>> GLOSSARY OF TERMS
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A.S.T.M.
Abbreviation for American Society For Testing Material. An organization for issuing standard specifications on materials, including metals and alloys.
ACCORDION REED STEEL
Hardened, tempered polished and blued or yellow flat steel with dressed edges. Carbon content about 1.00. Material has to possess good flatness, uniform hardness and high elasticity.
ACID-BRITTLENESS
Brittleness resulting from pickling steel in acid; hydrogen, formed by the interaction between iron and acid, is partially absorbed by the metal, causing acid brittleness.
ACID-PROCESS
A process of making steel, either Bessemer, open-hearth or electric, in which the furnace is lined with a siliceous refractory and for which low phosphorous pig iron is required as this element is not removed.
ACID-STEEL
The term has no reference to the acidity of the steel. (See acid process.)
AGE HARDENING
The term as applied to soft, or low carbon steels, relates to a wide variety of commercially important, slow, gradual changes that take place in properties of steels after the final treatment. These changes, which bring about a condition of increased hardness, elastic limit, and tensile strength with a consequent loss in ductility, occur during the period in which the steel is at normal temperatures.
AGING
Spontaneous change in the physical properties of some metals, which occurs on standing, at atmospheric temperatures after final cold working or after a final heat treatment. Frequently synonymous with the term "Age-Hardening."
AIR COOLING
Cooling of the heated metal, intermediate in rapidity between slow furnace cooling and quenching, in which the metal is permitted to stand in the open air.
AIR HARDENING STEEL
Alloy steel which may be hardened by cooling in air from a temperature above the transformation range. Such steels attain their martenstic structure without going through the quenching process. Additions of chromium, nickel, molybdenum and manganese are effective toward this end.
AISI STEELS
Steels of the American Iron and Steel Institute. Common and alloy steels have been numbered in a system essentially the same as the SAE. The AISI system is more elaborate than the SAE in that all numbers are preceded by letters: "A" represents basic open-hearth alloy steel, "B" acid Bessemer carbon steel, "C" basic open-hearth carbon steel, "CB" either acid Bessemer or basic open-hearth carbon steel, "E" electric furnace alloy steel.
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