| active |
The surface has lost its ability to resist corrosion (the passive
state) under the prevailing conditions |
| annealing |
A softening heat treatment done to
restore machinability or cold formability, usually following cold
working. Solution annealing dissolves precipitated particles (eg
carbides, sigma phase) to optimise corrosion resistance. |
| austenite |
A phase in the steel with the
smallest building block of atomic structure of 'face centred cubic'
(fcc) ie one atom at the eight corners of a cube and one in the centre
of each of the six faces. Austenitic
stainless steels with this structure include 1.4301 (304) and are
characteristically non-magnetic. |
| austenitising |
The first stage during the
hardening / strengthening heat treatment of martensitic stainless
steels. Normally followed by a tempering treatment after cooling down
to ambient temperatures. |
| bright annealing |
An annealing process done
in a protective atmosphere to prevent surface tarnish or oxidation. A
cracked ammonia gas is usually used during bright annealing of strip
(coil) at the steel mill. The resulting finish is 2R (BSEN
10088-2), often also known as BA |
| cathodic protection |
Methods of increasing the corrosion resistance of the
surface, over a wider range of conditions, for example on 316 types in
some seawater applications. Impressed voltage methods are widely
used, lowering the electrode potential of the metal surface. |
| chlorides (halides) |
Ions formed from
chlorine (fluorine, bromine, iodine) atoms. Often corrosive when in
solutions. Can be the cause of localised attack mechanisms such as crevice,
pitting and stress corrosion cracking. |
| cold working |
Deformation (forming, machining) below the recrystallisation
temperature of the steel, resulting in a progressive
increase in strength and hardness as more working is done. |
| corrosion |
An electrochemical process where metal atoms are removed from
the surface of the steel. Stainless
steels have good general corrosion resistance but can suffer from
localised corrosion mechanism such as crevice, pitting and stress
corrosion cracking. |
| creep |
Slow, time dependant, deformation
normally at temperatures above 600 C. Stress levels that result in
creep are significantly below the short term proof strength for a
particular temperature. |
| deep drawing |
A cold
forming method
where a sheet is drawn into a die by a press tool to make deep cup or
bowl shapes. The side wall of the pressing is not deliberately thinned
during forming cf stretch forming. Grade 1.4301(304) is used widely for
deep drawn sink bowls |
| duplex |
Steels
with a mix of austenite and ferrite phases, intended to produce higher
mechanical strength steels with better stress corrosion cracking
resistance than the austenitic types. |
| fatigue
(endurance) |
A
progressive mechanical failure mechanism resulting from oscillating
(cyclic) stresses (eg vibration) over a large number of stress
reversals. Martensitic steels can be susceptible to fatigue, other
types are more resistant. |
| ferrite |
A phase in the steel with the
smallest building block of atomic structure of 'body centred cubic'
(bcc) ie one atom at the eight corners of a cube and one in the centre
of the cube. Ferritic
stainless steels with this structure include 1.4016 (430) and are
characteristically magnetic. |
| hardening |
Normally associated with heat
treatment processes (austenitising and tempering) but cold work also
increases the hardness of austenitic stainless steels. Hardness is the
resistance to indentation or scratching, cf strengthening which is an
increase in tensile properties. |
| hot working |
Deformation (forging) above the
recrystallisation temperature of the steel. Here the metal continuously
anneals itself as the work progresses. There is no increase in strength
on cooling to ambient temperature and annealing is not needed after hot
working. |
| martensite |
A phase in the steel with a
characteristic high hardness, but which can be brittle. Formed when
carbon/chromium (martensitic stainless steels) are cooled rapidly from
their austenitising temperature during heat treatment. Martensitic
stainless steels include grades 1.4021 (420). |
| normalizing |
A form of sub-critical
temperature annealing process used where some of the structural
breakdown during previous cold working is to be retained. |
| passive |
Surface
condition making the steel corrosion resistant ie the passive film is
stable under the prevailing conditions. Stainless steels are intended
to be used under conditions where they maintain their passive
condition. |
| passivation |
Surface
oxidising treatments, normally done using nitric acid, to promote the
formation of the transparent protective corrosion resisting layer on
the surface of the steel. These treatments are only needed for complex
machined parts intended for immediate service where the natural
passivation process may be hindered. |
| permeability |
A
magnetic property
of materials related to their ability to be attracted by a permanent
magnet or influenced by a magnetic field. Austentic stainless steels eg
1.4301(304) when annealed have relative permeability levels just above
1 and are said to be non-magnetic. |
| pH |
A scale for showing the hydrogen ion
concentration of solutions. Acids have pH values between 1 and 6,
basses (alkalis) between 8 and 14 and water (neutral) has a value of 7. |
| pickle (pickling) |
Chemical (usually acid) treatments that remove a thin layer
of surface metal. Pickling with nitric acid is also used to remove iron
contamination from stainless steel surfaces. |
| pinch pass |
Also known as skin pass. A final cold rolling operation in
the production of coil (strip) to improve shape and flatness. Resulting
finish is 2B |
| pitting |
A form of localised
corrosion (attack) often associated with the presence of chlorides
in the environment. |
| precipitation
hardening |
A
strengthening mechanism produced by heat treatment. Can only be done on
specially formulated steels eg 1.4542 (17/4PH). High strengths are
achieved with better impact toughness than with ordinary martensitic
steels eg 1.4021 (420), 1.4057 (431), but usually with lower
hardnesses. |
| scaling temperature |
Temperature above which an arbitrary rate of surface oxidation in
air occurs. Often expressed in a weight gain per unit surface area
per specified time unit eg gm/cm2/hour |
| sensitisation |
A potential reduction in corrosion
resistance
(normally associated with intercystalline attack) due to holding or
passing through particular high temperature ranges. Weld decay is an
old term for this. |
| stabilisation |
Making the steel more
resistant to intercystalline corrosion sensitisation by adding small
amounts of either titanium or niobium to the steel. Grades 1.4541
(321), 1.4550 (347) and 1.4571
(316Ti) are examples of stabilised grades. |
| stress
relieving |
Heat
treatment done to reduce internal (residual) stresses, following cold
working. Done to improve resistance to stress corrosion cracking. |
| stretch forming |
A
cold forming
method where a sheet is drawn into a die by a press tool to make deep
cup or bowl shapes. The side wall of the pressing is thinned during
forming but the cold working induced prevents fractures in these areas
cf deep drawing. |
| tempering |
The second stage during the
hardening / strengthening heat treatment of martensitic stainless
steels. Improves the toughness but with some loss in strength and
hardness. |