Alloy steel

1-20 usd/kg
Circularity potential
High
Strength
Very high
Production energy
Medium
Stiffness
Very high
Embodied CO2
Medium
Density
Extreme

The properties of steel are transformed with the addition of alloys – such as chromium (Cr), manganese (Mn) and silicon (Si) – and tempering (controlled heating and cooling cycles in manufacture). While adding no more than 0.05% alloy to a plain carbon steel can almost double its strength, the cost is raised only very slightly. Other alloys, such as copper (Cu) and Cr, are added to improve corrosion resistance and yield materials that can tolerate extremely corrosive environments, or be left outdoors unpainted for more than a century.

Steel is relatively low cost and grades have been developed to suit almost every imaginable application. Its properties are highly tailorable and as a result, it is used in packaging (coated mild steel or naked stainless), automotive (steels with tensile strength of more than 550 MPa are known as advanced high-strength steel, AHSS), furniture, construction, buildings, bridges, heavy duty equipment, manufacturing equipment, laboratory environments and shipbuilding. Its tolerance to low and high temperatures in service depends on the grade, with some tool steels able to withstand extreme loads and shocks, and maintain incredible hardness (equivalent to granite and concrete) at over 500 degC.

Heat treatment (tempering) is a critical step in the production of many high performance steels. It is as important as the ingredients for the mechanical properties of the final part. Typically carried out once forming and welding have been completed, a steel item may be worth many more times the initial cost of the base metal by this point. Therefore, processes have been developed to reduce the risk of distortion, cracking and other defects. It has evolved into a sophisticate and critical step in the production of many types of steel.


Sustainability concerns
Non-renewable ingredients
Potential conflict commodity (3TG)
Raw material generates polluting by-products


Hot work tool steel (H) is used to make tools and dies for high-temperature manufacturing processes used in the production of non-ferrous metals, iron and glass, such as die casting, extrusion, drop forging, pressing and glassblowing. They have exceptional toughness and hardness at elevated temperature, and can tolerate thermal loading and shock. While applications are industrial, they are used to make many everyday objects.

They are based on low carbon steel, with various alloys – principally chromium (Cr), tungsten (W) or molybdenum (Mo) – that help improve resistance to shock, deformation at elevated temperature and abrasion. They are formed by machining, forging, pressing and swaging in the annealed condition, and then hardened to form the final structure and surface quality. The three main groups are:
– Cr-steeels (H10-19) are tough and resistant to continual exposure to high temperatures up to 500 degC.
– W-steels (H21-26) are harder than Cr-steel, but more brittle, and so unsuitable for forging dies, for example.
– Mo-steel (H42) is similar to W-steel.


Design properties
Cost usd/kg
8-20
Embodied energy MJ/kg
75
Carbon footprint kgCO2e/kg
6.8
Density kg/m3
7800
Tensile modulus GPa
200
Tensile strength MPa
1000
Hardness Mohs
5.5-6.5
Brinell hardness HB
400-577
Poissons ratio
0.29
Thermal expansion (µm/m)/ºC
10.4
Thermal conductivity W/mK
25
Temperature min-max °C
-40 to 500
Thermal
conductive
Electrical
conductor
Electrical resistivity µΩ⋅m
0.2