Hi Stan,

Cast high alloy steels are widely used for their corrosion resistance in aqueous media 
at or near room temperature and for service in hot gases and liquids at elevated and 
high temperatures (> 650�C). High-alloy cast steels are most often specified on the 
basis of composition using the designation system, which has been replaced by the 
Alloy Casting Institute (ACI), which formerly administered these designations.

Mechanical properties of these grades (for example, hardness and tensile strength) can 
be altered by suitable heat treatment. The cast high-alloy grades that contain more 
than 20 to 30% Cr+Ni, however, do not show the phase changes observed in plain carbon 
and low-alloy steels during heating or cooling between room temperature and the 
melting point. These materials are therefore non hardenable, and their properties 
depend on composition rather than heat treatment. Therefore, special consideration 
must be given to each grade of high-alloy cast steel with regard to casting design, 
foundry practice, and subsequent thermal processing.

Corrosion-resistant high-alloy cast steels, more commonly referred to as cast 
stainless steels, have grown steadily in technological and commercial importance 
during the past 40 years. The principal applications for these steels are for 
chemical-processing and power-generating equipment involving corrosion service in 
aqueous or liquid-vapor environments at temperatures normally below 315�C. These 
alloys are also used for special services at temperatures up to 650�C.

Cast stainless steels are defined as ferrous alloys that contain a minimum of 17% Cr 
for corrosion resistance. Most cast stainless steels are of course considerably more 
complex compositionally than this simple definition implies. Stainless steels 
typically contain one or more alloying elements in addition to chromium (for example, 
nickel, molybdenum, copper, niobium, and nitrogen) to produce a specific 
microstructure, corrosion resistance, or mechanical properties for particular service 
requirements.

Corrosion-resistant high-alloy cast steels are usually classified on the basis of 
composition or microstructure. It should be recognized that these bases for 
classification are not completely independent in most cases; that is, classification 
by composition also often involves microstructural distinctions.

Alloys are grouped as chromium steels, chromium-nickel steels in which chromium is the 
predominant alloying element, and nickel-chromium steels in which nickel is the 
predominant alloying element. The serviceability of cast corrosion-resistant steels 
depends greatly on the absence of carbon, and especially precipitated carbides, in the 
alloy microstructure.

The high-alloy cast steels can also be classified on the basis of microstructure. 
Structures may be austenitic, ferritic, martensitic, or duplex; the structure of a 
particular grade is primarily determined by composition. Chromium, nickel, and carbon 
contents are particularly important in this regard. In general, straight chromium 
grades of high-alloy cast steel are either martensitic or ferritic, the 
chromium-nickel grades are either duplex or austenitic, and the nickel-chromium steels 
are fully austenitic.

Martensitic grades include alloys CA-15, CA-40, CA-I5M, and CA-6NM. The CA-15 alloy 
contains the minimum amount of chromium necessary to make it essentially rustproof. It 
has good resistance to atmospheric corrosion as well as to many organic media in 
relatively mild service. A higher-carbon modification of CA-15, CA-40 can be heat 
treated to higher strength and hardness levels. Alloy CA-15M is a 
molybdenum-containing modification of CA-15 that provides improved 
elevated-temperature strength. Alloy CA-6NM is an iron-chromium-nickel-molybdenum 
alloy of low carbon content.

Austenitic grades include CH-20, CK-20, and CN-7M. The CH-20 and CK-20 alloys are 
high-chromium, high-carbon, wholly austenitic compositions in which the chromium 
exceeds the nickel content. The more highly alloyed CN-7M has excellent corrosion 
resistance in many environments and is often used in sulfuric acid service.

Ferritic grades are designated CB-30 and CC-50. Alloy CB-30 is practically 
nonhardenable by heat treatment. As this alloy is normally made, the balance among the 
elements in the composition results in a wholly ferritic structure similar to wrought 
AISI type 442 stainless steel. Alloy CC-50 has substantially more chromium than CB-30 
and has relatively high resistance to localized corrosion in many environments.

Austenitic-ferritic alloys include CE-30, CF-3, CF-3A, CF-8, CF-SA, CF-20, CF-3M, 
CF-3MA, CF-8M, CF-8C, CF-16F, and CG-8M. The microstructures of these alloys usually 
contain 5 to 40% ferrite, depending on the particular grade and the balance among the 
ferrite-promoting and austenite-promoting elements in the chemical composition.

Duplex Alloys. Two duplex alloys CD-4MCu and Ferralium are currently of interest. 
Alloy CD-4MCu is the most highly alloyed duplex alloy. Ferralium was developed by 
Langley Alloys and is essentially CD-4MCu with about 0.15% N added. With high levels 
of ferrite (about 40 to 50%) and low nickel, the duplex alloys have better resistance 
to stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) than CF-3M. Alloy CD-4MCu, which contains no 
nitrogen and has relatively low molybdenum content, has only slightly better 
resistance to localized corrosion than CF-3M. Ferralium, which has nitrogen and 
slightly higher molybdenum than CD-4MCu, exhibits better-localized corrosion 
resistance than either CF-3M or CD-4MCu.

Improvements in stainless steel production practices (for example, electron beam 
refining, vacuum and argon-oxygen decarburization, and vacuum induction melting) have 
created a second generation of duplex stainless steels. These steels offer excellent 
resistance to pitting and crevice corrosion, significantly better resistance to 
chloride SCC than the austenitic stainless steels, good toughness, and yield strengths 
two to three times higher than those of type 304 or 316 stainless steels.

First generation duplex stainless steels, for example, AISI type 329 and CD-4MCu, have 
been in use for many years. The need for improvement in the weldability and corrosion 
resistance of these alloys resulted in the second-generation alloys, which are 
characterized by the addition of nitrogen as an alloying element.

Second generation duplex stainless steels are usually about a 50-50 blend of ferrite 
and austenite. The new duplex alloys combine the near immunity to chloride SCC of the 
ferritic grades with the toughness and ease of fabrication of the austenitics. Among 
the second-generation duplexes, Alloy 2205 seems to have become the general-purpose 
stainless.

Precipitation-Hardening Grades. The alloys in this group are CB-7Cu and CD-4MCu. Alloy 
CB-7Cu is a low-carbon martensitic alloy that may contain minor amounts of retained 
austenite or ferrite. The copper precipitates in the martensite when the alloy is heat 
treated to the hardened (aged) condition.

Heat-resistant high-alloy steel castings are extensively used for applications 
involving service temperatures in excess of 650�C. Strength at these elevated 
temperatures is only one of the criteria by which these materials are selected, 
because applications often involve aggressive environments to which the steel must be 
resistant. The atmospheres most commonly encountered are air, flue gases, or process 
gases; such atmospheres may be either oxidizing or reducing and may be sulfidizing or 
carburizing if sulfur or carbon are present.

Carbon and low-alloy steels seldom have adequate strength and corrosion resistance at 
elevated temperatures in the environments for which heat-resistant cast steels are 
normally selected. Only heat-resistant steels exhibit the required mechanical 
properties and corrosion resistance over long periods of time without excessive or 
unpredictable degradation. In addition to long-term strength and corrosion resistance, 
some cast heat-resistant steels exhibit special resistance to the effects of cyclic 
temperatures and changes in the nature of the operating environment.

These alloy types resemble high-alloy corrosion-resistant steels except for their 
higher carbon contents, which impart greater strength at elevated temperature. The 
higher carbon content and, to a lesser extent, alloy composition ranges distinguish 
cast heat-resistant steel grades from their wrought counterparts.

Iron-chromium alloys contain 8 to 30% Cr and little or no nickel. They are ferritic in 
structure and exhibit low ductility at ambient temperatures. Iron-chromium alloys are 
primarily used where resistance to gaseous corrosion is the predominant consideration 
because they possess relatively low strength at elevated temperatures.

Iron-chromium-nickel alloys contain more than 18% Cr and more than 8% Ni, with the 
chromium content always exceeding that of nickel. They exhibit an austenitic matrix, 
although several grades also contain some ferrite. These alloys exhibit greater 
strength and ductility at elevated temperatures than those in the iron-chromium group 
and withstand moderate thermal cycling. Examples of these alloys are the HE, HF, HH, 
HI, HK, and HL grades.

Iron-nickel-chromium alloys contain more than 10% Cr and more than 23% Ni, with the 
nickel content always exceeding that of chromium. These alloys are wholly austenitic 
and exhibit high strength at elevated temperatures. They can withstand considerable 
temperature cycling and severe thermal gradients and are well suited to many reducing, 
as well as oxidizing, environments. Examples of iron-nickel-chromium alloys are the 
HN, HP, HT, HU, HW, and HX grades. Even though nickel is the major element in the HW 
and HX grades, these grades are ordinarily referred to as high-alloy steels rather 
than nickel-base alloys.




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> well, VERY loosely speaking essentially all nickle iron meteroties could be 
> said to be stainless steel, no?
> 
> 
> 
> >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Montrose, CO �meteor
> >Date: Tue, 25 May 2004 16:27:53 -0400
> >
> ><< while the more rare ones are comprised of solid steel. >>
> >
> >
> >Hmmmmm.....What's the classification for a "steel" meteorite.
> >
> >Hopefully this was poetic license by the author, and not a quote from 
> >either of our list members.
> >
> >
> >
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