox, pale blue chip,
participating preferred stock, penny stock, petrify, pewter, pewtery, pigsticker, point, preference stock, preferred
stock, prepare, prop, protect, protective stock,
puncturer, quarter
stock, quicksilver,
rails, rally, ready, refresh, reinforce, reinvigorate, restrengthen, reverse
split, rock, seasoned
stock, share ledger, shares, sharpener, shore up, short
stock, silver,
silver-plated, silvery,
special situation stock, specialty stock, speculative stock,
split, standard stock,
steels, steely, stiffen, stiletto, stock, stock ledger, stock list,
stock split, stocks,
stone, strengthen, support, sustain, sword, temper, ten-share unit stock,
tin, tinny, toad sticker, toughen, treasury stock, trusty
sword, undergird,
unissued capital stock, unmeasurable, utilities, vitrify, voting stock, whittle