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What
is Carbon Steel?
The
majority of the nearly 3, 500 different types of steel produced
and available in the global market today is carbon steel. Carbon
steel is formed when two elements, iron and carbon, is combined
with carbon being used as the alloying element. The carbon is used
as a hardening agent to prevent iron atoms in the crystal lattice
from sliding around. The carbon steel structure also has ferrite,
pearlite and cementite present in varying quantities, depending on
the carbon quantity of the steel. The percentage of carbon in the
steel affects the hardness, strength elasticity and ductility of
the steel. Low carbon content steel or mild steel has similar
properties to iron but it is softer and easy to form. As the
carbon content rises, the steel is harder and stronger but it is
less ductile. Mild or low carbon steel has a carbon content of
0.05 to 0.26 percent, medium carbon steel has a carbon content of
0.29 to 0.54 percent and high carbon steel has a carbon content of
0.55 to 0.95 percent with very high carbon steel having a carbon
content of 0.96 to 2.1 percent.
Carbon Steel
Coding
The AISI and
the SAE have designed a four digit code to assign to all carbon
and alloy steels to show its standard wrought steel composition.
In carbon steel grades the last two digits indicate the nominal
carbon content. When the code 10 appears in the first two digits
of the code (ex. 10xx) the steel is plain carbon steel. If the
code is 11xx it is resulfurized, 12xx refers to resulfurized and
rephosphorized while 15xx refers to nonresulfurized with a Mn
content of over 1 percent. The presence of the letter L between
the second and third digits of the code indicates that it is a
leaded steel. The letter B indicates a boron steel. Cast-carbon
steels will usually be specified by grade, such as A, B, or C. The
A grade (also LCA, WCA, AN, AQ, etc.) has a 0.25 percent carbon
content and a maximum of 0.70 percent of Mn. B-grade steel has a
0.30 percent carbon content and a Mn content of 1.00 percent while
C-grade steel has a 0.25 percent carbon content and 1.20 percent
of Mn. The mixture of carbon and manganese in a steel is used to
improve the steel’s strength, toughness, and weldability. Cast
carbon steels are specified to ASTM A27, A216, A352, or A487
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