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Abrasion
The process of rubbing, grinding, or wearing away by friction.

Abrasive
A substance capable of grinding away another material.

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 Steel
Steel melted in a furnace with an acid bottom and lining and under a slag containing an excess of an acid
substance such as silica.

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 phosphorus pig iron is required as this element is not removed.

Activation
The changing of the passive surface of a metal to a chemically active state. Contrast with passivation.

Age Hardening
Hardening by aging, usually after rapid cooling or cold working. 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
A change in properties that occurs at ambient or moderately elevated temperatures after hot working or a
heat treating operation (quench aging in ferrous alloys), or after a cold working operation (strain aging).
The change in properties is often, but not always, due to a phase change (precipitation), but does not
involve a change in chemical composition. In a metal or alloy, a change in properties that generally occurs
slowly at room temperature and more rapidly at higher temperatures.

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
A steel containing sufficient carbon and other alloying elements to harden fully during cooling in air or
other gaseous mediums from a temperature above its transformation range. Such steels attain their
martensitic structure without going through the quenching process. Additions of chromium, nickel,
molybdenum and manganese are effective toward this end. The term should be restricted to steels that are
capable of being hardened by cooling in air in fairly large sections, about 2 in. or more in diameter.

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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 ar basic open-hearth carbon steel, E electric furnace alloy
steel.

Alclad
Composite sheet produced by bonding either corrosion-resistant aluminum alloy or aluminum of high
purity to base metal of structurally stronger aluminum alloy. The coatings are anodic to the core so they
protect exposed areas of the core electrolytically during exposure to corrosive environment.

Allotriomorph
A particle of a phase that has no regular external shape.

Allotropy
The property whereby certain elements may exist in more than one crystal structure.

Alloy
A substance having metallic properties and composed of two or more chemical elements of which at least
one is a metal.

Alloy Steel
Steel containing substantial quantities of elements other than carbon and the commonly-accepted limited
amounts of manganese, sulfur, silicon, and phosphorus. Addition of such alloying elements is usually for
the purpose of increased hardness, strength or chemical resistance. The metals most commonly used for
forming alloy steels are: nickel, chromium, silicon, manganese tungsten, molybdenum and vanadium, Low
Alloy steels are usually considered to be those containing a total of less than 5% of such added constituents.

Alloying Element
An element added to a metal, and remaining in the metal, that effects changes in structure and properties.

Alpha Brass
A copper-zinc alloy containing up to 38% of zinc. Used mainly for cold working.

Alpha Bronze
A copper-tin alloy consisting of the alpha solid solution of tin in copper. Commercial forms contain 4 or 5%
of tin. This alloy is used in coinage, springs, turbine, blades, etc.

Alpha Iron
The polymorphic form of iron, stable below 1670 (degrees) F. has a body centered cubic lattice, and is
magnetic up to 1410 (degrees) F.

Aluminizing
Forming an aluminum or aluminum alloy coating on a metal by hot dipping, hot spraying, or diffusion.

Aluminum (Chemical symbol Al)


Element No. 13 of the periodic system; Atomic weight 26.97; silvery white metal of valence 3; melting
point 1220 (degrees) F; boiling point approximately 4118 (degrees) F.; ductile and malleable; stable against
normal atmospheric corrosion, but attacked by both acids and alkalis. Aluminum is used extensively in
articles requiring lightness, corrosion resistance, electrical conductivity, etc. Its principal functions as an
alloy in steel making; (1) Deoxidizes efficiently. (2) Restricts grain growth (by forming dispersed oxides or
nitrides) (3) Alloying element in nitriding steel.

Aluminum Killed Steel


A steel where aluminum has been used as a deoxidizing agent.

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Angstrom Unit
(A) A unit of linear measure equal to 10(-10)m, or 0.1 nm; not an accepted Si unit, but still sometimes used
for small distances such as interatomic distances and some wavelengths.

Anisotropy
The characteristics of exhibiting different values of a property in different directions with respect to a fixed
reference system in the material.

Annealing
Heating to and holding at a suitable temperature and then cooling at a suitable rate, for such purposes as
reducing hardness, improving machinability, facilitating cold working, producing a desired microstructure,
or obtaining desired mechanical, physical, or other properties. When applicable, the following more
specific terms should be used: black annealing, blue annealing, box annealing, bright annealing, flame
annealing, graphitizing, intermediate annealing, isothermal annealing, malleablizing, process annealing,
quench annealing, recrystallization annealing, and spheroidizing. When applied to ferrous alloys, the term
annealing, without qualification, implies full annealing. When applied to nonferrous alloys, the term
annealing implies a heat treatment designed to soften an age-hardened alloy by causing a nearly complete
precipitation of the second phase in relatively coarse form. Any process of annealing will usually reduce
stresses, but if the treatment is applied for the sole purpose of such relief, it should be designated stress
relieving.

Annealing Twin
A twin formed in a metal during an annealing heat treatment.

Anodizing (Aluminum Adic Oxide Coating),


A process of coating aluminum by anodic treatment resulting in a thin film of aluminum oxide of extreme
hardness. A wide variety of dye colored coatings are possible by impregnation in process.

Arc Welding
A group of welding processes wherein the metal or metals being joined are coalesced by heating with an
arc, with or without the application of pressure and with or without the use of filler metal.

Artifact
In microscopy, a false structure introduced during preparation of a specimen.

Artificial Aging
An aging treatment above room temperature.

ASTM
Abbreviation for American Society For Testing Material. An organization for issuing standard
specifications on materials, including metals and alloys.

Atomic-Hydrogen Weld,
Arc welding with heat from an arc between two tungsten or other suitable electrodes in a hydrogen
atmosphere. The use of pressure and filler metal is optional.

Attenuation
The fractional decrease of the intensity of an energy flux, including the reduction of intensity resulting from
geometrical spreading, absorption, and scattering.

Ausenitic Grain Size


The size of the grains in steel heated into the austenitic region.

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Austempering
Quenching a ferrous alloy from a temperature above the transformation range, in a medium having a rate of
heat abstraction high enough to prevent the formation of high-temperature transformation products, and
then holding the alloy, until transformation is complete, at a temperature below that of pearlite formation
and above that of martensite formation.

Austenite
Phase in certain steels, characterized as a solid solution, usually of carbon or iron carbide, in the hamma
form of iron. Such steels are known as austenitic. Austenite is stable only above 1333 (degrees) F. in a plain
carbon steel, but the presence of certain alloying elements, such as nickel and manganese, stabilizes the
austenitec form, even at normal temperatures.

Austenitic Steel
Steel which, because of the presence of alloying elements, such as manganese, nickel, chromium, etc.,
shows stability of Austenite at normal temperatures.

Austenitizing
Forming austenite by heating a ferrous alloy into the transformation range (partial austenitizing) or above
the transformation range (complete austenitizing).

Austentite
A solid solution of one or more elements in face-centered cubic iron.

Autofrettage
Pre-stressing a hollow metal cylinder by the use of momentary internal pressure exceeding the yield
strength.

Autoradiograph
A radiograph recorded photographically by radiation spontaneously emitted by radioisotopes that are
produced in, or added to, the material. This technique identifies the locations of the radioisotopes.

Bainite
A eutectoid transformation product of ferrite and a fine dispersion of carbide, generally formed at
temperatures below 840 to 930 F (450 to 500 C): upper bainite is an aggregate containing parallel lath-
shape units of ferrite, produces the so-called feathery appearance in optical microscopy, and is formed at
temperatures above about 660 F (350 C) ; lower bainite consists of individual plate-shape units and is
formed at temperatures below about 660 F (350 C). Also, a slender, needle-like (acicular) microstructure
appearing in spring steel strip characterized by toughness and greater ductility than tempered Martensite.
Bainite is a decomposition product of Austenite best developed at interrupted holding temperatures below
those forming fine pearlite and above those giving Martensite.

Bamboo Grain Structure


A structure in wire or sheet in which the boundaries of the grains tend to be aligned normal to the long axis
and to extend completely through the thickness.

Band Saw Steel (Wood)


A hardened tempered bright polished high carbon cold rolled spring steel strip produced especially for use
in the manufacture of band saws for sawing wood, non ferrous metals, and plastics. Usually carries some
nickel and with a Rockwell value of approximately C40/45.

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Banded Structure
Appearance of a metal showing parallel bands in the direction of rolling or working.

Banding
Inhomogeneous distribution of alloying elements or phases aligned in filaments or plates parallel to the
direction of working.

Bark
Surface of metal, under the oxide-scale layer, resulting from heating in an oxidizing environment. In the
case of steel, such bark always suffers from decarburization.

Basic Oxygen Process


A steel making process wherein oxygen of the highest purity is blown onto the surface of a bath of molten
iron contained in a basic lined and ladle shaped vessel. The melting cycle duration is extremely short with
quality comparable to Open Hearth Steel.

Basic Steel
Steel melted in a furnace with a basic bottom and lining and under a slag containing an excess of a basic
substance such as magnesia or lime.

Bath Annealing
Is immersion is a liquid bath (such as molten lead or fused salts) held at an assigned temperature-when a
lead bath is used, the process is known as lead annealing.

Bauxite
The only commercial ore of aluminum, corresponding essentially to the formula Al2O3xH2O.

Beading
Raising a ridge on sheet metal.

Bearing Load
A compressive load supported by a member, usually a tube or collar, along a line where contact is made
with a pin, rivet, axle, or shaft.

Bearing Strength
The maximum bearing load at failure divided by the effective bearing area. In a pinned or riveted joint, the
iffective area is calculated as the product of the diameter of the hole and the thickness of the bearing
member.

Bend Radius
The inside radius of a bent section,

Bend Test
Various tests which is used to ascertain the toughness and ductility of a metal product, in which the material
is bent around its axis and/ or around an outside radius. A complete test might specify such a bend to be
both with and against the direction of grain. For testing, samples should be edge filed to remove burrs and
any edgewise cracks resulting from slitting or shearing. If a vice is to be employed, then you must line the
jaws with some soft metal, to permit a flow of the metal in the piece being tested.

Beryllium Copper
An alloy of copper and 2-3% beryllium with optionally fractional percentages of nickel or cobalt. Alloys of
this series show remarkable age-hardening properties and an ultimate hardness of about 400 Brinell
(Rockwell C43). Because of such hardness and good electrical conductivity, beryllium-copper is used in
electrical switches, springs, etc.

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Bessemer Process
A process for making steel by blowing air through molten pig iron contained in a refractory lined vessel so
that the impurities are thus removed by oxidation.

Billet
A solid semi-finished round or square product that has been hot worked by forging, rolling, or extrusion.
An iron or steel billet has a minimum width or thickness of 1 1/2 in. and the cross-sectional area varies
from 2 1/4 to 36 sq. in. For nonferrous metals, it may also be a casting suitable for finished or semi-finished
rolling or for extrusion.

Binary Alloy
An alloy containing two elements, apart from minor impurities, as brass containing the two elements
copper and zinc.

Black Annealing
A process of box annealing or pot annealing ferrous alloy sheet, strip or wire after hot working and
pickling.

Black Oil Tempered Spring Steel Strip (Scaleless Blue)


A flat cold rolled usually .70/.80 medium high carbon steel strip, blue-black in color, which has been
quenched in oil and drawn to desired hardness. While it looks and acts much like blue tempered spring steel
and carries a Rockwell hardness of C44/47, it has not been polished and is lower in carbon content. Used
for less exacting requirements than clock spring steel, such as snaps, lock springs, hold down springs, trap
springs, etc. It will take a more severe bend before fracture than will clock spring, but it does not have the
same degree of spring-back.

Black Plate
A light weight or a thin uncoated steel sheet or strip so called because of its dark oxide coloring prior to
pickling. It is manufactured by two different processes. (1) Form sheet bar on single stand sheet mills or
sheet mills in tandem. This method is now almost obsolete. (2) On modern, high speed continuous tandem
cold reduction mills from coiled hot rolled pickled wide strip into ribbon wound coils to finished gage.
Sizes range from 12 to 32 in width, and in thicknesses from 55 lbs. to 275 lbs. base box weight. It is used
either as is for stampings, or may be enameled or painted or tin or terne coated.

Blast Furnace
A vertical shaft type smelting furnace in which an air blast is used, usually hot, for producing pih iron. The
furnace is continuous in operation using iron ore, coke, and limestone as raw materials which are charged at
the top while the molten iron and slag are collected at the bottom and are tapped out at intervals.

Blister
A defect in metal, on or near the surface, resulting from the expansion of gas in a subsurface zone. Very
small blisters are called pinheads or pepper blisters.

Blister Steel
High-carbon steel produced by carburizing wrought iron. The bar, originally smooth, is covered with small
blisters when removed from the cementation (carburizing) furnace.

Bloom
(1) Ancient Definition: iron produced in a solid condition directly by the reduction of ore in a primitive
furnace. The carbon content is variable but usually low. Also known as bloomery iron. The earliest iron

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making process, but still used in underdeveloped countries. (2) Modern Definition: a semi-finished hot
rolled steel product, rectangular in section, usually produced on a blooming mill but sometimes made by
forging.

Bloom
A semi-finished hot rolled product, rectangular in cross section, produced on a blooming mill. For iron and
steel, the width is not more than twice the thickness, and the cross-sectional area is usually not less than 36
sq. in. Iron and steel blooms are sometimes made by forging.

Bloomery
A primitive furnace used for direct reduction of ore to iron.

Blooming-Mill
A mill used to reduce ingots to blooms, billets slabs, sheet-bar etc.,

Blowhole
A cavity which was produced during the solidification of metal by evolved gas, which in failing to escape is
held in pockets.

Blue Annealing
Heating hot rolled ferrous sheet in an open furnace to a temperature within the transformation range and
then cooling in air, in order to soften the metal. The formation of a bluish oxide on the surface is incidental.

Blue Brittleness
Reduced ductility occurring as a result of strain aging, when certain ferrous alloys are worked between 300
and 700 (degrees) F. This phenomenon may be observed at the working temperature or subsequently at
lower temperatures.

Blue Brittleness
Brittleness exhibited by some steels after being heated to some temperature within the range of 300
(degrees) to 650 (degrees) F, and more especially if the steel is worked at the elevated temperature. Killed
steels are virtually free of this kind of brittleness.

Bluing
Subjecting the scale-free surface of a ferrous alloy to the action of air, steam, or other agents at a suitable
temperature, thus forming a thin blue film of oxide and improving the appearance and resistance to
corrosion. NOTE: This term is ordinarily applied to sheet, strip, or finished parts, It is used also to denote
the heating of springs after fabrication in order to improve their properties.

Body-Centered
Having the equivalent lattice points at the corners of the unit cell, and at its center; sometimes called
centered, or space-centered.

Bonderizing
The coating of steel with a film composed largely of zinc phosphate in order to develop a better bonding
surface for paint or lacquer.

Boron ( chemical symbol B)


Element N. 5 of the periodic system. Atomic weight 10.82. It is gray in color, ignites at about 1112
(degrees) F. and burns with a brilliant green flame, but its melting point in a non-oxidizing atmosphere is
about 4000 (degrees) F. Boron is used in steel in minute quantities for one purpose only- to increase the
hardenability as in case hardening and to increase strength and hardness penetration.

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Bottle Top Mold
Ingot mold, with the top constricted; used in the manufacture of capped steel, the metal in the constriction
being covered with a cap fitting into the bottle-neck, which stops rimming action by trapping escaping
gases.

Box Annealing
Annealing a metal or alloy in a sealed container under conditions that minimize oxidation. In box annealing
a ferrous alloy, the charge is usually heated slowly to a temperature below the transformation range, but
sometimes above or within it, and is then cooled slowly; this process is also called close annealing or pot
annealing.

Box Annealing
A process of annealing a ferrous alloy in a closed metal container, with or without packing materials, in
order to minimize the effects of oxidation. The charge is normally heated slowly to a temperature below the
transformation range, but occasionally above or within it, and then is slowly cooled.

Brake
A piece of equipment used for bending sheet; also called a bar folder. If operated manually, it is called a
hand brake; if power driven, it is called a press brake.

Brale
A diamond penetrator, conical in shape, used with a Rockwell hardness tester for hard metals.

Brasses
Copper base alloys in which zinc is the principal alloying element. Brass is harder and mechanically
stronger than either of its alloying elements copper or zinc. It is formable and ductile; develops high tensile
strength with cold-working and is not heat treatable.

Braze Welding
A family of welding procedures where metals are joined by filler metal that has a melting temperature
below the solidus of the parent metal, but above 840 (450 C).

Brazing
Joining metals by fusion of nonferrous alloys that have melting points above 800 F (425C), but lower than
those of the metals being joined. May be accomplished by a torch. Filler metal is ordinarily in rod form in
torch brazing; whereas in furnace and dip brazing the work material is first assembled and the filler metal
may then be applied as wire, washers, clips, bands, or may be bonded, as in brazing sheet.

Break Test (for tempered steel)


A method of testing hardened and tempered high carbon spring steel strip wherein the specimen is held and
bent across the grain in a vice-like calibrated testing machine. Pressure is applied until the metal fractures
at which point a reading is taken and compared with a standard chart of brake limitations for various
thickness ranges.

Bridling
The cold working of dead soft annealed strip metal immediately prior to a forming, bending, or drawing
operation. A process designed to prevent the formulation of Luder's lines. Caution-Bridled metal should be
used promptly and not permitted to (of itself) return to its pre-bridled condition.

Bright Annealed Wire


Steel wire bright drawn and annealed in controlled non-oxidizing atmosphere so that surface oxidation is
reduced to a minimum and the surface remains relatively bright.

Bright Annealing
The process of annealing in a protective atmosphere so as to prevent discoloration of the bright surface
desired.

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Bright Basic Wire


Bright steel wire, slightly softer than Bright Bessemer Wire. Used for round head wood screws, bolts and
rivets, electric welded chain, etc.

Bright Bessemer Wire


Stiff bright wire of hard temper. Normally wire is drawn down to size without annealing.

Bright Dip
An acid solution into which pieces are dipped in order to obtain a clean, bright surface.

Brinell Hardness Test


A common standard method of measuring the hardness of materials. The smooth surface of the metal is
subjected to indentation by a hardened steel ball under pressure. The diameter of the indentation, in the
material surface, is then measured by a microscope and the hardness value is read from a chart or
determined by a prescribed formula.

Brittle Fracture
Fracture preceded by little or negligible plastic deformation.

Brittleness
The tendency of a metal or material to fracture without undergoing appreciable plastic deformation.

Broaching
Multiple shaving, accomplished by pushing a tool with stepped cutting edges along the piece, particularly
through holes.

Bronze
Primarily an alloy of copper and tin, but additionally, the name is used when referring to other alloys not
containing tin, for example, aluminum bronze, manganese bronze, and beryllium bronze.

Brown & Sharp Gages (B&S)


A standard series of sizes refered to by numbers, in which the diameter of wire or thickness of sheet metal
is generally produced and which is used in the manufacture of brass, bronze, copper, copper-base alloys and
aluminum. These gage numbers have a definite relationship to each other. In this system, the decimal
thickness is reduced by 50% every six gage numbers- while temper is expressed by the number of B&S
gage numbers as cold reduced in thickness from previous annealing. For each B&S gage number in
thickness reduction, where is assigned a hardness value of 1/4 hard.

Buckle
Bulges and/ or hollows occurring along the length of the metal with the edges remaining otherwise flat.

Buffer
A substance added to aqueous solutions to maintain a constant hydrogen-ion concentration, even in the
presence of acids or alkalis.

Burning
(1) Permanently damaging a metal or alloy by heating to cause either incipient melting or intergranular
oxidation. (2) In grinding getting the work hot enough to cause discoloration or to change the
microstructure by tempering or hardening.

Burning

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Heating a metal beyond the temperature limits allowable for the desired heat treatment, or beyond the point
where serious oxidation or other detrimental action begins.

Burnishing
Smoothing surfaces through friction between the material and material such as hardened metal media.

Burnt
A definition applying to material which has been permanently damaged by over-heating.

Burr
Roughness left by a cutting operation such as slitting, shearing, blanking , etc.

Butcher Saw Steel


A hardened, tempered, and polished high carbon spring steel strip material (carbon content is generally
higher than that of a material used for wood band saw applications) with a Rockwell value of roughly
C47/49.

Butt Welding
Joining two edges or ends by placing one against the other and welding them.

Cake
A copper ingot rectangular in cross section intended for rolling.

Camber
(1) Deviation from edge straightness usually referring to the greatest deviation of side edge from a straight
line. (2) Sometimes used to denote crown in rolls where the center diameter has been increased to
compensate for deflection cause by the rolling pressure.

Camber or Bow
Edgewise curvature. A lateral departure of a side edge of sheet or strip metal from a straight line.

Camera Shutter Steel


Hardened, tempered and bright polished extra flat and extra precision rolled. Carbon content 1.25 -
Chromium .15.

Canning
A dished distortion in a flat or nearly flat surface, sometimes referred to as oil canning.

Capped Steel
Semikilled steel cast in a bottle-top mold and covered with a cap fitting into the neck of the mold. The cap
causes to top metal to solidify. Pressure is built up in the sealed-in molten metal and results in a surface
condition much like that of rimmed steel.

Carbide
A compound of carbon with one or more metallic elements.

Carbide
A compound of carbon with one or more metallic elements.

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Carbon
Chemical symbol C. Element No. 6 of the periodic system; atomic weight 12.01; has three allotropic
modifications, all non-metallic. Carbon is present in practically all ferrous alloys, and has tremendous
effect on the properties of the resultant metal. Carbon is also an essential component of the cemented
carbides. Its metallurgical use, in the form of coke, for reduction of oxides, is very extensive.

Carbon Equivalent
Referring to the rating of weld-ability, this is a value that takes into account the equivalent additive effects
of carbon and other alloying elements on a particular characteristic of a steel. For rating of weld-ability, a
formula commonly used is: CE = C + (Mn/6) + [(Cr + Mo + V)/5] + [(Ni + Cu)/15].

Carbon Free
Metals and alloys which are practically free from carbon.

Carbon Potential
A measure of the capacity of an environment containing active carbon to alter or maintain, under prescribed
conditions, the carbon concentration in a steel.

Carbon Range
In steel specifications, the carbon range is the difference between the minimum and maximum amount of
carbon acceptable.

Carbon Restoration
Replacing the carbon lost in the surface layer during previous processing by carburizing this layer to
substantially the original carbon level.

Carbon Steel
Common or ordinary steel as contrasted with special or alloy steels, which contain other alloying metals in
addition to the usual constituents of steel in their common percentages.

Carbon Steel
Steel containing carbon up to about 2% and only residual quantities of other elements except those added
for deoxidization, with silicon usually limited to 0.60% and manganese to about 1.65%. Also termed plain
carbon steel, ordinary steel, and straight carbon steel.

Carbon Steel
A steel containing only residual quantities of elements other than carbon, except those added for
deoxidization or to counter the deleterious effects of residual sulfur. Silicon is usually limited to about
0.60% and manganese to about 1,65%. Also termed plain carbon steel, ordinary steel, straight carbon steel.

Carbonitriding
Introducing carbon and nitrogen into a solid ferrous alloy by holding above Ac1 in an atmosphere that
contains suitable gases such as hydrocardons, carbon monocide, and ammonia. The carbonitrided alloy is
usually quench hardened.

Carbonitriding.
A case hardening process in which a suitable ferrous material is heated above the lower transformation
temperature in a gaseous atmosphere having a composition that results in simultaneous absorption of
carbon and nitrogen by the surface and, by diffusion, creates a concentration gradient. The process is
completed by cooling at a rate that produces the desired properties in the work piece.

Carburizing
A process in which an austenitized ferrous material is brought into contact with a carbonaceous atmosphere
having sufficient carbon potential to cause absorption of carbon at the surface and, by diffusion, create a
concentration gradient.

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Carburizing
Introducing carbon into a solid ferrous alloy by holding above Ac1 in contact with a suitable carbonaceous
material, which may be a solid, liquid, or gas. The carburized alloy is usually quench hardened.

Carburizing (Cementation)
Adding carbon to the surface of iron-base alloys by absorption through heating the metal at a temperature
below its melting point in contact with carbonaceous solids, liquids or gases. The oldest method of case
hardening.

Cartridge Brass
70% copper 30% zinc. This is one of the most widely used of the copper-zinc alloys; it is formable and
ductile and possesses excellent cold-working, poor hot working and poor machining properties. Rated
excellent for soft-soldering; good for silver alloy brazing or oxyacetylene welding and fair for resistance of
carbon arc welding. The alloy develops high tensile strength with cold-working. Temper is obtained by cold
rolling.

Case
In a ferrous alloy, the outer portion that has been made harder than the inner portion, or core.

Case Hardening
Carburizing and subsequently hardening by suitable heat-treatment, all or part of the surface portions of a
piece of iron-base alloy.

Case Hardening
Hardening a ferrous alloy so that the outer portion, or case, is made substantially harder than the inner
portion, or core. Typical processes used for case hardening are carburizing, cyaniding, carbonitriding,
nitriding, induction hardening, and flame hardening.

Case Hardening
A generic term covering several processes applicable to steel that change the the chemical composition of
the surface layer by absorption of carbon or nitrogen, or a mixture of the two, and, by diffusion, create a
concentration gradient.

Cast
(1) A term indicating in the annealed state as Cast Spring Steel Wire. (2) In reference to Bright or Polished
Strip Steel or Wire, the word cast implies discoloration as a shadow. (3) A term implying a lack of
straightness as in a coil set.

Cast Iron
Iron containing more carbon than the solubility limit in austenite (about 2%).

Cast Steel
Steel in the form of castings, usually containing less than 2% carbon.

Cast Steel
Any object made by pouring molten steel into molds.

Casting
(1) An object at or near finished shape obtained by solidification of a substance in a mold. (2) Pouring
molten metal into a mold to produce an object of desired shape.

Cavitation
The formation and instantaneous collapse of innumerable tiny voids or cavities within a liquid subjected to
rapid and intense pressure changes. Cavitation produced by ultrasonic radiation is sometimes used to give
violent localized agitation. That caused by severe turbulent flow often leads to cavitation damage.

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Cavitation Damage
Wearing away of metal through the formation and collapse of cavities in a liquid.

Cementation
(1) Introduction of one or more elements into the outer layer of a metal object by means of diffusion at high
temperature. (2) An obsolete process used to convert wrought iron to blister steel by carburizing. Wrought
iron bars were packed in sealed chests with charcoal and heated at about 2000 F (1100 C) for 6 to 8 days.
Cementation was the predominant method of manufacturing steels particularly high-carbon tool steels,
prior to the introduction of the bessemer and open-hearth methods.

Cementite
A compound of iron and carbon known as Iron carbide, which has the approximate chemical formula Fe3C
containing 6.69% of carbon. Hard and brittle, it is the hard constituent of cast iron, and the normal form in
which carbon is present in steel. It is magnetizable, but not as readily as ferrite.

Cementite
A compound of iron and carbon, known chemically as iron carbide and having the approximate chemical
formula Fe3C. It is characterized by an orthorhombic crystal structure. When it occurs as a phase in steel,
the chemical composition will be altered by the presence of manganese and other carbide-forming
elements.

Cementite
A metastable carbide, with composition Fe3C and orthorhombic crystal structure, having limited
substitutional solubility for the carbide-forming elements, notably manganese.

Centrifugal Casting
A casting made by pouring metal into a mold that is rotated or revolved.

Ceramic Tools
Cutting tools made from fused, sintered, or cemented metallic oxides.

Chafery
A charcoal-fired furnace used in early iron making processes to reheat a bloom of wrought iron for forging
to consolidate the iron and expel entrapped slag.

Chamfer
(1) A beveled surface to eliminate an otherwise sharp corner. (2) A relieved angular cutting edge at a tooth
corner.

Charcoal Tin Plate


Tin Plate with a relatively heavy coating of tin (higher than the Coke Tin Plate grades).

Charpy Test
A pendulum-type single-blow impact test in which the specimen usually notched, is supported at both ends
as a simple beam and broken by a falling pendulum. The energy absorbed, as determined by the subsequent
rise of the pendulum, is a measure of impact strength or notch toughness.

Chatter Marks
Parallel indentations or marks appearing at right angles to edge of strip forming a pattern at close and
regular intervals, caused by roll vibrations.

Chemical Milling
Removing metal stock by controlled selective chemical etching.

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Chemical Polishing
Improving the specular reflectivity of a metal surface by chemical treatment.

Chipping
A method for removing seams and other surface defects with chisel or gouge so that such defects will not
be worked into the finished product. Chipping is often employed also to remove metal that is excessive but
not defective. Removal of defects by gas cutting is known as deseaming or scarfing.

Chromadizing (Chromodizing, Chromatizing)


Forming an acid surface to improve paint adhesion on aluminum or aluminum alloys, mainly aircraft skins,
by treatment with a solution of chromic acid.

Chromium
Chemical symbol Cr. Element No. 24 of the periodic system; atomic weight 52.01. It is of bright silvery
color, relatively hard. It is strongly resistant to atmospheric and other oxidation. It is of great value in the
manufacture of Stainless Steel as an iron-base alloy. Chromium plating has also become a large outlet for
the metal. Its principal functions as an alloy in steel making; (1) increases resistance to corrosion and
oxidation (2) increases harden-ability (3) adds some strength at high temperatures (4) resists abrasion and
wear (with high carbon).

Chromium-Nickel Steel
Steel usually made by the electric furnace process in which chromium and nickel participate as alloying
elements. The stainless steel of 18% chromium and 8% nickel are the better known of the chromium-nickel
types.

Chromizing
A surface treatment at elevated temperature, generally carried out in pack, vapor, or salt bath, in which an
alloy is formed by the inward diffusion of chromium into the base metal.

Cigarette Knife Steel


Hardened, tempered and bright polished, 1.25 Carbon content- Chromium .15. Accurate flatness necessary
and a high hardness with Rockwell C 51 to 53. Usual sizes are 4 3/4 wide and 6 wide x .004 to .010.

Clad Metal
A composite metal containing two or three layers that have been bonded together. The bonding may have
been accomplished by co-rolling, welding, heavy chemical deposition or heavy electroplating.

Clad Metal
A composite metal containing two or three layers that have been bonded together. The bonding may have
been accomplished by corolling, welding, casting, heavy chemical deposition, or heavy electroplating.

Cladding
A process for covering one metal with another. Usually the surfaces of fairly thick slabs of two metals are
brought carefully into contact and are then subjected to co-rolling so that a clad composition results. In
some instances a thick electroplate may be deposited before rolling.

Cleavage
Fracture of a crystal by crack propagation across a crystallographic plane of low index.

Cleavage Fracture
Fracture of a grain, or most of the grains, in a polycrystalline metal by cleavage, resulting in bright
reflecting facets.

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Cleavage Plane
A characteristic crystallographic plane or set of planes in a crystal on which cleavage fracture occurs easily.

Cluster Mill
A rolling mill where each of the two working rolls of small diameter is supported by two or more back-up
rolls.

Cobalt
Chemical symbol Co. Element No. 27 of the periodic system; atomic weight 58.94. A gray magnetic metal,
of medium hardness; it resists corrosion like nickel, which it resembles closely; melting point 2696
(degrees) F.; specific gravity 8.9. It is used as the matrix metal in most cemented carbides and is
occasionally electroplated instead of nickel, the sulfate being used as electrolyte. Its principal function as an
alloy in tool steel; it contributes to red hardness by hardening ferrite.

Coil Breaks
Creases or ridges across a metal sheet transverse to the direction of coiling, occasionally occurring when
the metal has been coiled hot and uncoiled cold.

Coil Set or Longitudinal Curl


A lengthwise curve or set found in coiled strip metals following its coil pattern. A departure from
longitudinal flatness. Can be removed by roller or stretcher leveling from metals in the softer temper
ranges.

Coil Weld
A joint between two lengths of metal within a coil - not always visible in the cold reduced product.

Coils
Coiled flat sheet or strip metal- usually in one continuous piece or length.

Coining
A process of impressing images or characters of the die and punch onto a plane metal surface.

Coke Plate (Hot Dipped Tin Plate)


Standard tin plate, with the lightest commercial tin coat, used for food containers, oil canning, etc. A higher
grade is the best cokes, with special cokes representing the best of the coke tin variety. For high qualities
and heavier coatings.

Cold Reduced Strip


Metal strip, produced from hot-rolled strip, by rolling on a cold reduction mill.

Cold Reduction
Reduction of metal size, usually by rolling or drawing particularly thickness, while the metal is maintained
at room temperature or below the recrystallization temperature of the metal.

Cold Rolled Finish


Finish obtained by cold rolling plain pickled sheet or strip with a lubricant resulting in a relatively smooth
appearance.

Cold Rolling
Rolling metal at a temperature below the softening point of the metal to create strain hardening (work-
hardening). Same as cold reduction, except that the working method is limited to rolling. Cold rolling
changes the mechanical properties of strip and produces certain useful combinations of hardness, strength,
stiffness, ductility and other characteristics known as tempers, which see.

Cold Short
A condition of brittleness existing in some metals at temperatures below the recrystalization temperature.

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Cold Shut
(1) A discontinuity that appears on the surface of cast metal as a result of two streams of liquid meeting and
failing to unite. (2) A portion of the surface of a forging that is separated, in part, from the main body of
metal by oxide.

Cold Work
Permanent strain produced by an external force in a metal below its recrystallization temperature.

Cold Working
Plastic deformation, such as rolling, hammering, drawing, etc., at a temperature sufficiently low to create
strain-hardening (work-hardening). Commonly, the term refers to such deformation at normal temperatures.

Columbium
Chemical symbol Cb. Element No. 41 of the periodic system. Atomic weight 92.91. It is steel gray in color
and brilliant luster. Specific gravity 8.57. Melting point at about 4380 (degrees) F. It is used mainly in the
production of stabilized austenitic chromium-nickel steels, also to reduce the air-hardening characteristics
in plain chromium steels of the corrosion resistant type. (Now known as Niobium (Nb), element No. 41 of
the periodic system.)

Columnar Structure
A structure consisting of elongated grains whose tong axes are parallel.

Columnar Structure
A coarse structure of parallel columns of grains, having the long axis perpendicular to the casting surface.

Commercial Bronze
A copper-zinc alloy (brass) containing 90% copper and 10% zinc; used for screws, wire, hardware, etc.
Although termed commercial-bronze it contains no tin. It is somewhat stronger than copper and has equal
or better ductility.

Commercial Quality Steel Sheet


Normally to a ladle analysis of carbon limit at 0.15 max. A Standard Quality Carbon Steel Sheet.

Compressive Strength
The maximum compressive stress that a material is capable of developing, based on original area of cross
section. In the case of a material which fails in compression by a shattering fracture, the compressive
strength has a very definite value. In the case of materials which do not fail in compression by a shattering
fracture, the value obtained for compressive strength is an arbitrary value depending upon the degree of
distortion that is regarded as indicating complete failure of the material.

Constitute
A phase, or combination of phases, that occurs in a characteristic configuration in a microstructure.

Constitutional Diagram
A graphical representation of the temperature and composition limits of phase fields in an alloy system as
they actually exist under specific conditions of heating and cooling (synonymous with phase diagram). A
constitutional diagram may be, or may approximate, and equilibrium diagram, or may represent metastable
conditions or phases. Compare equilibrium diagram.

Continuous Casting
A casting technique in which the ingot is continuously solidified while it is being poured, and the length is
not determined by mold dimensions.

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Continuous Casting
A casting technique in which an ingot, billet, tube, or other shape is continuously solidified while it is being
poured, so that its length is not determined by mold dimensions.

Continuous Furnace
Furnace, in which the material being heated moves steadily through the furnace.

Continuous Phase
In an alloy or portion of an alloy containing more than one phase, the phase that forms the background or
matrix in which the other phase or phases are present as isolated volumes.

Continuous Pickling
Passing sheet or strip metal continuously through a series of pickling and washing tanks.

Continuous Strip Mill


A series of synchronized rolling mill stands in which coiled flat rolled metal entering the first pass (or
stand) moves in a straight line and is continuously reduced in thickness (not width) at each subsequent pass.
The finished strip is recoiled upon leaving the final or finishing pass.

Controlled Atmosphere Furnaces


A furnace used for bright annealing into which specially prepared gases are introduced for the purpose of
maintaining a neutral atmosphere so that no oxidizing reaction between metal and atmosphere takes place.

Controlled Rolling
A hot rolling process in which the temperature of the steel is closely controlled, particularly during the final
rolling passes, to produce a fine-grain microstructure.

Converter
A furnace in which air is blown through the molten bath of crude metal or matte for the purpose of
oxidizing impurities.

Cooling Stresses
Stresses developed by uneven contraction or external constraint of metal during cooling; also those stresses
resulting from localized plastic deformation during cooling, and retained.

Copper
Chemical symbol Cu) Element No. 29 of the periodic system, atomic weight 63.57. A characteristically
reddish metal of bright luster, highly malleable and ductile and having high electrical and heat conductivity;
melting point 1981 (degrees) F.; boiling point 4327 F.; specific gravity 8.94. Unibersally and extensively
used in the arts in brasses, bronzes. Universally used in the pure state as sheet, tube, rod and wire and also
as alloyed by other elements and an alloy with other metals.

Coring
A variation of composition between the center and surface of a unit of structure (such as a dendrite, a grain
or a carbide particle) resulting from non-equilibrium growth over a range of temperature.

Corrosion
Gradual chemical or electrochemical attack on a metal by atmosphere, moisture or other agents.

Corrosion
Deterioration of a metal by chemical or electrochemical reaction with its environment.

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Corrosion Embrittlement
The severe loss of ductility of a metal resulting from corrosive attack, usually intergranular and often not
visually apparent.

Corrosion Embrittlement
The embrittlement caused in certain alloys by exposure to a corrosive environment. Such material is
usually susceptible to the intergranular type of corrosion attack.

Corrosion Fatigue
Effect of the application of repeated or fluctuating stresses in a corrosive environment characterized by
shorter life than would be encountered as a result of either their repeated or fluctuating stresses alone or the
corrosive environment alone.

Corrugated
As a defect. Alternate ridges and furrows. A series of deep short waves.

Covered Electrode
A filler-metal electrode, used in arc welding, consisting of a metal core vire with a relatively thick covering
which provides protection for the molten metal form the atmosphere, improves the properties of the weld
metal and stabilizes the arc. The covering is usually mineral or metal powders mixed with cellulose or other
binder.

Creep
Time-dependent strain occurring under stress.

Creep
The flow or plastic deformation of metals held for long periods of time at stresses lower than the normal
yield strength. The effect is particularly important if the temperature of stressing is above the
recrystallization temperature of the metal.

Creep
Time-dependent strain occurring under stress. The creep strain occurring at a diminishing rate is called
primary creep; that occurring at a minimum and almost constant rate, secondary creep; that occurring at an
accelerating rate, tertiary creep.

Creep Limit
(1) The maximum stress that will cause less than a specified quantity of creep in a given time. (2) The
maximum nominal stress under which the creep strain rate decreases continuously with time under constant
load and at constant temperature. Sometimes used synonymously with creep strength.

Creep Strength
(1) The constant nominal stress that will cause a specified quantity of creep in a given time at constant
temperature. (2) The constant nominal stress that will cause a specified creep react at constant temperature.

Crevice Erosion
A type of concentration-cell corrosion; corrosion of a metal that is caused by the concentration of dissolved
salts, metal ions, oxygen, or other gases, and such, in crevices or pockets remote from the principal fluid
stream, with a resultant building up of differential cells that ultimately cause deep pitting.

Critical Cooling Rate


The limiting rate at which austenite must be cooled to ensure that a particular type of transformation
product is formed.

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Critical Cooling Rate
The minimum rate of continuous cooling just sufficient to prevent undesired transformations. For steel, the
slowest rate at which it can be cooled form above the upper critical temperature to prevent the
decomposition of austenite at any temperature above the Ms.

Critical Point
(1) The temperature or pressure at which a change in crystal structure, phase or physical properties occurs;
same as transformation temperature. (2) In an equilibrium diagram, that specific combination of
composition, temperature and pressure at which the phases of an inhomogeneous system are in equilibrium.

Critical Point
(1) The temperature or pressure at which a change in crystal structure, phase, or physical properties occurs.
Same as transformation temperature. (2) In an equilibrium diagram, that specific value of composition,
temperature and pressure, or combinations thereof, at which the phases of a heterogeneous systems are in
equilibrium.

Critical Points
Temperatures at which internal changes or transformations take place within a metal either on a rising or
falling temperature.

Critical Range
A temperature range in which an internal change takes place within a metal. Also termed transformation
range.

Critical Strain
That strain which results in the formation of very large grains during recrystallization.

Critical Temperature
Synonymous with critical point if pressure is constant.

Crop
The defective ends of a rolled or forged product which are cut off and discarded.

Cross Rolling
The rolling of sheet so that the direction of rolling is changed about 90 (degrees) from the direction of the
previous rolling.

Cross Direction (in rolled or drawn metal)


The direction parallel to the axes of the rolls during rolling. The direction at right angles to the direction of
rolling or drawing.

Cross Rolling
Rolling at an angle to the long dimension of the metal; usually done to increase width.

Cross Rolling
A (hot) rolling process in which rolling reduction is carried out in a direction perpendicular to, as well as a
direction parallel to, the length of the original slab.

Crown
A contour on a sheet or roll where the thickness or diameter increases from edge to center.

Crown or Heavy Center


Increased thickness in the center of metal sheet or strip as compared with thickness at the edge.

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Crucible
A ceramic pot or receptacle made of graphite and clay, or clay or other refractory material, and used in the
melting of metal. The term is sometimes applied to pots made of cast iron, cast steel or wrought steel.

Crucible Steel
High-carbon steel produced by melting blister steel in a covered crucible. Crucible steel was developed by
Benjamin Huntsman in about 1750 and remained in use until the late 1940's.

Crystal
(1) A physically homogeneous solid in which the atoms. ions or molecules are arranged in a three-
dimensional repetitive pattern. (2) A coherent piece of matter, all parts of which have the same anisotropic
arrangement of atom; in metals, usually synonymous with grain and crystallite.

Crystalline
Composed of crystals.

Crystalline Fracture
A fracture of a polycrystalline metal characterized by a grainy appearance. Compare fibrous fracture.

Crystallization
The formation of crystals by the atoms assuming definite positions in a crystal lattice. This is what happens
when a liquid metal solidifies. (Fatigue, the failure of metals under repeated stresses, is sometimes falsely
attributed to crystallization.)

Cube-Centered
Metallography- (concerning space lattices) - Body-centered cubic. Refers to crystal structure.

Cup Fracture
A type of fracture in a tensile test specimen which looks like a cup having the exterior portion extended
with the interior slightly depressed.

Cup Fracture (Cup-and-Cone Fracture)


Fracture, frequently seen in tensile test pieces of a ductile material, in which the surface of failure on one
portion shows a central flat area of failure in tension, with an exterior extended rim of failure in shear.

Cutting Speed
The linear or peripheral speed of relative motion between the tool and work piece in the principal direction
of cutting.

Cyaniding
Introducing carbon and nitrogen into a solid ferrous alloy by holding above Ac1 in contact with molten
cyanide of suitable composition. The cyanided alloy is usually quench hardened.

Cyaniding
Surface hardening of an iron-base alloy article or portion of it by heating at a suitable temperature in
contact with a cyanide salt, followed by quenching.

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DC (Direct Chill) Casting
A continuous method of making ingots or billets for sheet or extrusion by pouring the metal into a short
mold. The base of the mold is a platform that is gradually lowered while the metal solidifies, the frozen
shell of metal acting as a retainer for the liquid metal below the wall of the mold. The ingot is usually
cooled by the impingement of water directly on the mold or on the walls of the solid metal as it is lowered.
The length of the ingot is limited by the depth to which the platform can be lowered; therefore, it is often
called semicontinuous casting.

Dead Flat
Perfectly flat. As pertaining to sheet, strip or plate. Refer to Stretcher Leveling.

Dead Soft Annealing


Heating metal to above the critical range and appropriately cooling to develop the greatest possible
commercial softness or ductility.

Dead Soft Steel


Steel, normally made in the basic open-hearth furnace or by the basic oxygen process with carbon less than
0.10% and manganese in the 0.20-0.50% range, completely annealed.

Dead Soft Temper


Condition of maximum softness commercially attainable in wire, strip, or sheet metal in the annealed state.

Deburring
A method whereby the raw slit edge of metal is removed by rolling or filing.

Decarburization
Removal of carbon from the outer surface of iron or steel, usually by heating in an oxidizing or reducing
atmosphere. Water vapor, oxygen and carbon dioxide are strong decarburizers. Reheating with adhering
scale is also strongly decarburizing in action.

Decarburization
Loss of carbon from the surface of a ferrous alloy as a result of heating in a medium that reacts with
carbon.

Decarburization
The loss of carbon from the surface of a ferrous alloy as a result of heating in a medium that reacts with the
carbon at the surface.

Decoration (of dislocations)


Segregation of solute atoms to the line of a dislocation in a crystal. In ferrite, the dislocations may be
decorated with carbon or nitrogen atoms.

Deep Drawing
The process of cold working or drawing sheet or strip metal blanks by means of dies on a press into shapes
which are usually more or less cup-like in character involving considerable plastic deformation of the
metal. Deep-drawing quality sheet or strip steel, ordered or sold on the basis of suitability for deep-drawing

Deformative Bands
Generally, bands in which deformation has been concentrated inhomogeneously.

Degassing Process (In steel making)


Removing gases from the molten metal by means of a vacuum process in combination with mechanical
action.

Degenerate Structure

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Usually refers to pearlite that does not have an ideally lamellar structure. The degree of degeneracy may
vary from slight perturbations in the lamellar arrangement to structures that are not recognizably lamellar.

Delta Iron
Allotropic modification of iron, stable above 2552 (degrees) F. to melting point. It is of body-centered
cubic crystal structure.

Dendrite
A crystal that has grown in treelike branching mode.

Dendrite
A crystal that has a tree-like branching pattern, being most evident in cast metals slowly cooled through the
solidification range.

Dendritic Segregation
Inhomogeneous distribution of alloying elements through the arms of dendrites.

Deoxidation
(1) Removal of oxygen from molten metals by use of suitable chemical agents. (2) Sometimes refers to
removal of undesirable elements other than oxygen by the introduction of elements or compounds that
readily react with them.

Deoxidizing
Removal of oxygen. In steel sheet, strip, and wire technology, the term refers to heat treatment in a
reducing atmosphere, to lessen the amount of scale.

Die Sinking
Forming or machining a depressed pattern in a die.

Die-Lines
Lines of markings daused on drawn or extruded products by minor imperfections in the surface of the die.

Diffusion
(1) Spreading of a constituent in a gas, liquid or solid, tending to make the composition of all parts uniform.
(2) The spontaneous movement of atoms or molecules to new sites within a material.

Dilatometer
An instrument for measuring the expansion or contraction of a solid metal resulting from heating, cooling,
polymorphic changes, etc.

Dish
A concave surface departing from a straight line edge to edge. Indicates transverse or across the width.

Dislocation
A linear defect in the structure of a crystal.

Doctor Blade Steel Strip


A hardened and tempered spring steel strip, usually blued, produced from approximately .85 carbon cold
rolled spring steel strip specially selected for straightness and good edges. Sometimes hand straightened or
straightened by grinding and cur to desired lengths. This product is used in the printing trade as a blade to
uniformly remove excess ink (dope) from the rolls; hence its name.

Drawing
(1) Forming recessed parts by forcing the plastic flow of metal in dies. (2) Reducing the cross section of
wire or tubing by pulling it through a die. (3) A misnomer for tempering.

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Drawing Back
Reheating after hardening to a temperature below the critical for the purpose of changing the hardness of
the steel.

Drill Rod
A term given to an annealed and polished high carbon tool steel rod usually round and centerless ground.
The sizes range in round stock from .013 to 1 1/2 diameter. Commercial qualities embrace water and oil
hardening grades. A less popular but nevertheless standard grade is a non-deforming quality. Drill Rods are
used principally by machinists and tool and die makers for punches, drills, taps, dowel pins, screw machine
parts, small tools, etc.

Drop Forging
A forging made with a drop hammer.

Drop Hammer
A forging hammer than depends on gravity for its force.

Dry Rolled Finish


Finish obtained by cold rolling on polished rolls without the use of any coolant or metal lubricant, of
material previously plain pickled, giving a burnished appearance.

Ductile Crack Propagation


Slow crack propagation that is accompanied by noticeable plastic deformation and requires energy to be
supplied from outside the body.

Ductility
The ability of a material to deform plastically without fracturing, being measured by elongation or
reduction of area in a tensile test, by height of cupping in an Erichsen test or by other means.

Ductility
The capacity of a material to deform plastically without fracturing.

Ductility
The property of metals that enables them to be mechanically deformed when cold, without fracture. In
steel, ductility is usually measured by elongation and reduction of area as determined in a tensile test.

Duralumin
The trade name applied to the first aluminum-copper-magnesium type of age-hardenable alloy (17S), which
contains nominally 4% Cu, 1/2% Mg. The term is sometimes used to include the class of wrought
aluminum-copper-magnesium alloys that harden during aging at room temperature.

Duralumin (obsolete)
A term formerly applied to the class of age-hardenable aluminum-copper alloys containing manganese,
magnesium, or silicon.

Earing
Wavy projections formed at the open end of a cup or shell in the course of deep drawing because of
difference in directional properties. Also termed scallop.

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Earing
The formation of scallops (ears) around the top edge of a drawn part caused by differences in the
directional properties of the sheet metal used.

Eddy-Current Testing
Nondestructive testing method in which eddy-curent flow is induced in the test object. Changes in the flow
caused by variations in the object are reflected into a nearby coil or coils for subsequent analysis by
suitable instrumentation and techniques.

Edge Filing
A method whereby the raw or slit edges of strip metal are passed or drawn one or more times against a
series of files, mounted at various angles. This method may be used for deburring only or filing to a
specific contour including a completely rounded edge.

Edge Strain or Edge Breaks


Creases extending in from the edge of the temper rolled sheet.

Edges
Many types of edges can be produced in the manufacture of flat rolled metal products. Over the years the
following types of edges have become recognized as standard in their respective fields. . Copper Base
Alloys- Slit, Slit and Edge Rolled, Sheared, Sawed, Machined or Drawn . Sheet Steels or Aluminum Sheet-
Mill Edge, Slit Edge or Sheared Edge. . Strip Steels and Stainless Strip . No. 1 Edge A- Smooth, uniform,
round or square edge, either slit or filed or slit and edge rolled as specified, width tolerance +/- .005. . No. 2
Edge- A natural sound mill edge carried through from the hot rolled band. Has not been slit, filed, or edge
rolled. Tolerances not closer than hot-rolled strip limits. . No. 3 Edge - Square, produced by slitting only.
Not filed. Width tolerances close. . No. 4 Edge - A round edge produced by edge rolling either from a
natural mill edge or from slit edge strip. Not as perfect as No. 1 edge. Width tolerances liberal. . No. 5 Edge
- An approximately square edge produced by slitting and filing or slitting and rolling to remove burr. . No.
6 Edge - A square edge produced by square edge rolling, generally from square edge hot-rolled
occasionally from slit strip. Width tolerances and finish not as exancting as No. 1 edge.

Edging
The dressing of metal strip edges by rolling, filing or drawing.

Elastic Limit
Maximum stress that a material will stand before permanent deformation occurs.

Elastic Limit
The maximum stress to which a material may be subjected without any permanent strain remaining upon
complete release of stress.

Elastic Limit
The maximum stress to which a material may be subjected without any permanent strain remaining upon
complete release of the stress.

Elastic Strain
Dimensional changes accompanying stress where the original dimensions are restored upon release of the
stress.

Electocleaning (Electrolytic Brightening)


An anodic treatment. A cleaning, polishing, or oxidizing treatment i which the specimen or work is made
the anode in a suitable electrolyte; an inert metal is used as cathode and a potential is applied.

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Electric Furnace Steel
Steel made in any furnace where heat is generated electrically, almost always by arc. Because of relatively
high cost, only tool steels and other high-value steels are made by the electric furnace process.

Electro-Galvanizing
Galvanizing by Electro deposition of zinc on steel.

Electrolytic Tin Plate


Black Plate that has been Tin plated on both sides with commercially pure tin by electrodeposition.

Electron Beam Microprobe Analyzer


An instrument for selective chemical analysis of a small volume of material. An electron beam bombards
the area of interest and x-radiation thereby emitted is analyzed in a spectrometer.

Electroplating
The production of a thin coating of one metal on another by electodeposition. It is very extensively used in
industry and is continuing to enlarge its useful functions. Various plated metal and combinations therof are
being used for different purposes, to illustrate: 1. Decorative and protection against
corrosion..............copper, nickel and chromium . 2. Protection against
corrosion.......................................cadmium or zinc . 3. Protection against
wear..............................................chromium . 4. Build-up of a part or parts
undersize............................chromium or nickel . 5. Pate for rubber
adhesion.............................................brass . 6. Protection against carburization and for brazing
operations....copper and nickel

Electropolishing
Improving the specular reflectivity of a metal surface by electrochemical dissolution.

Elongation
Increase in length which occurs before a metal is fractured, when subjected to stress. This is usually
expressed as a percentage of the original length and is a measure of the ductility of the metal.

Elongation
In tensile testing, the increase in the gauge length, measured after fracture of the specimen within the gauge
length, usually expressed as a percentage of the original gauge length.

Elongation After Fracture


In tensile testing, the increase in the gauge length measured after fracture of the specimen within the gauge
length and usually expressed as a percentage of the original gauge length.

Embossing
Raising or indenting a design in relief on a sheet or strip of metal by passing between rolls of desired
pattern.

Endurance Limit
Same as fatigue limit.

Endurance Limit
Maximum alternating stress which a given material will withstand for an infinite number of times without
causing fatigue failure.

Epitaxy
Induced orientation of the lattice of a crystal of a surface deposit by the lattice of the substrate crystal.

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Eqilibrium Diagram
A graphical representation of the temperature, pressure and composition limits of phase fields in an alloy
system as they exist under conditions of thermodynamical equilibrium. In condensed systems, pressure is
usually considered constant.

Equiaxed Structure
A structure in which the grains have approximately the same dimensions in all directions.

Erichsen Test
Similar to the Olsen Test. Readings are in millimeters.

Erichsen Test
A cupping test in which a piece of sheet metal, restrained except at the center, is deformed by a cone-
shaped spherical-end plunger until fracture occurs. The height of the cup in millimeters at fracture is a
measure of the ductility.

Etchant
A chemical solution used to etch a metal to reveal structural details.

Etching
Subjecting the surface of a metal to preferential chemical or electrolytic attack to reveal structural details.

Etching
In metallography, the process of revealing structural details by the preferential attack of reagents on a metal
surface.

Eutectoid
(1) An isothermal reversible transformation in which a solid solution is converted into two or more
intimately mixed solids, the number of solids formed being the same as the number of components in the
system. (2) An alloy having the composition indicated by the eutectoid point on an equilibrium diagram. (3)
An alloy structure of intermixed solid constituents formed by a eutectoid transformation.

Eutectoid Steel
Steel representing the eutectoid composition of the iron-carbon system, with about 0.80% to 0.83% carbon,
the eutectoid temperature being about 1333 (degrees) F. Such steel in the annealed condition consists
exclusively of pearlite. Steels with less than this quota of carbon are known as hypo-eutectoid and contain
free ferrite in addition to the pearlite. When more carbon is present, the steel is known as hyper-eutectoid
and contains free cementite. The presence of certain elements, such as nickel or chromium, lowers the
eutedtoid carbon content.

Exfoliation
A type of corrosion that progresses approximately parallel to the outer surface of the metal, causing layers
of the metal to be elevated by the formation of corrosion product.

Expander Steel
Hardened and tempered, blue polished. Carbon content about 1.00, Chromium .17. Used for the expanders
in oil piston rings. Hardness 30 N 70 to 73. Range of sizes run for grooves 3/32 to 1/4 wide with the steel
approximately .003 less than the grooves and thickness from .012 to .020.

Extensometer
An apparatus for indicating the deformation of metal while it is subjected to stress.

Extensometer Test
The measurement of deformation during stressing in the elastic range, permitting determination of elastic
properties such as properties such as proportional limit, proof stress, yield strength by the offset method

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and so forth. Requires the use of special testing equipment and testing procedures such as the use of an
extensometer or the plotting of a stress-strain diagram.

Extra Hard Temper


In brass mill terminology, Extra Hard is six B&S numbers hard or 50.15% reduction from the previous
annealing or soft stage.

Extra Spring Temper


In brass mill terminology. Extra Spring is ten numbers hard or 68.55% reduction in thickness from the
previous annealing or soft stage.

Extrusion
Shaping metal into a chosen continuous form by forcing it through a die of appropriate shape.

Face Centered (concerning cubic space lattices)


Having equivalent points at the corners of the unit cell and at the centers of its six faces. A face-centered
cubic space lattice is characteristic of one of the slose-packed arrangements of equal hard spheres.

Fatigue
The phenomenon leading to fracture under repeated or fluctuating stresses having a maximum value less
than the tensile strength of the material. Fatigue fractures are progressive, beginning as minute cracks that
grow under the action of the fluctuating stress.

Fatigue
The phenomenon leading to fracture under repeated or fluctuating stress. Fatigue fractures are progressive
beginning as minute cracks and grow under the action of fluctuating stress.

Fatigue
The phenomenon leading to fracture under repeatef or fluctuating stresses (having maximum value less
than the tensile strength of the material).

Fatigue Life
The number of cycles of stress that can be sustained prior to failure for a stated test condition.

Fatigue Limit
The maximum stress below which a materiel can presumable endure an infinite number of stress cycles. If
the stress is not completely reversed, the value of the mean stress, the minimum stress or the stress ratio
should be stated.

Fatigue Strength
The maximum stress that can be sustained for a specified number of cycles without failure, the stress being
completely reversed within each cycle unless otherwise stated.

Ferrite
A solid solution of one or more elements in body-centered cubic iron. Unless otherwise designated (for
instance, as chromium ferrite), the solute is generally assumed to be carbon. On some equilibrium diagrams

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ther are two ferrite regions separated by an austenite area. The lower area is alpha ferrite; the upper, delta
ferrite. If there is no designation, alpha ferrite is assumed.

Ferrite
Generally, a solid solution of one or more alloying elements in the bcc polymorph of iron ( -Fe).
Specifically, in carbon steels, the interstitial solid solution of carbon in -Fe.

Ferrite Banding
Parallel bands of free ferrite aligned in the direction of working. Sometimes referred to a ferrite streaks.

Ferrite-pearlite Banding
Inhomogeneous distribution of ferrite and pearlite aligned in filaments or plates parallel to the direction of
working.

Ferritic Grain Size


The grain size of the ferric matrix of a steel.

Ferro-Manganese
An alloy of iron and manganese (80% manganese) used in making additions of manganese to steel or cast-
iron. Ferroalloy, An alloy of iron with a sufficient amount of some element or elements such as manganese,
chromium, or vanadium for use as a means in adding these elements into molten steel.

Ferrous
Related to iron (derived from the Latin ferrum). Ferrous alloys are, therfore, iron base alloys.

Fiber
(1) The characteristic of wrought metal that indicates directional properties. It is revealed by etching a
longitudinal section or manifested by the fibrous appearance of a fracture. It is caused chiefly by extension
of the constituents of the metal, both metallic and nonmetallic, in the direction of working. (2) The pattern
of preferred orientation of metal crystal after a given deformation process.

Fiber or Fibre
Direction in which metals have been caused to flow, as by rolling, with microscopic evidence in the form of
fibrous appearance in the direction of flow.

Fiber Stress
Unit stress which exists at any given point in a structural element subjected to load; given as load per unit
area.

Fiber Stress
Local stress through a small area (a point or line) on a section where the stress is not uniform, as in a beam
under a bending load.

Fibrous Fracture
A fracture whose surface is characterized by a dull gray or silky appearance.

Filed Edges
Finished edges, the final contours of which are produced by drawing the strip over a series of small steel
files. This is the usual and accepted method of dressing the edges of annealed spring steel strip after slitting
in cases where edgewise slitting cracks are objectionable or slitting burr is to be removed.

Filler Metal
A third material that is melted concurrently with the parent metal during fusion or braze welding. It is
usually, but not necessarily, of different composition from the parent metals.

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Finery
A charcoal-fueled hearth furnace used in early processes for converting cast iron to wrought iron by
melting and oxidizing it in an air blast, then repeatedly oxidizing the product in the presence of a slag. The
carbon oxidizes more rapidly than the iron so that a wrought iron of low carbon content is produced.

Finished Steel
Steel that is ready for the market without further work or treatment. Blooms, billets, slabs, sheet bars, and
wire rods are termed semi-finished produced by the in-the-line thermal treatment following
electrodeposition.

Finishing Temperature
The temperature at which hot working is completed.

Finishing Temperature
Temperature of final hot-working of a metal.

Fish eyes
Areas on a fractured steel surface having a characteristic white crystalline appearance.

Flakes
Short discontinuous internal fissures in ferrous metals attributed to stresses produced by lacalized
transformation and decreased solubility of hydrogen during cooling after hot working. In a fractured
surface, flakes appear as bright silvery areas; on an etched surface thay appear as short discontinuous
cracks. Also called shatter cracks and snowflakes.

Flame Annealing
Annealing in which the heat is applied directly by a flame.

Flame Annealing
A process of softening a metal by the application of heat from a high-temperature flame.

Flame Hardening
A process of hardening a ferrous alloy by heating it above the transformation range by means of a high-
temperature flame, and then cooling as required.

Flame Hardening
Quench hardening in which the heat is applied directly by a flame.

Flapper Valve Steel


An extremely flat, very smooth, very accurate to gage, polished, hardened and tempered spring steel
produced from approximately 1.15 carbon. The name is derived from its common and principle usage.

Flare Test
A test applied to tubing, involving a tapered expansion over a cone. Similar to pin expansion test.

Flash
(1) In forging, the excess metal forced between the upper and lower dies. (2) In resistance butt welding, a
fin formed perpendicular to the direction of applied pressure.

Flash
(1) In forging, the excess metal forced between the upper and lower dies. (2) In die casting, the fin of metal
which results form leakage between the mating die surfaces. (3) In resistance butt welding, a fin formed
perpendicular to the direction of applied pressure.

Flash Welding

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A resistance butt welding process in which the weld is produced over the entire abutting surface by pressure
and heat, the heat being produced by electric arcs between the members being welded.

Flat Latch Needle Steel


Supplied cold rolled and annealed. Carbon content .85. Supplied both in coil and flat length. Used to make
flat latch needles which are used in the manufacture of knitted goods.

Flat Wire
A flat Cold Rolled, prepared edge section up to 1 1/4 wide, rectangular in shape. Generally produced from
hot rolled rods or specially prepared round wire by one or more cold rolling operations, primarily for the
purpose of obtaining the size and section desired. May also be produced by slitting cold rolled flat metal to
desired with followed by edge dressing.

Flow Lines
(1) Texture showing the direction of metal flow during hot or cold working. Flow lines often can be
revealed by etching the surface or a section of a metal part. (2) In mechanical metallurgy, paths followed by
volume elements of metal during deformation.

Flow Stress
The shear stress required to cause plastic deformation of solid metals.

Flow Stress
The uniaxial true stress required to cause plastic deformation at a specified value of strain.

Flowlines
Always visible to a greater or less degree when a longitudinal section has been subjected to Macro etching,
indicating the direction of working or rolling.

Fluting
Kinking or breakage due to curving of metal strip on a radius so small, with relation to thickness, as to
stretch the outer surface above its elastic limit. Not to be confused with the specific product, Fluted Tubes.

Flux
(1) In refining, a material used to remove undesirable substances as a molten mixture. It may also be used
as a protective covering for molten metal. (2) In welding, a material used to prevent the formation of, or to
dissolve and facilitate the removal of, oxides and other undesirable substances.

Foil
Metal in sheet form less than 0.006 in. in thickness.

Foil
Metal in any width but no more than about 0.005 thick.

Folds
Defects caused in metal by continued fabrication of overlapping surfaces.

Forge Welding
Welding hot metal by applying pressure or blows.

Forging
Plastically deforming metal, usually hot, into desired shapes with compressive force, with or without dies.

Forging
Plastically deforming metal, usually hot, into desired shapes with compressive force, with or without dies.

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Fractography
Descriptive treatment of fracture, especially in metals, with specific reference to photographs of the
fracture surface. Macrofractography involves photographs at low magnification; microfractography, at high
magnification.

Fractography
Descriptive treatment of fracture, especially in metal, with specific reference to photography of the fracture
surface.

Fracture
Surface appearance of metals when broken.

Fracture Test
Nicking and breaking a bar by means of sudden impact, to enable macroscopic study of the fractured
surface.

Fracture Test
Breaking a specimen and examining the fractured surface with the unaided eye or with a low-power
microscope to determine such things as composition, grain size, case depth, soundness, and presence of
defects.

Fragmentation
The subdivision of a grain into small discrete crystallites outlined by a heavily deformed network of
intersecting slip bands as a result of cold working. These small crystals or fragments differ from one
another in orientation and tend to rotate to a stable orientation detemined by the slip systems.

Free Machining
Pertains to the machining characteristics of an alloy to which one or more ingredients have been introduced
to produce small broken chips, low power consumption, better surface finish or longer tool life.

Free Machining
Pertains to the machining characteristics of an alloy to which an ingredient has been introduced to give
small broken chips, lower power consumption, better surface finish, and longer tool life; among such
additions are sulfur or lead to steel, lead to brass, lead and bismuth to aluminum, and sulfur or selenium to
stainless steel.

Fretting (Fretting Corrosion)


Action that results in surface damage, especially in a corrosive environment, when there is relative motion
between solid surfaces in contact under pressure.

Friction Gouges or Scratches


A series of relatively short surface scratches variable in form and severity. Refer to Galling.

Full Annealing
Annealing a ferrous alloy by austenitizing and then cooling slowly through the transformation range. The
austenitizing temperature to hypoeutectoid steel is usually above Ac3; and for hypereutectoid steel, usually
between Ac1 and Ac (cm).

Full Annealing
Used principally on iron and steel, means heating the metal to about 100 (degrees) F. above the critical
temperature range, followed by soaking at this point and slow cooling below the critical temperature.

Full Annealing (ferrous materials)

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An annealing treatment in which a steel is ausenitized by heating to a temperature above the upper critical
temperature (A3 or Acm) and then cooled slowly to room temperature. A typical cooling rate would be
210F/h 100 C/h. Compare normalizing. Use of the term annealing without qualification implies full
annealing.

Full Finish Plate


Steel sheet or strip, reduced either hot or cold, cleaned, annealed, and then cold-rolled to a bright finish.

Full Hard Temper


(A) (No. 1 Temper) In low carbon sheet or strip steel, stiff and springy, not suitable for bending in any
direction. It is the hardest temper obtainable by hard cold rolling. (B) In Stainless Steel Strip, tempers are
based on minimum tensile or yield strength. For Chromium-Nickel grades Full Hard temper is 185,000 TS,
140,000 YS Min. Term also used in connection with copper base alloys and considered synonymous with
Hard Temper.

Fusion Welding
Any welding process in which fusion is employed to complete the weld.

Half Hard Temper


(A) In low carbon cold-rolled strip steel, produced by cold rolling to a hardness next to but somewhat softer
than full hard temper. (B) In brass mill terminology, half hard is two B&S numbers hard or 20.70%
thickness reduction. (C) In Stainless Steel Strip, Tempers are based on minimum tensile or yield strength.
For Chromium-Nickel grades Half-Hard Temper 150,000 T.S., 110,000 Y.S.Min.

Hammer Forging
Forging in which the work is deformed by repeated blows. Compare with press forging.

Hard Chromium
Chromium deposited for engineering purposes, such as increasing the wear resistance of sliding metal
surfaces, rather than as a decorative coating. It is usually applied directly to basis metal and is customarily
thicker than a decorative deposit.

Hard Drawing
Drawing metal wire through a die to reduce cross section and increase tensile strength.

Hard Drawn
Wire or tubing drawn to high tensile strength by a high degree of cold work.

Hard Drawn Spring Steel Wire


A medium high carbon cold drawn spring steel wire. Used principally for cold wound springs.

Hard Temper
(A) (For steel see Full Hard Temper) (B) In brass mill terminology. Hard Temper is four B&S numbers hard
or 37.1% reduction.

Hardenability
In a ferrous alloy, the property that determines the depth and distribution of hardness induced by
quenching.

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Hardenability
The ability of a metal, usually steel, to harden in depth as distinguished from the terms hardness.

Hardenability
In ferrous alloys, the property that determines the depth and distribution of hardness induced by quenching.

Hardened and Tempered Spring Steel Strip


A medium or high carbon quality steel strip which has been subjected to the sequence of heating,
quenching and tempering.

Hardening
Increasing hardness by suitable treatment, usually involving heating and cooling. When applicable, the
following more specific terms should be used: age hardening, case hardening, flame hardening, induction
hardening, precipitation hardening, quench hardening.

Hardening
Increasing the hardness by suitable treatment, usually involving heating and cooling.

Hardening
Any process which increases the hardness of a metal. Usually heating and quenching certain iron base
alloys from a temperature either within or above the critical temperature range.

Hardness
Degree to which a metal will resist cutting, abrasion, penetration, bending and stetching. The indicated
hardness of metals will differ somewhat with the specific apparatus and technique of measuring. For details
concerning the various types of apparatus used in measuring hardness, See Brinell Hardness, Rockwell
Hardness, Vickers Hardness, Scleroscope Hardness. Tensile Strength also is an indication of hardness.

Hardness (indentation)
Resistance of a metal to plastic deformation by indentation. Various hardness tests such as Brinell,
Rockwell and Vickers may be used. In the Vickers test, a diamond pyramid with an included face angle of
136 is used as the indenter.

Heat of Steel
The product of a single melting operation in a furnace, starting with the charging of raw materials and
ending with the tapping of molten metal and consequently identical in its characteristics.

Heat Tinting
Colouration of a metal surface through oxidation by heating to reveal details of structure.

Heat Treatment
Heating and cooling a solid metal or alloy in such a way that desired structures, conditions or properties are
attained. Heating for the sole purpose of hot working is excluded from the meaning of this term.

Heat Treatment
Altering the properties of a metal by subjecting it to a sequence of termperature changes, time of retention
at specific temperature and rate of coolingtherfrom being as important as the temperature itself. Heat
treatment usually markedly affects strength, hardness, ductility, malleability, and similar properties of both
metals and their alloys.

Heat-Affected Zone
That portion of the base metal which was not melted during brazing, cutting, or welding, but whose
microstructure and physical peoperties were altered by the heat.

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Heat-Affected Zone
That portion of the base metal which was not melted during brazing, cutting or welding, but within which
microstructure and physical properties were altered by the treatment.

Hematite
The oxide of iron of highest valency which has a composition close to the stoichiometric composition
Fe2O3.

High Brass
65% A copper-zinc alloy containing 35% zinc. Possesses high tensile strength. Used for springs, screws,
rivets, etc.

Homogenizing
Holding at high temperature to eliminate or decrease chemical segregation by diffusion.

Homogenizing Annealing
An annealing treatment carried out at a high temperature, approaching the solidus temperature, for a
sufficiently long time that inhomogeneous distributions of alloying elements are reduced by diffusional
processes.

Honing
Removing stock generally on the internal cylindrical surface of a workpiece with an abrasive stick mounted
in a holder.

Hooke's Law
Stress is proportional to strain in the elastic range. The value of the stress at which a material ceases to obey
Hooke's law is known as the elastic limit.

Hot Dip
In steel mill practice, a process wherby ferrous alloy base metals are dipped into molten metal, usually zinc,
tin, or terne, for the purpose of fizing a rust resistant coating.

Hot Short
Brittleness in hot metal.

Hot Shortness
Brittleness in metal in the hot forming range.

Hot Top
(1) A reservoir, thermally insulated or heated, to hold molten metal on top of a mold to feed the ingot or
casting as it contracts on solidifying to avoid having pipe or voids.

Hot Working
Deformation under conditions that result in recrystallization.

Hot Working
Plastic deformation of metal at a temperature sufficiently high not to create strain hardening. The lower
limit of temperature for this process is the recrystallization temperature.

Hydrogen Embrittlement
A condition low ductility in metals resulting from the absorbtion of hydrogen.

Hydrogen Embrittlement
(1) Brittleness of metal, resulting from the occlusion of hydrogen (usually as a by-product of pickling or by
co-deposition in electroplating). (2) A condition of low ductility resulting from hydrogen absorption and

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internal pressure developed subsequently. Electrolytic copper exhibits similar results when exposed to
reducing atmosphere at elevated temperatures.

Hypereutectoid Alloy
In a eutectoid system, any alloy containing more than the eutectoid concentration of solute.

Hypereutectoid Steel
A steel having more than the eutectoid percentage of carbon.

Hypoeutectic Alloy
In a eutectic system, any alloy containing less than the eutectic concentration of solute.

Hypoeutectoid Steel
Steel with less than the eutectoid percentage of carbon.

Idiomorph
A particle of a phase the has a regular external shape.

Immersed Scanning
In ultrasonics, a planned, systematic movement of the beam relative to the object being inspected, the
search unit being coupled to this object through a column of liquid. In most cases the object and the search
unit are submerged in water.

Impact Energy (Impact Value)


The amount of energy required to ffracture a material, usually measured by means of an Izod or Charpy
test. The type of speciment and testing conditions affect the values and therfore should be specified.

Impact Test
Test designed to determine the resistance of metal to breakage by impact, usually by concentrating the
applied stress to a notched specimen.

Impact Test
A test to determine the behavior of materials when subjected to high rates of loading,usually in bending,
tension, or torsion. The quantity measured is the energy absorbed in breaking the specimen by a single
blow, as in the Charpy or Izod.

Impact Test
A test for determining the behaviour of materials when subjected to high rates of loading under conditions
designed to promote fracture, usually in bending, tension or torsion. The quantity measured is the energy
absorbed when the specimen is broken by a single blow.

Impurities
Elements or compounds whose presence in a material is undesired.

Inclusion
A nonmetallic material in a solid metallic matrix.

Inclusions
Particles of impurities (usually oxides, sulfides, silicates, etc.) that are held mechanically or are formed
during the solidification or by subsequent reaction within the solid metal.

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Inclusions
Non,etallic materials in a solid metallic matrix.

Indentation Hardness
The resistance of a meterial to indentation. This is the usual type osf hardness test, in which a pointed or
rounded indenter is pressed into a surface under a substantially static load.

Induction Hardening
Quench hardening in which the heat is generated by electrical induction.

Induction Hardening
A process of hardening a ferrous alloy by heating it above the transformation range by means of electrical
induction, and then cooling as required.

Induction Heating
A process of heating by electrical induction.

Inert-Gas Shielded-Arc Welding


Arc welding in an inert gas such as argon or helium.

Ingot
A casting suitable for hot working or remelting.

Ingot
A casting for subsequent rolling or forging.

Ingot Iron
Commercially pure iron.

Ingot Iron
Commercially pure open-hearth iron.

Inhibitor
A substance which retards some specific chemical reaction. Pickling inhibitors retard the sissolution of
metal without hindering the removal of scale from steel.

Intercrystalline
Between crystals, or between grains. Same as intergranular.

Interleaving
The placing of a sheet of paper between two adjacent layers of metal to facilitate handling and shearing of
rectangular sheets, or to prevent sticking or scratching.

Intermediate Annealing
An annealing treatment given to wrought metals following cold work hardening for the purpose of
softening prior to further cold working.

Internal Oxidation
Formation of oxides beneath the surface of a metal.

Interrupted Aging
The aging of an alloy at two or more temperatures by steps, and cooling to room termperature after each
step. Compare with progressuve aging.

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Interrupted Quenching
Quenching in which the metal object being quenched is removed from the quenching medium while the
object is at a temperature substantially higher than that of the quenching medium.

Interstitial Solid Solution


A solid solution in which the solute atoms occupy (interstitial) positions between the atoms in the structure
of the solvent.

Intracrystalline
Within or across crystals or grains. Same as transcrystalline and transgranular.

Investment Casting
(1) Casting metal into a mold produced by surrounding (investing) an expendable pattern with a refractory
slurry that sets at room temperature after which the wax, plastic, or frozed mercury pattern is removed
through the use of heat. Also called precision casting, or lost-wax process. (2) A casting made by the
process.

Irom
(Chemical symbol Fe.) Element No. 26 of the periodic system; Atomic weight 55.85. A magnetic silver
white metal of high tensile strength, ductile and malleable. Melting point of pure iron about 2795 (degrees)
F. Chemically iron is chiefly base forming. The principal forms of commercial iron are steel, cast iron and
wrought iron.

Iron
An element that has an average atomic number of 55.85 and that always, in engineering practice, contains
small but significant amounts of carbon. Thus iron-carbon alloys containing less than about 0.1% C may be
referred to as irons. Alloys with higher carbon contents are always termed steels.

Ironing
Thinning the walls of deep drawn articles by reducing the clearance between punch and die.

Isothermal Annealing
A process in which a ferrous alloy is heated to produce a structure partly or wholly austenitic, and is then
cooled to and held at a temperaure that causes transformation of the austenite to a relatively soft ferrite-
carbide aggregate.

Isothermal Transformation
A change in phase at any constant temperature.

Isothermal Transformation (IT) Diagram


A diagram that shows the isothermal time required for transformation of austenite to commence and to
finish as a function of temperature. Same as time-temperature-transformation (TTT) diagram or S-curve.

Izod Test
A pendulum type of single-blow impact test in which the specimen, usually notched, is fixed at one end and
broken by a falling pendulum. The energy absorbed, as measured by the subsequent rise of the pendulum, is
a measure of impact strength or notch toughness.

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Killed Steel
Steel deoxidized with a strong deoxidizing agent, such as silicon or aluminum, to reduce the oxygen
content to such a level that no reaction occurs between carbon and oxygen during solidification.

Killed Steel
The term killed indicates that the steel has been sufficiently deoxidized to quiet the molten metal when
poured into the ingot mold. The general practice is to use aluminum ferrosilicon or manganese as
deoxidizing agents. A properly killed steel is more uniform as to analysis and is comparatively free from
aging. However, for the same carbon and manganese content Killed Steel is harder than Rimmed Steel. In
general all steels above 0.25% carbon are killed, also all forging grades, structural steels from 0.15% to
0.25% carbon and some special steels in the low carbon range. Most steels below 0.15% carbon are rimmed
steel.

Killed Steel
Steel deoxidized with a strong deoxidizing agent such as silicon or aluminum in order to reduce the oxygen
content to such a level that no reaction occurs between carbon and oxygen during solidification.

Kind Band (deformation)


In polycrystalline materials, a volume of crystal that has rotated physically to accommodate differential
deformation between adjoining parts of a grain while the band itself has deformed homogeneously. This
occurs by regular bending of the slip lamellae along the boundaries of the band.

Kip
A load of 1000 lbs.

Ladle Analysis
A term applied to the chemical analysis representative of a heat of steel as reported by the producer. It is
determined by analyzing a test ingot sample obtained during the pouring of the steel from a ladle.

Lamellar Tear
A system of cracks or discontinuities aligned generally parallel to the worked surface of a plate. Usually
associated with a fusion weld in thick plate.

Lamination
An abnormal structure resulting in a separation or weakness aligned generally parallel to the worked
surface of the metal.

Laminations
A defect appearing in sheets or strips as a segregation or in layers. To become divided, caused by gas
pockets in the ingot.

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Laminations
Metal defects with separation or weakness generally aligned parallel to the worked surface of the metal.
May be the result of pipe, blisters, seams, inclusions, or segregation elongated and made directional by
working. Lamination defects may also occur in metal-powder compacts.

Lap
A surface defect, appearing as a seam, caused by fording over hot metal, fins, or sharp corners and then
rolling or forging them into the surface, but not welding them.

Lap
A surface defect appearing as a seam, caused by folding over hot metal, fins or sharp corners and then
rolling or forging them into the surface, but not welding them.

Lap-Weld
A term applied to a weld formed by lapping two pieces of metal and then pressing or hammering, and
applied particularly to the longitudinal joint produced by a welding process for tubes or pipe, in which the
edges of the skelp are beveled or scarfed so that when they are overlapped they can be welded together.

Lath Martensite
Martensite formed, partly in steel containing less than about 1.0% C and solely in steels containing less
than about 0.5% C, as parallel arrays or packets of lath-shape units about 0.1 to 0.3 m thick, and having a
habit plane that is close to {111}.

Lattice
Space lattice. Lattice lines and lattice planes are lines and planes chosen so as to pass through collinear
lattice points, and non-collinear lattice points, respectively.

Leveling
Flattening rolled metal sheet or strip.

Light Metal
One of the low-density metals such as aluminum, magnesium, titanium, beryllium, or their alloys.

Light Metals
Metal and alloys that have a low specific gravity, such as beryllium, magnesium and aluminum.

Liquation
Partial melting of an alloy.

Liquidus
In a constitutional diagram, the locus of points representing the temperatures at which various components
commence freezing on cooling or finish melting on heating.

Lithographic Sheet Aluminum


Sheet having a superior surface on one side with respect to freedom from surface imperfections and
supplied with a maximum degree of flatness, for use as a plate in offset printing.

Long Terne
A term applying to steel sheets that have been terne coated (Lead and Tin) by immersion in a bath of Terne
Metal.

Longitudinal Direction
The principal direction of flow in a worked metal.

Low Brass

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80% cu. A copper-Zinc alloy containing 20% zinc. Is a light golden color, very ductile, suitable for
cupping, drawing, forming, etc. Because of its good strength and corrosion resistance it is used for flexible
metal gose, metal bellows, etc.

Low Carbon Steels


Contain from 0.10 to 0.30% carbon and less than 0.60% manganese. (The product of Basic Oxygen,
Bessemer, Open Hearth or Electric Processes.)

Low-Hydrogen Electrode
A covered arc-welding electrode that provides an atmosphere around the arc and molten weld metal which
is low in hydrogen.

Luders Lines (Steel)


(Characteristic of No. 5 Yemper-Not a defect in No. 5 dead soft temper.) Long vein-like marks appearing
on the surface of certain metals, in the direction of the maximum shear stress, when the metal is subjected
to deformation beyond the field point.

Luders Lines or Bands


Elongated surface markings or depressions caused by localized plastic deformation that results form
discontinuous (inhomogeneous) yielding.

M B Grade
A term applied to Open-Hearth steel wire in the .45/.75 carbon range either hard drawn or oil tempered. Oil
tempered wire of M B and W M B types are the most widely used of all spring wires. Oil tempered wire is
more suitable to precision forming and casting operations than hard drawn wire, because of close control of
tensile strength and superior straightness. . NOTE M B, H B and extra H B designate Basic Open Hearth
steels, while W M B, W H B and extra W H B designate Acid Open Hearth Steels. The chemical
composition and the mechanical properties are the same for both basic and acid steel.

Machinability
The relative ease of machining a metal.

Machinability
The capacity of a material to be machined easily.

Machinability Index
A relative measure of the machinability of an engineering material under specified standard conditions.

Macro-Etch
Etching of a metal surface for accentuation of gross structural details and defects for observation by the
unaided eye or at magnifications not exceeding ten diameters.

Macroetch Test
Consists of immersing a carefully prepared section of the steel in hot acid and of examining the etched
surface to evaluate the soundness and homogeneity of the product being tested.

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Macroetching
Etching of a metal surface with the abjective of accentuating gross structural details, for observation by the
unaided eye or at magnifications not exceeding ten diameters.

Macrograph
A graphic reproduction of a prepared surface of a specimen at a magnification not exceeding ten diameters.
When photographed, the reproduction is known as a photomacrograph (not a macrophotograph).

Macrograph
A photographic reproduction of any object that has not been magnified more than ten times.

Macroscopic
Visible either with the naked eye or under low magnification (as great as about ten diameters.

Macrostructure
The structure of a metal as revealed by examination of the etched surface at a magnification not exceeding
ten diameters.

Macrostructure
The structure of metal as revealed by macroscopic examination.

Macrostructure
The structure of metals as revealed by examination of the etched surface of a polished specimen at a
magnification not exceeding ten diameters.

Magnetic-Particle Inspection
A nondestructive method of inspection for determining the existence and extent of possible defects in
ferromagnetic materials. Finely divided magnetic particles, applied to the magnetized part, anre attracted to
and outline the pattern of any magnetic-leakage fields created by discontinuities.

Magnetite
The oxide or iron of intermediate valence which has a composition close to the stoichiometric composition
Fe3O4.

Malleability
The property that determines the ease of deforming a metal when the metal is subjected to rolling or
hammering. The more malleable metals can be hammered or rolled into thin sheet more easily than others.

Malleabilizing
A process of annealing white cast iron in such a way that the combined carbon is wholly or partly
transformed to graphitic or free carbon or, in someinstances, part of the carbon is removed completely.

Manganese
(Chemical symbol Mn.) Element No. 25 of the periodic system; atomic weight 54.93. Lustrous, reddish-
white metal of hard brittle and, therfore, non-malleable character. The metal is used in large quantities in
the form of Spiegel and Ferromanganese for steel manufacture as well as in manganese and many copper-
base alloys. Its principal function is as an alloy in steel making: (1) It is ferrite-strengthening and carbide
forming element. It increases hardenability inexpensively, with a tendency toward embrittlement when too
high carbon and too high manganese accompany each other. (2) It counteracts brittleness from sulfur.

Manual Welding
Welding where in the entire welding operation is performed and controlled by hand.

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Martempering
Quenching an austenitized ferrous alloy in a medium at a temperature in the upper part of the martensite
range, or slightly above that range, and holding it in the medium until the temperature throughout the alloy
is substantially uniform. The alloy is then allowed to cool in air through the martensite range.

Martempering
(1) A hardening procedure in which an austenitized ferrous material is quenched into an appropriate
medium at a temperature just above the Ms temperature of the material, held in the medium until the
temperature is uniform through-out -but not long enough for bainite to form - and then cooled in air. The
treatment is frequently followed by tempering. (2) When the process is applied to carburized material, the
controlling Ms temperature is that of the case. This variation of the process is frequently called
marquenching.

Martensite
In steel, a metalstable transition phase with a body-centered-tetragonal crystal structure formed by
diffusionless transformation of austenite generally during cooling between the Ms and Mf temperatures.

Martensite
A distinctive neddle like structure existing in steel as a transition stage in the transformation of austenite. It
is the hardest constituent of steel of eutectoid composition. It is produced by rapid cooling from quenching
temperature and is the chief constituent of hardened carbon tool steels. Martensite is magnetic.

Martensite
(1) In an alloy, a metastable transitional structure intermediate between two allotropic modifications whose
abilities to dissolve a given solute differ considerably, the high-temperature phase transformed to martensite
depends to a large extent upon the temperature attained in cooling, there being a rather distinct beginning
temperature. (2) A metastable phase of steel, formed by a transformation of austenite below the Ms (or Ar)
temperature. It is an interstitial supersaturated solid solution of carbon in iron having a body-centered
tetragonal lattice. Its microstructure is characterized by an acicular, or needle-like, pattern.

Martensite Range
The interval between the Ms and Mf temperatures.

Matalloid
(a) Element intermediate in lustre and conductivity between the true metals and non-metals. Arsenic,
antimony, boron, tellurium, and selenium, etc., are generally considered metalloids; frequently one
allotropic modification of an element will be non-metallic, another metalloid in character. Obviously, no
hard and fast line can be drawn. (b) In steel metallurgy, metalloid has a specialized, even if erroneous,
meaning; it covers elements commonly prosent in simple steel; carbon, manganese, phosphorus, silicon and
sulfur.

Matrix
The principal phase or aggregate in which another constituent is embedded.

Matrix
The principal phase in which another constituent is embedded.

Matt or Matte Finish


(Steel) Not as smooth as normal mill finish. Produce by etched or mechanically roughened finishing rolls.

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Mechanical Polishing
A method of producing a specularly reflecting surface by use of abrasives.

Mechanical Properties
The properties of a material that reveal its elastic and inelastic behavior where force is applied, thereby
indicating its suitability for mechanical application; for example, modulus of elasticity, tensile strength,
elongation, hardness, and fatigue limit.

Mechanical Properties
Those properties of a meterial that reveal the elastic and inelastic reaction when force is applied, or that
involve the relationship between stress and strain; for example, the modulus of elasticity, tensile strength
and fatigue limit. These properties have often been designated as physical properties, but the term
mechanical properties is much to be preferred. The mechanical properties of steel are dependent on its
microstructure.

Mechanical Spring
Any spring produced by cold forming from any material with or without subsequent heat treatment.

Mechanical Twin
A twin formed in a metal during plastic deformation by simple shear of the structure.

Mechanical Working
Plastic deformation or other physical change to which metal is subjected, by rolling, hammering, drawing.,
etc. to change its shape, properties or structure.

Medium-Carbon Steel
Contains from 0.30% to 0.60% carbon and less than 1.00% manganese. May be made by any of the
standard processes.

Melting Point
The temperature at which a pure metal, compound or eutectic changes form solid to liquid; the temperature
at which the liquid and the solid are in equilibrium.

Melting Range
The range of temperature in which an alloy melt; that is the range between solidus and liquidus
temperatures.

Metal
An opaque, lustrous, elemental substance that is a good conductor of heat and electricity and, when
polished, a good reflector or light. Most metals are malleable and ductile and are, in general, denser than
other substances.

Metal Spraying
A process for applying a coating of metal to an object. The metal, usually in the form of wire, is melted by
an oxyhydrogen or oxyacetylene blast or by an electric arc and is proficted at high speed by gas pressure
against the object being coated.

Metallography
The science concerning the constituents and structure of metals and alloys as revealed by the microscope.

Metalograph
An optical instrument designed for both visual observation and photomicrography of prepared surfaces of
opaque materials at magnifications ranging from about 25 to about 1500 diameters.

Metastable

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Possessing a state of pseudo-equilibrium that has a free energy higher than that of the true equilibrium state
but from which a system does not change spontaneously.

Mf Temperature
The temperature at which martensitic transformation is essentially complete during cooling after
austenitization.

Microbands (deformation)
Thin sheet like volumes of constant thickness in which cooperative slip occurs on a fone scale. They are an
instability which carry exclusively the deformation at medium strains when normal homogeneous slip is
precluded. The sheets are aligned at +/- 55(degrees) to the compression direction and are confined to
individual grains, which usually contain two sets of bands. Compare shear bands.

Microcrack
A crack of microscopic size.

Micrograph
A graphic reproduction of the prepared surface of a specimen at a magnification greater than ten diameters.
When photographed, the reproduction is known as a photomicrograph (not a microphotograph).

Microstructure
The structure of a prepared surface of a metal as revealed by a microscope at a magnification greater than
ten diameters.

Microstructure
The structure of polished and etched metal and alloy specimens as revealed by the microscope.

Mild Steel
Carbon steel containing a maximum of about 0.25% C.

Mill Edge
The edge of strip, sheet or plate in the as rolled state. Unsheared.

Mill Finish
A surface finish produced on sheet and plate. Characteristic of the ground finish used on the rolls in
fabrication.

Modulus of Elasticity
A measure of the rigidity of metal. Ratio of stress, within proportional limit, to corresponding strain.
Specifically, the modulus obtained in tension or compression is Young's modulus, stretch modulus or
modulus of extensibility; the modulus obtained in torsion or shear is modulus of rigidity, shear modulus or
modulus of torsion; the modulus covering the ratio of the mean normal stress to the change in volume per
unit volume is the bulk modulus. The tangent modulus and secant modulus are not restricted within the
proportional limit; the former is the slope of the stress-strain curve at a specified point; the latter is the
slope of a line from the origin to a specified point on the stress-strain curve. Also called elastic modulus
and coefficient of elasticity.

Modulus of Elasticity (tension)


Force which would be required to stretch a substance to double its normal length, on the assumption that it
would remain perfectly elastic, i.e., obey Hooke's Law throughout the twist. The ratio of stress to strain
within the perfectly elastic range.

Mold
A form of cavity into which molten metal is poured to produce a desired shape.

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Molybdenum
(Chemical symbol Mo) Element No. 42 of the peridic system; atomic weight 95.95. Hard, tough metal of
grayish-white color, becoming very ductile and malleable when properly treated at high temperatures;
melting point 4748 (degrees) F.; boiling point about 6600 (degrees) F.; specific gravity 10.2 . Pure
molybdenum can best be obtained as a black powder, by reduction of molybdenum trioxide or ammonium
molybdate with hydrogen. From this powder, ductile sheet and wire are made by powder metallurgy
techniques; these are used in radio and related work. Its principal functions as an alloy in steel making: (1)
Raises grain-coarsening temperature of austenite. (2) Deepens hardening. (3) Counteracts tendency toward
temperbrittleness. (4) Raises hot and creep strength, red hardness. (5) Enhances corrosion resistance in
stainless steel. (6) Forms abrasion-resisting particles.

Ms Temperature
The temperature at which a martensitic transformation starts during cooling after austenitization.

Muntz Metal (A refractory Alloy)


Alpha-beta brass, 60% copper and 40% zinc. Stronger than alpha-brass and used for castings and hot-
worked (rolled, stamped, or extruded) products. High strength brasses are developed from this by adding
other elements.

Music Wire
A polished high tensile strength cold drawn wire with higher tensile strength and higher torsional strength
than any other material available. These high mechanical properties are obtained by a combination of the
high carbon content, the patenting treatment and by many continuous passes through drawing dies. The
high toughness characteristic of this material is obtained by the patenting. Such wire is purchased according
to tensile strength, not hardness.

Natural Aging
Spontaneous aging of a supersaturated solid solution at room temperature.

Natural Aging
Spontaneous aging of a supersaturated solid solution at room temperature.

Necking
Local reduction of the cross-sectional area of metal by stretching.

Needle Cutter Steel


Usually supplied quarter hard rolled, extra precision rolled with sheared edges. Carbon content 1.25 -
Chromium .15. Usually supplied in a 2 width from .002 to .035. Used for cutting the eyes of needle and
milling the latch in a latch needle.

Network Structure
A structure in which the crystals of one constituent are surrounded by envelopes of another constituent
which gives a network appearance to an etched test specimen.

Neumann Band
A mechanical (deformation) twin in ferrite.

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Nickel
(Chemical symbol Ni) Element No. 28 of the periodic system; atomic weight 58.69. Silvery white, slightly
magnetic metal, of medium hardness and high degree of ductility and malleability and resistance to
chemical and atmospheric corrosion; melting point 2651 (degrees) F.; boiling point about 5250 (degrees) F.,
specific gravity 8.90. Used for electroplating. Used as an alloying agent, it is of great importance in iron-
base alloys in stainless steels and in copper-base alloys such as Cupro-Nickel, as well as in nickel-base
alloys such as Monel Metal. Its principal functions as an alloy in steel making: (1) Strengthens unquenched
or annealed steels. (2) Toughens pearlitic-ferritic steels (especially at low temperature). (3) Renders high-
chromium iron alloys austenitic.

Nickel Silver
Copper base alloys that contain 10-45% Zn. and 5-30% Ni.

Nickel Steel
Steel containing nickel as an alloying element. Varying amounts are added to increase the strength in the
normalized condition to enable hardening to be performed in oil or air instead of water.

Niobium
(Chemical symbol Nb) Element No. 41 of the periodic system. See Columbium

Nitriding
Introducing nitrogen into a solid ferrous alloy by holding at a suitable temperature (below Ac1 for ferritic
steels) in contact with a nitrogenous material, usually ammonia of molten cyanide of appropriate
composition. Quenching is not required to produce a hard case.

Nitriding
Process of surface hardening certain types of steel by heating in ammonia gas at about 935-1000 (degrees)
F., the increase in hardness being the result of surface nitride formation. Certain alloying constituents,
principal among them being aluminum, greatly facilitate the hardening reaction. In general, the depth of the
case is less than with carburizing.

Nitriding Steel
Steel which is particularly suited for the nitriding process, that is, it will form a very hard and adherent
surface upon proper nitriding (heating in a partially dissociated atmosphere of ammonia gas). Composition
usually .20-.40 carbon, .90-1.50 chromium, .15-1.00 molybdenum, and .85-1.20% aluminum.

Nodular Pearlite
Pearlite that has grown as a colony with an approximately spherical morphology.

Non-Ferrous Metals
Metals or alloys that are free of iron or comparatively so.

Non-Metallic Inclusions
Impurities (commonly oxides), sulphides, silicates or similar substances held in metals mechanically during
solidification or formed by reactions in the solid state.

Non-Refractory Alloy
A term opposed to refractory alloy. A non-refractory alloy has malleability, that is, ease of flattening when
subjected to rolling or hammering.

Non-Scalloping Quality Strip Steel


Strip steel ordered or sold on the basis of absence of unevenness, or ears, on the edges of the steel, when
subjected to deep drawing.

Normalizing

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Heating a ferrous alloy to a suitable temperature above A3 or Acm and then cooling in still air to a
temperature substantially below A1. The cooling rate usually is in the range 900 to1800 F/h (500 to
1000C/h).

Normalizing
Heating a ferrous alloy to a suitable temperature above the transformation range and then cooling in air to a
temperature substantially below the transformation range.

Normalizing
A heat treatment applied to steel, Involves heating above the critical range followed by cooling in still air.
Is performed to refine the crystal structure and eliminate internal stress.

Notch Brittleness
A measure of the susceptibility of a material to brittle fracture at locations of stress concentration. For
example, in a notch tensile test a material is said to be notch brittle if its notch strength is less than its
tensile strength; otherwise, it is said to be notch ductile.

Notch Sensitivity
A measure of the reduction in strength of a metal caused by the presence of stress concentration. Values can
be obtained from static, impact or fatigue tests.

Nucleation
Initiation of a phase transformation at discrete sites, the new phase growing from nuclei.

Nucleus
(1) The first structurally stable particle capable of initiating recrystallization of a phase or the growth of a
new phase, and separated form the matrix by an interface. (2) The heavy central core of an atom, in which
most of the mass and the total positive electrical charge are concentrated.

Number as Pertaining to Hardness


In copper base alloys inductry; temper is referred to as so many numbers hard, i.e. Yellow Brass Half Hard
is termed 2 numbers hard. This term is derived from terminology used on the mill gloor where by temper or
hardness is imparted by cold working and classified as to hardness by the number of Brown & Sharpe
gages away from the soft or as-annealed state.

Oil Hardening
A process of hardening a ferrous alloy of suitable composition by heating within or above the
transformation range and quenching in oil.

Oil Stain Aluminum


Stain produced by the incomplete burning of the lubricants on the surface of the sheet. Rolling subsequent
to staining will change color from darker browns to lighter browns down to white.

Oil-Hardening Steel
Steel adaptable to hardening by heat treatment and quenching in oil.

Olsen (Ductility) Test

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A method of measuring the ductility and drawing properties of strip or sheet metal which involves
determination of the width and depth of impression. The test simulating a deep drawing operation is made
by a standard steel ball under pressure, continuing until the cup formed from the metal sample fractures.
Readings are in thousandths of an inch. This test is sometimes used to detect stretcher straining and
indicates the surface finish after drawing, similar to the Erichsen ductility test.

Open Surface
Rough surface on black plate, sheet or strip, resulting from imperfection in the original steel bars from
which the plate was rolled.

Open-Hearth Furnace
A reverberatory melting furnace with a shallow hearth and a low roof. The flame passes over the charge in
the hearth, causing the charge to be heated both by direct flame and radiation from the roof and sidewalls of
the furnace. In ferrous industry, the furnace is regenerative.

Open-Hearth Process
Process of making steel by heating the metal in the hearth of a regenerative furnace. In the basic open-
hearth steel process, the lining of the hearth is basic, usually magnesite; whereas in the acid open-hearth
steel process, an acid material, silica, is used as the furnace lining and pig iron, extremely low in
phosphorous (less than 0.04%), is the raw material charged in.

Orange Peel
A pebble-grain surface which develops in forming of metals having coarse grains.

Orange Peel (effect)


A surface roughening (defect) encountered in forming products from metal stock that has a coarse grain
size. It is due to uneven flow or to the appearance of the overly large grains usually the result of annealing
at too high a temperature. Also referred to as pebbles and alligator skin.

Ore
A mineral from which metal is (or may be) extracted.

Orientation (crystal)
Arrangement of certain crystal axes or crystal planes in a crystalline aggregate with respect to a given
direction or plane. If there is any tendency for one arrangement to predominate, it is known as the preferred
orientation; in the absence of any such preference, random orientation exists.

Orientation (crystal)
Directions in space of the axes of the lattice of a crystal with respect to a chosen reference or coordinate
system.

Oscillated Wound or Scroll Wound


A method of even winding metal strip or wire on to a reel or mandrel wherein the strands are uniformly
over-lapped. Sometimes termed stagger wound or vibrated wound. The opposite of ribbon wound.

Overaging
Aging under conditions of time and temperature greater than those required to obtain maximum change in a
certain property, so that the property is altered in the direction of the initial value.

Overaging
Aging under conditions of time and temperature greater than those required to obtain maximum change in a
certain property.

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Overaging
Aging under conditions of time and temperature greater than those required to obtain maximum strength.

Overheating
Heating a metal or alloy to such a high temperature that its properties are impaired. When the original
properties cannot be restored by further heat treating, by mechanical working, or by combination of
working and heat treating, the overheating is known as burning.

Overheating
Heating a metal or alloy to such a high temperature that its properties are impaired. When the original
properties cannot be restored by further heat treating, by mechanical working or by a combination of
working and heat treating, the overheating is known as burning.

Oxidation
The addition of oxygen to a compound. Exposure to atmosphere sometimes results in oxidation of the
exposed surface, hence a staining or discoloration. This effect is increased with temperature increase.

Oxidation
(1) A reaction in which there is an increase in valence resulting from a loss of electrons. (2) Chemical
combination with oxygen to form an oxide.

Oxide
Compound of oxygen with another element.

Oxidized Surface
A surface having a thin, tightly adhering oxidized skin.

Oxygen Lance
A length of pipe used to convey oxygen onto a bath of molten metal.

Oxygen-Free Copper
Electrolytic copper free from cuprous oxide, produced without the use of residual metallic or metalloidal
deoxidizers.

Pack Rolling
Rolling two or more pieces of thin sheet at the same time, a method usually practiced in rolling sheet into
thin foil.

Pack Rolling
Hot rolling a pack of two or more sheets of metal; scale prevents the sheets from being welded together.

Pack Rolling
Hot rolling a pack of two or more sheets of metal; scale prevents their being welded together.

Pancake Forging
A rough forged shape which may be obtained quickly with a minimum of tooling. It usually requires
considerable machining to attain the finish size.

Pancake Grain Structure

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A structure in which the lengths and widths of individual grains are large compared to their thicknesses.

Pass
A term indicating the process of passing metal through a rolling mill.

Pass
(1) A single transfer of metal through a stand of rolls. (2) The open space between two grooved rolls
through which metal is processed. (3) The weld metal deposited in one run along the axis of a weld.

Passivation
The changing of the chemically active surface of a metal to a much less reactive state. Contrast with
activation.

Patenting
A heat treatment applied to medium and high-carbon steel prior to cold drawing to wire. The treatment
involves austenitization followed by isothermal transformation at a temperature that produces a
microstructure of very fine pearlite.

Patenting
Treatment of steel, usually in wire form, in which the metal is gradually heated to about 1830 (degrees) F.,
with subsequent colling, usually in air, in a bath of molten lead, or in a fused salt mixture held between 800
(degrees) F. and 1050 (degrees) F.

Pattern Welding
A process in which strips or other small sections of iron or steel are twisted together and then forge welded.
Homogeneity and toughness are thereby improved. A regular decorative pattern can be developed in the
final product. COmmonly used for making swords as early as the 3rd century A.D.

Patterned or Embossed Sheet


A sheet product on which a raised or indented pattern has been impressed on either on or both surfaces by
the use of rolls.

Pearlite
A eutectoid transformation product of ferrite and cementite that ideally has a lamellar structure but that is
always degenerate to some extent.

Pearlite
Lamellar structure resembling mother of pearl. A compound of iron and carbon occurring in steel as a result
of the transformation of austenite into aggregations of ferrite and iron carbide.

Pearlite
A lamellar aggregate of ferrite and cementite, oftern occurring in steel and case iron.

Peening
Mechanical working of metal by hammer blows or shot impingement.

Penetrant Inspection
A method of non-destructive testing for determining the existence and extent of discontinuities that are
open to the surface in the part being inspected. The indications ore made visible through the use of a dye or
fluorescent chemical in the liquid employed as the inspection medium.

Peritectic
An isothermal reversible reaction in which a liquid phase reacts with a solid phase to produce another solid
phase.

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Permalloy
Nickel alloys containing about 20 to 60% Fe, used for their high magnetic permeability and electrical
resistivity.

Permanent Set
Non-elastic or plastic, deformation of metal under stress, after passing the elastic limit.

Phase
A physically homogeneous and distincy portion of a material system.

Phase Diagram
Synonymous with constitutional diagram.

Phosphor Bronze
Copper base alloys, with 3.5 to 10% of tin, to which has been added in the molten state phosphorus in
varying amounts of less than 1% for deoxidizing and strengthening purposes. Because of excellent
toughness, strength, fine grain, resistance to fatigue and wear, and chemical resistance, these alloys find
general use as springs and in making fittings. It has corrosion resisting properties comparable to copper.

Phosphor Bronze Strip


A copper-base alloy containing up to 10% tin, which has been deoxidized with phosphorus in varying
amounts of less than 1%. Temper is imparted by cold rolling, resulting in greater tensile strength and
hardness than in most copper-base alloys or either of its alloying elements copper or tin. The various
tempers from One Number Hard to Ten Numbers Hard are classified in hardness by the number of B&S
Gages reduction in dimension from the previous soft or as-annealed state. Phosphor Bronze is not heat
treatable for purposes of hardness development. It does not withstand elevated temperatures very well and
should not be used in service above 225 (degrees) F. even after stress relieving treatment at 325 (degrees) to
350 (degrees) F. It has excellent electrical properties, corrosion resistant comparable to copper; great
toughness and resistance to fatigue. Rated good for soft soldering, silver alloy brazing, oxyacetylene,
carbon arc and resistance welding.

Phosphorus
(Chemical symbol P) Element No. 15 of the periodic system; atomic weight 30.98. Non-metallic element
occurring in at least three allotropic forms; melting point 111 (degrees) F.; boiling point 536 (degrees) F.;
specific gravity 1.82. In steels it is usually undesirable with limits set in most specifications. However, it is
specified as an alloy in steel to prevent the sticking of light-gage sheets; to a degree it strengthens low
carbon steel; increases resistance to corrosion, and improves machinability in free-cutting steels. In the
manufacture of Phosphor Bronze it is used as a deoxidizing agent.

Photomicrograph
A photographic reproduction of any object magnified more than ten diameters. The term micrograph may
be used.

Physical Properties
Properties other than mechanical properties, that pertain to the physical nature of a material; e.g., density,
electrical conductivity, thermal expansion, reflectivity, magnetic susceptibility, etc.

Physical Properties
The properties, other than mechanical properties, that pertain to the physics of a material; for example,
density, electrical conductivity, heat conductivity, thermal expansion.

Physical Properties
Those properties familiarly discussed in physics, exclusive of those described under mechanical properties;
for example, density, electrical conductivity, co-efficient of thermal expansion. This term often has been
used to describe mechanical properties, but this usage is not recommended.

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Pickling
Removing surface oxides from metals by chemical or electrochemical reaction.

Pickling
The process of chemically removing oxides and scale from the surface of a metal by the action of water
solutions of inorganic acids.

Pickling Patch
A defect in tin plate, galvanized or terne plated steel due to faulty pickling, leaving areas from which the
oxide has not been completely removed.

Pig Iron
(1) High-carbon iron made by reduction of iron ore in the blast furnace. (2) Cast iron in the form of pigs.

Pig Iron
Iron produced by reduction of iron ore in a blast furnace. Pig iron contains approximately 92% iron and
about 3.5% carbon. Balance largely silicone and manganese with small percentages of phosphorus, sulphur,
and other impurities.

Pig Iron
(1) High-carbon iron made by reduction of iron ore in the blast furnace. (2) Cast Iron in the form of pigs.

Piling
A process in which several bars are stacked and hot rolled together with the objective of improving the
homogeneity of the final product. Used in primitive iron making.

Pin Expansion Test


A test for determining the ability of tubes to be expanded or for revealing the presence of cracks or other
longitudinal weaknesses, made by forcing a tapered pin into the open end of a tube.

Pinchers
Long fern like creases usually diagonal to the direction of rolling.

Pinholes
Microscopic imperfection of the coatings, that is, microscopic bare spots, also microscopic holes
penetrating through a layer or thickness of light gage metal.

Pipe
(1) The central cavity formed by contraction in metal, especially ingots, during solidification. (2) The
defect in wrought or cast products resulting from such a cavity. (3) An extrusion defect due to the oxidized
surface of the billet flowing toward the center of the rod at the back end. (4) A tubular metal product, cast
or wrought.

Pipe (defect)
Contraction cavity, essentially cone-like in shape, which occurs in the approximate center, at the top and
reaching down into a casting; caused by the shrinkage of cast metal.

Pit (defect)
A sharp depresssion in the surface of the metal.

Pitting
Forming small sharp cavities in a metal surface by nonuniform electro-deposition or by corrosion.

Planimetric Method
A method of measuring grain size, in which the grains within a definite area are counted.

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Planishing
Producing a smooth surface finish on metal by rapid succession of blows delivered by highly polished dies
or by a hammer designed for the purpose, or by rolling in a planishing mill.

Plastic Deformation
Deformation that remains, or will remain, permanent after release of the stress that caused it.

Plastic Deformation
Permanent distortion of a material under the action of applied stresses.

Plasticity
The ability of a metal to be deformed extensively without rupture.

Plasticity
The capacity of a metal to deform non-elastically without rupturing.

Plate
A flat-rolled metal product of some minimum thickness and width argitrarily dependent on the type of
metal.

Plate Martensite
Martensite formed, partly in steels containing more than about 0.5% C and solely in steels containing more
than about 1.0% C, as lenticular-shape plates on irrational habit planes that are near (225)A, or {259}A in
very-high-carbon steels

Plating
A thin coating of metal laid on another metal.

Polished Surface
The finish obtained by buffing with rouge or similar fine abrasive, resulting in a high gloss or polish.

Polishing
Producing a specularly reflecting surface.

Polycrystalline
Comprising an aggregate of more than one crystal, and usually a large number of crystals.

Polymorphism
The ability of a material to exist in more than one crystallographic structure. Numerous metals change in
crystallographic structure at transformation temperatures during heating or cooling. If the change is
reversible, it is allotropy. The allotropy of iron, particularly the changes between the alpha body-centered
and the gamma face centered form, is of fundamental importance in the hardening of steel.

Polymorphism
The property whereby certain substances may exist in more than one crystalline form, the particular form
depending on the conditions of crystallization - e.g., temperature and pressure. Among elements, this
phenomenon is also called allotropy.

Postheating
Heating weldments immediately after welding, for tempering, for stress relieving, or for providing a
controlled rate of cooling to prevent formation of a hard or brittle structure.

Pot
A vessel for holding molten metal. Also used to refer to the electrolytic reduction cell employed in winning
certain metals, such as aluminum, from a fused electrolyte.

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Pot Annealing
Is the same as box annealing.

Pouring
The transfer of molten metal from the ladle into ingot molds or other types of molds; for example, in
castings.

Powder Metallurgy
The art of producing metal powders and of utilizing metal powders for the production of massive materials
and shaped objects.

Precipitation Hardening
Hardening caused by the precipitation of a constituent form a supersaturated solid solution.

Precipitation Hardening
A process of hardening an alloy in which a constituent precipitates from a supersaturated solid solution.

Precipitation Heat Treatment


Nonfer met. Any of the various aging treatments conducted at elevated temperatures to improve certain of
the mechanical properties through precipitation from solid solution.

Preferred Orientation
A condition of a polycrystalline aggregate in which the crystal orientations are not random.

Preheating
Heating before some further thermal or mechanical treatment. For tool steel, heating to an intermediate
temperature immediately before austenitizing. For some nonferrous alloys, heating to a high temperature
for a long time, in order to homogenize the structure before working.

Preheating
(1) A general term used to describe heating applied as a preliminary to some further thermal or mechanical
treatment. (2) A term applied specifically to tool steel to describe a process in which the steel is heated
slowly and uniformly to a temperature below the hardening temperature and is then transferred to a furnace
in which the temperature is substantially above the preheating temperature. (3) Nonfer. met.-Heating a
metal to a relatively high temperature for a relatively long time in order to change the structure before
working. Ingots are homogenized by preheating.

Press Forging
Forging metal, usually hot, between dies in a press.

Primary Crystal
The first type of crystal that separates from a melt during solidifacation.

Primes
Metal products, principally sheet and plate, of the highest quality and free from visible defects.

Primes
Metal products, such as sheet and plate, of the highest quality and free from visible surface defects.

Process Annealing
In the sheet and wire industries, heating a ferrous alloy to a temperature close to, but below, the lower limit
of the transformation range and then cooling, in order to soften the alloy for futher cold working.

Process Annealing

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In the sheet and wire industries, a process by whcih a ferrous alloy is heated to a temperature close to, but
below, the lower limit of the transformation range and is subsequently cooled. This process is applied in
order to soften the alloy for further cold working.

Proeutectoid (phase)
Particles of a phase that precipitate during cooling after austenitizing but before the eutectoid
transformation takes place.

Progressive Aging
An aging process in which the temperature of the alloy is continuously increased during the aging cycle.
The temperature may be increased in steps or by any other progressive method. Compare with interrupted
aging.

Proof Stress
(1) The stress that will cause a specified small permanent set in a material. (2) A specified stress to be
applied to a member or structure to indicate its ability to withstand service loads.

Propertional Limit
The greatest stress that the material is capable of sustaining without a deviation from the law of
proportionally of stress to strain (Hooke's Law).

Propertional Limit
The maximum stress at which strain remains directly propertional to stress.

Puddling Process
A process for making wrought iron in which cast orn is melted in a hearth furnace and rabbled with slag
and oxide until a pasty mass is obtained. This process was developed by Henry Cort about 1784 and
remained in use until 1957, although on a very small scale during the present century.

Pulse-Echo Method
A nondestructive test in which pulses of energy are directed onto a part, and the time for the echo to return
from one or more reflecting surfaces is measured.

Punch
The movable part that forces the metal into the die in equipment for sheet drawing, blanking, coining,
embossing and the like.

Punching
Shearing holes in sheet metal with punch and die.

Pyrometer
An instrument of any of various types used for measuring temperatures.

Quarter Hard (No. 3 Temper)


(A) In low carbon cold-rolled strip steel, a medium soft temper produced by a limited amount of cold
rolling after annealing. (B) In brass mill terminology. Quarter hard is one B and S number hard or 10.95%
reduction. (C) In stainless steel terminology tempers are based on minimum tensile, or yield strength. For
Chromium-Nickel grades Quarter Hard Temper is 125,000 T. S., 75,000 Y.S. min.

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Quench Aging
Aging that occurs after quenching following solution heat treatment.

Quench Hardening
Hardening by austenitizing and then cooling at a rate such that a substantial amount of austenite is
transformed to martensite.

Quench Hardening
Hardening a ferrous alloy by austenitizing and then cooling rapidly enough so that some or all of the
austenite transforms to martensite. The austenitizing temperature for hypoeutectoid steels is usually above
Ac3 and for hypereutectoid steels usually between Ac1 and Ac (cm).

Quench Hardening (Steel)


A process of hardening a ferrous alloy of suitable composition by heating within or above the
transformation range and cooling at a rate sufficient to increase the hardness substantially. The process
usually involves the formation of martensite.

Quenching
Rapid cooling.

Quenching
In the heat treating of metals, the step of cooling metals rapidly in order to obtain desired properties; most
commonly accomplished by immersing the metal in oil or water. In the case of most copper base alloys,
quenching has no effect other than to hasten cooling.

Radiant Tube Annealing Box


A box which is heated, inside, by means of tubes in which gas is burned; the hot tubes radiate their heat to
the covered pile of metal, standing on the base of the box. Usually a protective atmosphere is maintained in
the box to protect the metal from oxidation.

Radiography
A nondestructive method of internal examination in which metal objects are exposed to a beam of X-ray or
gamma radiation. Differences in thickness, density or absorption, caused by internal defects or inclusions,
are apparent in the shadow image either on a fluorescent screen or on photographic film placed behind the
object.

Ragged Edges
Edges of Sheet or Strip which are torn, split, cracked, ragged or burred or otherwise disfigured.

Recarburizing
(1) Increasing the carbon content of molten cast iron or steel by adding carbonaceous material, high-carbon
pig iron or a high-carbon alloy. (2) Carburizing a metal part to return surface carbon lost in processing.

Reciprocal Lattice (for a crystal)


A group of points arranged about a center in such a way that the line joining each point of the center is
perpendicular to a family of planes in the crystal, and the length of this line is inversely proportional to
their interplanar distance.

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Recovery
Reduction or removal of work-hardening effects, without motion of large-angle grain boundaries.

Recovery
(1) The removal of residual stresses by localized plastic flow as the result of low-temperature annealing
operations; performed on cold worked metals without altering the grain structure or strength properties
substantially.

Recrystallization
A process whereby a distorted grain structure of cold worked metals is replaced by a new, stress-free grain
structure as a result of annealing above a specific minimum temperature for a specific time.

Recrystallization
(1) The change from one crystal structure to another, as occurs on heating or cooling through a critical
temperature. (2) The formation of a new, strain-free grain structure from that existing in cold worked metal,
usually accomplished by heating.

Recrystallization
(1) A change from one crystal structure to another, such as that occurring on heating or cooling through a
critical temperature. (2) Formation of a new, strain-free grain, structure from the structure existing in cold
worked metal.

Recrystallization Temperature
The approximate minimum temperature at which complete recrystallization of a cold worked metal occurs
within a specified time.

Recrystallization Temperature
The approximate minimum temperature at which complete recrystallization of a cold worked metal occurs
within a specified time.

Recystallization Annealing
Annealing cold worked metal to produce a new grain structure without a phase change.

Red Brass
85% Copper -- A copper-zinc alloy containing approximately 15% zinc, used for plumbing pipe, hardware,
condenser tubes. Because of its color, is used or vanity cases, coins, plaques, badges, etc. It is somewhat
stronger than commercial bronze and is hardened more rapidly by cold working.

Red Shorness
Brittleness in steel when it is red hot.

Reduction of Area
(1) Commonly, the difference, expressed as a percentage of original area, between the original cross-
sectional area of a tensile test specimen and the minimum cross-sectional area measured after complete
separation. (2) The difference, expressed as a percentage of original area, between original cross-sectional
area and that after straining the specimen.

Refining Temperature
A temperature, usually just higher than the transformation range, employed in the heat treatment of steel to
refine the structure -- in particular, the grain size.

Reflector Sheet

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An alclad product containing on one side a surface layer of high-purity aluminum superimposed on a core
or base alloy of commercial-purity aluminum or an aluminum-manganese alloy. The high-purity coating
imparts good polishing characteristics and the core gives adequate strength and formability.

Refractory
A heat-resistant material, usually nonmetallic, which is used for furnace linings and such.

Refractory Alloy
A term applied to those alloys which due to hardness or abrasiveness present relative difficulty in
maintaining close dimensional tolerances.

Refractory Metal
A metal having an extremely high melting point. In the broad sense, it refers to metals having melting
points above the range of iron, cobalt, and nickel.

Rephosphorizing (Steel)
A Ladle-chemical treatment consisting of the addition of phosphorus as a work hardening agent when
temper rolling black plate or sheet steel resulting in greater hardness and stiffness and with a corresponding
loss in ductility. . NOTE: Black Plate in tempers T5 and T6 (R/B range 68/84) are temper rolled from
Rephosphorized steel.

Residual Elements
Small quantities of elements unintentionally present in an alloy.

Residual Stress
Stress present in a body that is free of external forces or thermal gradients.

Residual Stress
Macroscopic stresses that are set up within a metal as the result of non-uniform plastic deformation. This
deformation may be caused by cold working or by drastic gradients of temperature from quenching or
welding.

Residual Stress
Stress present in a body that is free of external forces or thermal gradients.

Residuals
'Incidental' or 'tramp' elements not named in a specification. These inclusions are usually due to
contaminated scrap.

Resilience
The tendency of a material to return to its original shape after the removal of a stress that has produced
elastic strain.

Resistance Welding
A type of welding process in which the work pieces are heated by the passage of an electric current through
the contact. Such processes include spot welding, seam or line welding and percussion welding. Flash and
butt welding are sometimes considered as resistance welding processes.

Resistance Welding
Welding with electrical resistance heating and pressure, the work being part of an electrical circuit.

Resolution

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The capacity of an optical or radiation system to separate closely spaced forms or entities; also, the degree
to which such forms or entities can be discriminated.

Resulfurized Steel
Steel to which sulfur has been added in controlled amounts after refining. The sulfur is added to improve
machinability.

Ribbon Wound
A term applied to a common method of winding strip steel layer upon layer around an arbor or mandrel.

Riffles
Waviness at the edge of sheet or strip.

Rimmed Steel
Low-carbon steel containing sufficient iron oxide to produce continuous evolution of carbon monoxide
during ingot solidification, resulting in a case or rim of metal virtually free of voids.

Rimmed Steel
Low-carbon steel in which incomplete deoxidation permits the metal to remain liquid at the top of the
ingot, resulting in the formation of a bottom and side rim of considerable thickness. The rim is of somewhat
purer composition than the original metal poured. If the rimming action is stopped shortly after pouring of
the ingot is completed, the metal is known as capped steel. Most steels below 0.15% carbon are rimmed
steels. For the same carbon and manganese content rimmed steel is softer than killed steel.

Rimmed Steel
A low-carbon steel containing sufficient iron oxide to give a continuous evolution of carbon monoxide
while the ingot is solidifying, resulting in a case or rim of metal virtually free of voids. Sheet and strip
products made from the ingot have very good surface quality.

Ripple (defect)
A slight transverse wave or shadow mark appearing at intervals along the piece.

Rockwell Hardness (Test)


A standard method for measuring the hardness of metels. The hardness is expressed as a number related to
the depth of residual penetration of a steel ball or diamond cone (brale) after a minor load of 10 kilograms
has been applied to hold the penetrator in position. This residual penetration is automatically registered on a
dial when the major load is removed from the penetrator. Various dial readings combined with different
major loads, five scales designated by letters varying from A to H; the B and C scales are most commonly
in use.

Roll Forming
An operation used in forming sheet. Strips of sheet are passed between rolls of definite settings that bend
the sheet progressively into structural members of various contours, sometimes called molded sections.

Rolled Edges
Finished edges, the final contours of which are produced by side or edging rolls. The edge contours most
commonly used are square corners, rounded corners and rounded edge.

Rolled In Scale
A surface defect consisting of scale partially rolled into the surface of the sheet.

Roller Leveling
Passing sheet or strip metal through a series of staggered small rolls so as to flatten the metal. This method
is relatively ineffective in removing defects such as buckles, wavy edges, corrugations, twists, etc., or from
steel in the higher hardness ranges.

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Roller Leveling
Leveling by passing flat stock through a machine having a series of small-diameter staggered rolls.

Rolling
Reducing the cross-sectional area of metal stock, or otherwise shaping metal products, through the use of
rotating rolls.

Rolling
A term applied to the operation of shaping and reducing metal in thickness by passing it between rolls
which compress, shape and lengthen it following the roll pattern.

Rolling Direction (in rolled metal)


The direction, in the plane of the sheet, perpendicular to the axes of the rolls during rolling.

Rolling Mills
Equipment used for rolling down metal to a smaller size or to a given shape employing sets of rolls the
contours of which determine or fashion the product into numerous intermediate and final shapes, e.g.,
blooms, slabs, rails, bars, rods, sections, plates, sheets and strip.

Rotary Shear (Slitting Machine)


A cutting machine with sharpened circular blades or disc-like cutters used for trimming edges and slitting
sheet and foil. NOTE: cutter discs are also employed in producing dircles from flat sheets but with
differently designed machines.

Rough Machining
Machining without regard to finish, usually to be followed by a subsequent operation.

Rule Die Steel


A hardened and tempered medium high carbon spring steel strip sufficiently low in hardness to take
moderately sharp bends without fracture, intended for manufacture into rule dies for the purpose of cutting
or stamping fabrics, paper, cardboard, plastics, and metal foil into desired shape.

SAE
Abbreviation for Society of Automotive Engineers. This organization has specified common and alloy
steels and copper base alloys in accordance with a numerical index system allowing approximation of the
composition of the metal. The last two digits always indicate the carbon content, usually within 0.05%.

Salt Spray Test


An accelerated corrosion test in which the metal specimens are exposed to a fine mist of salt water solution
either continuously or intermittently.

Scab
A defect consisting of a flat volume of metal joined to a casting through a small area. It is usually set in a
depression, a flat side being separated from the metal of the casting proper by a thin layer of sand.

Scab (scabby)
A blemish caused on a casting by eruption of gas from the mold face, or by uneven mold surfaces; or
occurring where the skin from a blowhole has partly burned away and is not welded.

Scale
A layer of oxidation products formed on a metal at high temperature.

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Scaling
(1) Oxidation of metal due to heat, resulting in relatively heavy surface layers of oxide. (2) Removal of
scale from metal.

Scaling
Forming a thick layer of oxidation products on metals at high temperatures.

Scalped Extrusion Ingot


A cast, solid, or hollow extrusion ingot which has been machined on the outside surface.

Scalping
Machining the surface layers from ingots, billets and slabs before fabrication.

Scarf Joint
A butt joint in which the plane of the joint is inclined with respect to the main axes of the members.

Scarfing
Cutting surface areas of metal objects, ordinarily by using a gas torch. The operation permits surface
defects to be cut from ingots, billets, or the edges of plate that is to be beveled for butt welding.

Scarfing
Cutting surface areas of metal objects, ordinarily by using a gas torch. The operation permits surface
defects to be cut from ingots, billets, or the edges of plate that is to be beveled for butt welding.

Scleroscope Hardness (Test)


A method for measuring the hardness of metals; a diamond-pointed hammer drops from a fixed distance
through a tube onto the smoothed metal surface and the rebound measured. The scleroscope hardness value
is empirically taken from the rebound distance, with a specified high-carbon steel as 100.

Scleroscope Test
A hardness test where the loss in kinetic energy of a falling metal tup, absorbed by indentation upon impact
of the tup on the metal being tested, is indicated by the height of rebound.

Scrap
Material unsuitable for direct use but usable for reprocessing by re-melting.

Scratch Brushed Finish


Finish obtained by mechanically brushing the surface with wire bristle brushes, by buffing with greaseless
compound or by cold rolling with wire bristled rolls on scratch etched finish.

Seam
On the surface of metal, an unwelded ford or lap which appears as a crack, usually resulting from a defect
obtained in casting or in working.

Seam (A defect.)
On the surface of metal a crack that has been closed but not welded; usually produced by some defect either
in casting or in working, such as blowholes that have become oxidized or folds and laps that have been
formed during working. Similar to cold shut and laminations.

Seam Welding
An electric-resistance type of welding process, in which the lapped sheet is passed between electrodes of
the roller type while a series of overlapping spot welds is made by the intermittent application of electric
current.

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Secondary Hardening
Tempering certain alloy steels at certain temperatures so that the resulting hardness is greater than that
obtained by tempering the same steel at some lower temperature for the same time.

Seconds
The designation given to sheet or strip that has imperfections in moderate degree or extent, which may be
classified in two general groups -- imperfections in the base material, or other manufacturing defects. This
term not used in connection with non-ferrous alloys.

Segment Steel
Used for laminated piston rings. Carbon content about .60%. Hardened and blue tempered with round
edges. Hardness usually Rockwells 30 N 68 to 71, widths vary from .058 to .163 and thicknesses are .020,
.024 and .030.

Segregation
Nonuniform distribution of alloying elements, impurities or phases.

Segregation
Nonumiform distribution of alloying elements, impurities or microphases.

Segregation
In an alloy, concentration of alloying elements at specific regions, usually as a result of the primary
crystallization of one phase with the subsequent concentration of other elements in the remaining liquid.

Segregation Banding
In homogeneous distribution of alloying elements aligned on filaments or plates parallel to the direction of
working.

Self Diffusion
The spontaneous movement of an atom to a new site in a crystal of its own species.

Self-Hardening Steel
A steel containing sufficient carbon or alloying element, or both, fo form martensite either through air
hardening or, as in welding and induction hardening, through rapid removal of heat from a locally heated
portion by conduction into the surrounding cold metal.

Semi-Steel
Cast iron (not steel) of high quality, obtained by using a large percentage of steel scrap with the pig iron.

Semifinished Steel
Steel in the form of billets, blooms, itc., requiring further working before completion into finished steel
ready for marketing.

Semikilled Steel
Steel that is incompletely deoxidized and contains sufficient dissolved oxygen to react with the carbon to
form carbon monoxide and thus offset solidification shrinkage.

Semikilled Steel
Steel that is completely deoxided and contains sufficient dissolved oxygen to react with the carbon to form
carbon monoxide to offset solidifacation shrinkage.

Semikilled Steel
Steel incompletely deoxidized, to permit evolution of sufficient carbon monoxide to offset solidification
shrinkage.

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Sendzimir Mill
A mill having two work rolls of 1 to 2 1/2-in diam. each, backed up by two rolls twice that diameter and
each of these backed up by bearings on a shaft mounted eccentrically so that rotating it increases the
pressure between bearings and backup rolls.

Shear
A type of cutting operation in which the metal object is cut by means of a moving blade and fixed edge or
by a pair of moving blades that may be either flat or curved.

Shear
That type of force that causes or tends to cause two contiguous parts of the same body to slide relative to
each other in a direction parallel to their plane of contact.

Shear Bands (deformation)


Bands in which deformation has been concentrated inhomogeneously in sheets that extend across regional
groups of grains. Usually only one system is present in each regional group of grains, different systems
being present in adhoining groups. The bands are noncrystallographic and form on planes of maximum
shear stress (55(degrees) to the compression direction). They carry most of the deformation at large strains.
Compare microbands.

Shear Crack
A diagonal, transgranular crack caused by shear stresses.

Shear Steel
Steel produced by forge welding together several bars of blister steel, providing a more homogeneous
product.

Shear Strength
The stress required to produce fracture in the plane of cross section, the conditions of loading being such
that the directions of force and of resistance are parallel and opposite although their paths are offset a
specified minimum amount.

Sheet
A flat-rolled metal product of some maximum thickness and minimum width arbitrarily dependent on the
type of metal. Sheet is thinner than plate.

Shell Molding
Forming a mold from thermosetting resin-bonded sand mixtures brought in contact with pregeated (300 to
500 (degrees) F) metal patterns, resulting in a firm shell with a cavity corresponding to the outline of the
pattern. Also called Croning process.

Shielded-Arc Welding
Arc welding in which the arc and the weld metal are protected by a gaseous atmosphere, the products of
decomposition of the electrode covering, or a blanket of fusible flux.

Shim
A thin flat hard metal strip produced to close tolerances; used primarily for tool, die and machine alignment
purposes. In steel there are four general types: (1) Low Carbon Rockwell B 80/100; (2) Hard Rolled High
Carbon Rockwell C 28/33. (3) Hardened and Tempered Spring Steel Rockwell C 44/51; (4) Austenitic
Stainless Steel Rockwell C 35/45. Brass shim of commercial quality is also used and most generally
specified is 2 Nos. Hard but may be 4 Nos. Hard.

Shore Hardness Test


Same as scleroscope test.

Short

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Brittle.

Short Terne
A term applying to terne coated (Lead and Tin) sheets with reference to Base Box sizes (14 x 20) Refer to
terne plate.

Shortness
A form of brittleness in metal. It is designed as cold, hot, and red, to indicate the temperature range in
which the brittleness occurs.

Shortness
A form of brittleness in metal. It is designated as cold, hot, and red, to indicate the temperature range in
which the brittleness occurs.

Shot Blasting
Cleaning surface of metal by air blast, using metal as a result of solidification shrinkage and the progressive
freezing of metal towards the center.

Shrinkage Cavity
A void left in cast metals as a result of solidification shrinkage and the progressive freezing of metal
towards the center.

Silicon
Chemical symbol Si. Element No. 14 of the periodic system; atomic weight 28.06. Extremely common
element, the major component of all rodks and sands; its chemical reactions, however, are those of a
metalloid. Used in metallurgy as a deoxidizing scavenger. Silicon is present, to some extent, in all steels,
and is deliberately added to the extent of approximately 4% for electric sheets, extensively used in
alternating current magnetic circuits. Silicon cannot be electrodeposited.

Silicon Steel
Steel usually made in the basic open-hearth or electric furnace, with about 0.50-5.% silicon, other elements
being usually dept as low as possible. Because of high electrical resistance and low hysterisis loss, silicon
sheet and strip are standard in electric magnet manufacture.

Siliconizing
Diffusing silicon into solid metal, usually steel, at an elevated temperature.

Silky Fracture
A steel fracture that has a very smooth fine grain or silky appearance.

Silver Solders
Alloys of silver, copper, sinc and other metals, melting between 650 and 875 (degrees) C. used for making
strong yet moderately ductile joints that resist corrosion.

Single-Action Press
A forming press that operates with a single function, such as moving a punch into a die with no
simultaneous action for holding down the bland or ejecting the formed work.

Sinker Steel
Used for making sinkers in hosiery making machinery. Supplied both hardened and tempered and cold
rolled and annealed. Usually extra precision rolled and extra flat. Carbon content about 1.25.

Sinkhead or Hot Top

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A reservoir insulated to retain heat and to hod excess molten metal on top of an ingot mold, in order to feed
the shrinkage of the ingot. Also called shrink head or feeder head.

Sintered Carbide
Composite, containing carbides of extremely refractory metals, such as tungsten, tantalum, titanium, etc.,
cemented together by a relatively low-melting metal, such as cobalt acing as a matrix.

Sintering
Bonding of adjacent surfaces of particles in a mass of metal powders, or in a compact, by heating

Sintering
Converting powder into a continuous mass by heating to a temperature considerably below fusion, usually
after preliminary compacting by pressure.

Skelp
A piece or strip of metal produced to a suitable thickness, width, and edge configuration, from which pipe
or tubing is made.

Skelp
A plate of steel or wrought iron from which pipe or tubing is made by rolling the skelp into shape
longitudinally and welding or riveting the edges together.

Skin
A thin surface layer that is different from the main mass of a metal object, in composition, structure or other
characteristics.

Skull
A layer of solidified metal or dross on the wall of a pouring vessel often when metal has been poured.

Slab
A piece of metal, intermediate between ingot and plate, at least twice as wide as it is thick.

Slack Quenching
The process of hardening steel by quenching from the austenitizing temperature at a rate slower than the
critical cooling rate for the particular steel, resulting in incomplete hardening and the formation of one or
more transformation products in addition to or instead of martensite.

Slag
A product resulting from the action of a flux on the nonmetallic constituents of a processed ore, or on the
oxidized metallic constituents that are undesirable. Usually slags consist of combinations of acid oxides
with basic oxides, and neutral oxides are added to aid fusibility.

Slag
A nonmetallic product resulting form mutual dissolution of flux and nonmetallic impurities in smelting and
refining operations.

Slip
Plastic deformation by irreversible shear displacement of one part of a crystal relative to another in a
definite crystallographic direction and on a definite crystallographic plane.

Slip Direction
The crystallographic direction in which translation of slip takes place.

Slip Line
Trace of a slip plane on a viewing surface.

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Slip Plane
The crystallographic plane on which slip occurs in a crystal.

Slit Edges
The edges of sheet or strip metal resulting from cutting to width by rotary slitters.

Slitting
Cutting sheet or strip metal to width by rotary slitters.

Sliver (defect)
Loose metal piece rolled down onto the surface of the metal during the rolling operations.

Soaking
Prolonged heating of a metal at selected temperature.

Soft Skin Rolled Temper (No. 4 Temper)


In low carbon-rolled strip steel, soft and ductile. Produced by subjecting annealed strip to a pinch pass or
skin rolling (a very light rolling).

Solder Embrittlement
Reduction in ductility of a metal or alloy, associated with local penetration by molten solder along grain
boundaries.

Soldering
Joining metals by fusion of alloys that have relatively low melting points -- most commonly, lead-base or
tin-base alloys, which are the soft solders. Hard solders are alloys that have silver, copper, or nickel bases
and use of these alloys with melting points higher than 800 (degrees) F. is generally termed brazing.

Solid Solution
A single solid homogeneous crystalline phase containing two or more chemical species.

Solid Solution
A solid crystalline phase containing two or more chemical species in concentrations that may vary between
limits imposed by phase equilibrium.

Solidus
In a constitutional diagram, the locus of points representing the temperatures at which various components
finish freezing on cooling or begin to melt on heating.

Solute
The component of either a liquid or solid solution that is present to the lesser or minor extent; the
component that is dissolved in the solvent.

Solution Heat Treatment


A heat treatment in which an alloy is heated to a suitable temperature, held at that temperature long enough
to cause one or more constituents to enter into solid solution, and then cooled rapidly enough to hold these
constituents in solution.

Solution Heat Treatment


Heating an alloy to a suitable temperature, holding at that temperature long enough to allow one or more
constituents to enter into solid solution, and then cooling rapidly enough to hold the constituents in
solution. The alloy is left in a supersaturated, unstable state, and may subsequently exhibit quench aging.

Solution Heat Treatment

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A process in which an alloy is heated to a suitable temperature long enough to allow a certain constituent to
enter into solid solution and is then cooled rapidly to hold the constituent in solution. The metal is left in a
supersaturated, unstable state and may subsequently exhibit age hardening.

Solvent
The component of either a liquid or solid solution that is present to the greater or major extent; the
component that dissolves the solute.

Solvus
In a phase or equilibrium diagram, the locus of points representing the temperature at which solid phases
with various compositions coexist with other solid phases; that is, the limits of solid solubility.

Sorbite
Structure of steel, resulting from the tempering of martensite. In a truly sorbitic structure, the cementite is
completely dispersed in the matrix. The trend is to call this structure tempered martensite.

Sorbite (obsolete)
A fine mixture of ferrite and cementite produced either by regulating the rate of cooling of steel or
tempering steel after hardening. The first type is very fine pearlite difficult to resolve under the microscope;
the second type is tempered martensite.

Sorbitic Pearlite
Structure of steel resulting, on cooling under the proper conditions, from the decomposition of austenite;
has a fine, lamellar appearance.

Space Lattice (crystal)


A system of equivalent points formed by the intersections of three sets of planes parallel to pairs of
principal axes; the space lattice may be thought of as formed by the corners of the unit cells.

Space-Centered (concerning space lattices)


Body-centered.

Spalling
The cracking and flaking of particles out of a surface.

Specific Gravity
A numerical value representing the weight of a given substance as compared with the weight of an equal
volume of water, for which the specific gravity is taken as 1.0000.

Spectograph
An optical instrument for determining the presence or concentration of minor metallic constituents in a
material by indicating the presence and intensity of specific wave lengths of radiation when the material is
thermally or electrically excited.

Spectograph (X-rays)
An instrument using an extended surface -- a photographic plate or film, or a fluorescent screen -- for
receiving the X-ray diffraction pattern.

Spelter (Prime Western Spelter)


A low-grade of Virgin Zinc containing approximately 98% Zinc used in Galvanizing processes.

Speroidizing
Heating and cooling to produce a spheroidal or globular form of carbide in steel. Spheroidizing methods
frequently used are: 1. Prolonged holding at a temperature just below Ae1. . 2. Heating and cooling
alternately between temperatures that are just below Ae1. . 3. Heating to temperature above Ae1 or Ae3 and

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then cooling very slowly in the furnace or holding at a temperature just below Ae1. . 4. Cooling at a
suitable rate from the minimum temperature at which all carbide is dissolved, to prevent the reformation of
a carbide network, and then re-heating in accordance with methods 1 or 2 above. (Applicable to
hypereutectoid steel containing a carbide network.

Speroidizing Annealing
A subcritical annealing treatment intended to produce spheroidization of cementite or other carbide phases.

Spheroidized Structure
A microstructure consisting of a matrix containing spheroidal particles of another constituent.

Spheroidizing
Any process of prolonged heating and slow cooling of steel which will convey the carbide content into
rounded or spheroid form.

Spheroidizing
Heating and cooling to produce a spheroidal or globular form of carbide in steel.

Spiegel
High-manganese pig iron, containing 15-30% manganese, approximately 5% carbon, and less than 1%
silicon used in the manufacture of steel by the Bessemer, or basic open-hearth process.

Spinning
The procedure of making sheet metal discs into hollow shapes by pressing the metal against a rotating form
(spinning chuck) by a tool.

Spot Welding
An electric-resistance welding process in which the fusion is limited to a small area. The pieces being
welded are pressed together between a pair of water-cooled electrodes through which an electical current is
passed during a very short interval so that fusion occurs over a small area at the interface between the
pieces.

Spot Welding
Welding of lapped parts in which fusion is confined to a relatively small circular area. It is generally
resistance welding, but may also be gas-shielded tungsten-arc, gas-shielded metal-arc, or submerged-arc
welding.

Spring Steel Strip


Any of a number of strip steels produced for use in the manufacture of steel springs or where high tensile
properties are required marketed in the annealed state, hard rolled or as hardened and tempered strip.

Spring Temper
In brass mill terminology, Spring Temper is eight numbers hard or 60.50% reduction.

Spring-Back
An indicator of elastic stresses, frequently measured as the increase in diameter of a curved strip after
removing it from the mandrel about which it was held. The measurement is employed as an indicator of the
extent of recovery or relief of residual stresses that has been achieved by the transformation of elastic strain
to plastic strain during heating or stress relieving.

Stabilizing Anneal
A treatment applied to austentic stainless steels that contain titanium or columbium. This treatment consists
of heating to a temperature below that of a full anneal in order to precipitate the maximum amount of
carbon at titanium carbide or columbium carbide. This eliminates precipitation at lower temperatures,
which might reduce the resistance of the steel to corrosion.

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Stabilizing Treatment
A thermal treatment designed to precipitate material from solid solution, in order to improve the
workability, to decrease the tendency of certain alloys to age harden at room temperature, or to obtain
dimensional stability under service at slightly elevated temperatures.

Stablizing Treatment
Any treatment intended to stabilize the structure of an alloy of the dimensions of a part. (1) Heating
austenitic stainless steels that contain titanium, columbium, or tantalum to a suitable temperature below that
of a full anneal in order to inactivate the maximum amount of carbon by precipitation as a carbide of
titanium, columbium, or tantalum. (2) Transforming retained austenite in parts made from tool steel. (3)
Precipitating a constituent from a nonferrous solid solution to improve the workability, to decrease the
tendency of certain alloys to age harden at room temperature, or to obtain dimensional stability.

Stainless Steel
Corrosion resistant steel of a wide variety, but always containing a high percentage of chromium. These are
highly resistant to corrosion attack by organic acids, weak mineral acids, atmospheric oxidation, etc.

Stamping
A term used to refer to various press forming operations in coining, embossing, blanking, and pressing.

Standard Gold
A legally adopted alloy for coinage of gold. In the United States the alloy contains 10% Cu.

Steel
An iron-base alloy usually containing carbon and other alloying elements. In carbon steel and low-alloy
steel, the maximum carbon content is about 2.0%; in high-alloy steel, about 2.5%. The dividing line
between low-alloy and high-alloy steels is generally regarded as the 5% level of total metallic alloying
elements. Steel is differentiated from two general classes of iron - namely, cast irons, which have high
carbon concentrations, and relatively pure irons, which have low carbon concentrations.

Steel
An iron-base alloy, malleable in some temperature range as initially cast, containing maganease, usually
carbon, and often other alloying elements. In carbon steel and low-alloy steel, the maximum carbon is
about 2.0%; in high-alloy steel, about 2.5%. The dividing line between low-alloy and high-alloy steels is
generally regarded as being at about 5% metallic alloying elements. Steel is to be differentiated from two
general classes of irons: the cast irons, on the high-carbon side, and the relatively pure irons such as ingot
iron, carbonyl iron, and electrolytic iron, on the low-carbon side. In some steels containing extremely low
carbon, the maganese content is the principal differentiating factor, steel usually containing at least 0.25%;
ingot iron contains considerably less.

Steel
Iron, malleable in at least one range of temperature below its melting point without special heat treatment,
substantially free from slag, and containing carbon bore than about 0.05% and less than about 2.00%. Other
alloying elements may be present in significant quantities, but all steels contain at least small amounts of
manganese and silicon, and usually as undesirable constituents.

Sterling Silver
A silver alloy containing at least 95.2% Ag, the remainder being unspecified but usually copper.

Sticker
Steel sheets or strip adhering. Usually by fusion spots caused by overheating during box annealing.

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Straight-Chrome
An iron alloy. A term indicating a group of stainless steels the principal alloying element of which is
chromium in varying amounts from 4.00 to 27.00%.

Strain
A measure of the relative change in the size of a body. Linear strain is the change per unit length of a linear
dimension. True (or natural) strain is the natural logarithm of the ratio of the length at the moment of
observation to the original gauge length. Shearing strain is the change in angle (expressed in radians)
between two reference lines originally at right angles. When the term is used alone, it usually refers to
linear strain in the direction of the applied stress.

Strain
A measure of the change in the size or shape of a body, referred to its original size or shape. Linear strain is
the change per unit length of a linear dimension. True strain (or natural strain) is the natural logarithm of
the ratio of the length at the moment of observation to the original gauge length. Conventional strain is the
linear strain referred to the original gauge length. Shearing strain (or shear strain) is the change in angle
(expressed in radians) between two lines originally at right angles. When the term strain is used alone it
usually refers to the linear strain in the direction of the applied stress.

Strain
Deformation produced on a body by an outside force.

Strain Aging
Aging induced by cold work.

Strain Aging
Aging induced by cold working.

Strain Hardening
An increase in hardness and strength caused by plastic deformation at temperatures lower than the
recrystallization range.

Strain Hardening
An increase in hardness and strength caused by p;astic deformation at temperatures below the
recrystallization range.

Stress
Force per unit area. True stress denotes stress determined by measuring force and area at the same time.
Conventional stress, as applied to tension and compression tests, is force divided by original area. Nominal
stress is stress computed by simple elasticity formula.

Stress
Force per unit area, often thought of as force acting through a small area within a plane. It can be divided
into components, normal and parallel to the plane, called normal stress and shear stress, receptively. True
stress denotes the stress where force and area are measured at the same time. Conventional stress, as
applied to tension and compression tests, is force decided by the original gauge length. Shearing strain (or
shear strain) is the change in angle (expressed in radians) between two lines originally at right angles.
When the term strain is used alone it usually refers to the linear strain in the direction of the applied stress.

Stress
Deforming force to which a body is subjected, or, the resistance which the body offers to deformation by
the force.

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Stress Relief
Low temperature annealing for removing internal stresses, such as those resulting on a metal from work
hardening or quenching.

Stress Relieving
Heating to a suitable temperature, holding long enough to reduce residual stresses and then cooling slowly
enough to minimize the development of new residual stresses.

Stress Relieving
Heating to a suitable temperature, holding long enough to reduce residual stresses and then cooling slowly
enough to minimize the development of new residual stresses.

Stress-corrosion Cracking
Failure by cracking under the combined action of corrosion and stress, either external (applied) or internal
(residual). Cracking may be either intergranular or transgranular, depending on the metal and the corrosive
medium.

Stress-Corrosion Cracking
Failure by cracking under combined action or corrosion and stress, either external (applied) or internal
(residual). Cracking may be either intergranular or transgranular, depends on metal and corrosive medium.

Stress-Rupture Test
A tension test performed at constant temperature, the load being held at such a level as to cause rupture.
Also known as creep-rupture test.

Stretch Forming
A process of forming panels and cowls of large curvature by stretching sheet over a form of the desired
shape. This method is more rapid than hammering and beating.

Stretcher Leveling
Leveling where a piece of metal is gripped at each end and subjected to a stress higher than its yield
strength to remove warp and distortion. Sometimes called patent leveling.

Stretcher Leveling
A method of making metal sheet or strip dead flat by stretching.

Stretcher Straightening
A process for straightening rod, tubing, and shapes by the application of tension at the ends of the stock.
The products are elongated a definite amount to remove warpage.

Stretcher Strains
Elongated markings that appear on the surface of some materials when deformed just past the yield point.
These markings lie approximately parallel to the direction of maximum shear stress and are the result of
localized yielding Same as Luders lines.

Stretcher Strains
Long vein-like marks appearing on the surface of certain metals, in the direction of the maximum shear
stress, when the metal is subjected to deformation beyond the yield point. Also termed Luders Lines. (Not a
defect in No. 5 dead soft temper.)

Stretcher Strains
Elongated markings that appear on the surfaces of some materials when they are deformed just past the
yield point. These markings lie approximately parallel to the direction of maximum shear stress and are the
result of localized yielding.

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Strip
A sheet of metal whose length is many times its width.

Strip Steel (cold rolled)


A flat cold rolled steel product (Other than Flat Wire) 23 15/16 and narrower; under .250 in thickness,
which has been cold reduced to desired decimal thickness and temper on single stand, single stand
reversing, or tandem cold mills in coil form from coiled hot rolled pickled strip steel.

Structure
The arangement of parts; in crystals, expecially, the shape and dimension of the until cell, and the number,
kinds and positions of the atoms within it.

Sub-boundary Structure (subgrain structure)


A network of low-angle boundaries (usually with misorientations or less than one degree) within the main
grains of a microstructure.

Subcritical Annealing
An annealing treatment in which a steel is heated to a temperature below the A1 temperature and then
cooled slowly to room temperature.

Subgrain
A portion of a crystal or grain slightly different in orientation from neighboring portions of the same
crystal. Generally, neighboring subgrains are separated by low-angle boundaries.

Substitutional Solid Solution


A solid solution in which the solvent and solute atoms are located randomly at the atom sites in the crystal
structure of the solution.

Substrate
The layer of metal underlying a coating, regardless of whether the layer is base metal.

Sulfide Spheroidization
A stage of overheating in which sulfide inclusions are partly or completely spheroidized.

Sulfur
Chemical symbol S) Element No. 16 of the periodic system; atomic weight 32.06. Non-metal occurring in a
number of allotropic modifications, the most common being a pale-yellow brittle solid. In steel most
commonly encountered as an undesired contaminant. However, it is frequently deliberately added to cutting
stock, to increase machinability.

Sulfur Print
A macrographic method of examining distribution of sulfide inclusions.

Superalloy
An alloy developed for very high temperature service where relatively high stresses (tensile, thermal,
vibratory, and shock) are encountered and where oxidation resistance is frequently required.

Supercooling
Cooling to a temperature below that of an equilibrium phase transformation without the transformation
taking place.

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Superficial Rockwell Hardness Test
Form of Rockwell hardness test using relatively light loads which produce minimum penetration. Used for
determining surface hardness or hardness of thin sections or small parts, or where large hardness
impression might be harmful.

Superheating
(1) Heating a phase to a temperature above that of a phase transformation without the transformation taking
place. (2) Heating molten metal to a temperature to obtain more complete refining or greater fluidity.

Surface Hardening
A generic term covering several processes applicable to a suitable ferrous alloy that produce, by quench
hardening only, a surface layer that is harder or more wear resistant than the core. There is no significant
alteration of the chemical composition of the surface layer. The processes commonly used are induction
hardening, flame hardening and shell hardening. Use of the applicable specific process name is preferred.

Tack Welds
Small scattered welds made to hold parts of a weld in proper alignment while the final welds are being
made.

Arrangement of
Tandem Mill rolling mills, in direct line, allowing the metal to pass from one set of rolls into the next.

Taper Section
A section made at an acute angle to a surface of interest, thereby achieving a geometrical magnification of
depth. A sectioning angle 5(degrees) 43 achieves a depth magnification of 10: 1.

Tapping
Transferring molten metal from melting furnace to ladle.

Tarnish
Surface discoloration on a metal, usually from a thin film of oxide or sulfide.

Teeming
Pouring metal into ingot molds.

Teeming
Pouring molten metal from a ladle into ingot molds. The term applies particularly to the specific operation
of pouring either iron or steel into ingot molds.

Telescoping
Transverse slipping of successive layers of a coil so that the edge of the coil is conical rather than flat.

Temper
(1) In heat treatment, re-heating hardened steel or hardened steel or hardened cast iron to some temperature
below the eutectoid temperature for the purpose of decreasing the hardness and increasing the toughness.
The process also is sometimes applied to normalized steel. (2) In tool steels, temper is sometimes used, but
inadvisedly, to denote the carbon content. (3) In nonferrous alloys and in some ferrous alloys (steels that

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cannot be hardened by heat treatment), the hardness and strength produced by mechanical or thermal
treatment, or both, and characterized by a certain structure, mechanical properties, or reduction in area
during cold working.

Temper (Met.)
The state of or condition of a metal as to its hardness or toughness produced by either thermal treatment or
heat treatment and quench or cold working or a combination of same in order to bring the metal to its
specified consistency. Each branch of the metal producing industry has developed its own system of temper
designations. In flat-rolled products including sheet and strip steel, tin mill products, stainless strip,
aluminum sheet and copper base alloy strip they are shown as follows

Temper Brittleness
A reversible increase in the ductile-brittle transition temperature in steels heated in, or slowly cooled
through, the temperature range from about 700 to 1100 F (375 to 575 C).

Temper Brittleness
Brittleness that results when certain steels are held within, or are cooled slowly through, a certain range of
temperature below the transformation range. The brittleness is revealed by notched-bar impact tests at or
below room temperature.

Temper Rolling
Subjecting metal sheet or strip to a slight amount of cold rolling following annealing (usually 1/2 to 1
1/2%) to forestall stretcher strains. Also termed Pinch Pass or Skin Rolled.

Temper Rolling
Light cold rolling of sheet steel. The operation is performed to improve flatness, to minimize the formation
of stretcher strains, and to obtain a specified hardness or temper.

Tempered and Polished Spring Steel Strip


90/1.03 carbon range (Also known as clock spring steel.) This product, while similar to general description
under heading of Tempered Spring Steel Strip, is manufactured and processed with great and extreme care
exercised in each step of its production. Manufactured from carbon range of .90/1.03 with Rockwell range
C 48/51. Clock spring quality has been ground and polished with edges dressed. It is usually supplied hard
blue in color and has a wide range of uses, such as coiled and flat mechanical springs, ignition vibrator
springs, springs for timing devices, springs for the electric and electonic fields, steel tapes, rules, etc.

Tempered Spring Steel Strip


Any medium or high carbon (excluding clock spring) strip steel of spring quality which has been hardened
and tempered to meet specifications. Where specification calls for blue or straw color, same is
accomplished by passing through heat prepared at proper temperature depending on color required. Blue is
developed at approximately 600 (degrees) F.

Tempering
Re-heating a quench-hardened or normalized ferrous alloy to a temperature below the transformation range
and then cooling at any rate desired.

Tempering
In heat treatment, re-heating hardened steel to some temperature below the A1 temperature for the purpose
of decreasing hardness and/or increasing toughness. The process also is sometimes applied to normalized
steel.

Tempering (Also termed 'drawing.')


A process of re-heating quench-hardened or normalized steel to a temperature below the transformation
range and then cooling at any rate desired. The primary purpose of tempering is to impart a degree of
plasticity or toughness to the steel to alleviate the brittleness of its martensite.

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Tensile Strength
In tensile testing, the ratio of the maximum force sustained to the original cross-sectional area.

Tensile Strength
In tensile testing, the ratio of maximum load to original cross-sectional area. Also called ultimate strength.

Tensile Strength (Also called ultimate strength)


Breaking strength of a material when subjected to a tensile (stretching) force. Usually measured by placing
a standard test piece in the jaws of a tensile machine, gradually separating the jaws, and measuring the
stretching force necessary to break the test piece. Tensile strength is commonly expressed as pounds (or
tons) per square inch of original cross section.

Ternary Alloy
An alloy that contains three principal elements.

Terne Plate
Sheet steel, coated with a lead-tin alloy. The percentage of tin is usually kept as low as possible because of
its high cost; however, about 15% is normally necessary in order to obtain proper coating of the steel, since
pure lead does not alloy with iron and some surface alloying is necessary for proper adhesion.

Texture
In a polycrystalline aggregate, the state of distribution of crystal orientations. In the usual sense, it is
synonymous with preferred orientation, in which the distribution is not random.

Thermal Analysis
A method of studying transformations in metal by measuring the temperatures at which thermal arrests
occur.

Thermocouple
A device for measuring temperatures by the use of two dissimilar metals in contact; the junction of these
metals gives rise to a measurable electrical potential with changes in temperature.

Thickness Gage or Feeler Stock


A hardened and tempered, edged, ground, and polished thin section, high carbon strip steel. Usually 1/2 in
width and in thicknesses from .001 to .050 manufactured to extremely close tolerances. It is used primarily
for determining measurement of openings by tool and die makers, machinists, and automobile technicians.
It is prepared in handy pocket size knife-like holders containing an assembly of various thicknesses. Also
prepared in standard 12 lengths with rounded ends and in 10 ' and 25' coils. Universally used in the metal
industry.

Three-Quarter Hard Temper


(A) In stainless steel strip tempers are based on a minimum tensile or yield strength. For Chromium-Nickel
grades three-quarter hard temper is 175,000 T.S., 135,000 Y.S. min. (B) In Brass mill terminology, this
temper is three B&S numbers hard or 29.4% thickness reduction.

Tin
Chemical symbol Sn. Element No. 50 of the periodic system; atomic weight 118.70. Soft silvery white
metal of high malleability and ductility, but low tensile strength; melting point 449 (degrees) F., boiling
point 4384 (degrees) F., yielding the longest molten-state range for any common metal; specific gravity
7.28. Principal use as a coating on steel in tin plate; also as a constituent in alloys.

Tin Plate Base Box


A Tin Plate Base Box is measured in terms of pounds per Base Box (112 sheets 14 x 20) a unit peculiar to
the tin industry. This corresponds to it's area of sheet totaling to 31.360 square inches of any gage and is
applied to tin plate weighing from 55 to 275 pounds per base box. To convert to decimal thickness multiply
weight per base box by .00011.

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Tin Plating
Electroplating metal objects with tin; the object to be coated is made cathode (negative electrode) in an
electrolytic bath containing a decomposable tin salt.

Tinning
Coating with tin, commonly either by immersion into molten tin or by electro-deposition; also by spraying.

Titanium
Chemical symbol Ti. Element No. 22 of the periodic system; atomic weight 47.90; melting point about
3270 (degrees) F.; boiling point over 5430 (degrees) F.; specific gravity 4.5. Bright white metal, very
malleable and ductile when exceedingly pure. Its principal functions as an alloy in the making of steel. (1)
Fixes carbon in inert particles (a) reduces martensitic hardness and hardnability in medium chromium
steels. (b) prevents formation of austenite in high-chromium steels. (c) prevents localized depletion of
chromium in stainless steel during long heating. Now finding application in its own right because of its
high strength and good corrosion resistance.

Tolerance Limit
The permissible deviation from the desired value.

Tong Hold
The portion of a forging billet, usually on one end, that is gripped by the operator's tongs. It is removed
from the part at the end of the forging operation. Common to drop-hammer and press-type forging.

Tool Steel
Any high carbon or alloy steel capable of being suitably tempered for use in the manufacture of tools.

Torsion
A twisting action resulting in shear stresses and strains.

Toughness
Property of resisting fracture or distortion. Usually measured by impact test, high impact values indicating
high toughness.

Toughness
Capacity of a metal to absorb energy and deform plastically before fracturing.

Toughness
Ability of a metal to absorb energy and deform plastically before fracturing. It is usually measured by the
energy absorbed in a notch impact test, but the area under the stress-strain curve in tensile testing is also a
measure of toughness.

Trace
Extremely small quantity of an element, usually too small to determine quantitatively.

Transformation
A constitutional change in a solid metal, e.g., the change from gamma to alpha iron, or the formation of
pearlite from austenite.

Transformation Range
Temperature range over which a chemical or metallurgical change takes place.

Transformation Ranges (transformation temperature ranges)


Those ranges of temperature within which austenite forms during heating and transforms during cooling.
The two ranges are distinct, sometimes overlapping but never coinciding. The limiting temperatures of

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these ranges depend on the composition of the alloy and on the rate of change of temperature, particularly
during cooling.

Transformation Ranges (Transformation Temperature Ranges)


Those ranges of temperature within which austenite forms during heating and transforms during cooling.
The two ranges are distinct, sometimes overlapping but never coinciding. The limiting temperatures of the
ranges depend on the composition of the alloy and on the rate of change of temperature, particularly during
cooling.

Transformation Temperature
The temperature at which a change in phase occurs. The term is sometimes used to denote the limiting
temperature of a transformation range. The following symbols are used for iron and steels: . Ac(cm) In
hypereutectoid steel, the temperature at which the solution of cementite in austentite is completed during
heating. . Ac1 The temperature at which austenite begins to form during heating. . Ac3 The temperature at
which transformation of ferrite to austenite is completed during heating. . Ac4 The temperature at which
austenite transforms to delta ferrite during heating. . Ae(cm) Ae1 Ae3 Ae4 The temperatures of phase
changes at equilibrium. . Ar(cm) In hypereutectoid steel, the temperature at which precipitation of
cementite starts during cooling. . Ar1 The temperature at which transformation of austenite to ferrite or to
ferrite plus cementite is completed during cooling. . Ar3 The temperature at which austenite begins to
transform to ferrite during cooling. . Ar4 The temperature at which delta ferrite transforms to austentie
during cooling. . M(s) (or Ar) The temperature at which transformation of austenite to martensite starts
during cooling. . M(f) The temperature at which martensite formation finishes during cooling. . NOTE: All
these changes except the formation of martensite occur at lower temperatures during cooling than during
heating, and depend on the rate of change of temperature.

Transformation Temperature
The temperature at which a change in phase occurs. The term is sometimes used to denote the limiting
temperature of a transformation range. The following symbols are used: . -A1-The temperature of the
eutectoid transformation. . -A3- The temperature at which pro-eutectiod ferrite begins to separate from
austenite under conditions of slow cooling. . -Acm- The temperature at which pro-eutectoid cementite
begins to separate from austenite under conditions of slow cooling. . M(f)- The temperature at which
transformation of austenite to martensite finishes during cooling. . M(s)-The temperature at which
transformation of austenite to martensite starts during cooling.

Transformation Temperature
The temperature at which transformation occurs. The term is sometimes used to denote the limiting
temperature of a transformation range.

Transition Temperature
(1) An arbitrarily defined temperature within the temperature range in which metal fracture characteristics
determined usually by notched tests are changing rapidly such as from primarily fibrous (shear) to
promarily crystalline (cleavage) fracture. Commonly used definitions are transition temperature for 50%
cleavage fracture, 10-ft-lb transition temperature, and transition temperature for half maximum energy. (2)
Sometimes also used to denote the arbitrarily defined temperature in a range in which the ductility changes
rapidly with temperature.

Transition Temperature (ductile-brittle transition temperature


An arbitrarily defined temperature that lies within the temperature range in which metal fracture
characteristics (as usually determined by tests of notched specimens) change rapidly, such as from
primarily fibrous (shear) to primarily cleavage.

Transverse
Literally, 'across', usually signifying a direction or plane perpendicular to the direction of working.

Trepanning

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A type of boring where an annular cut is made into a solid material with the coincidental formation of a
plug or solid cylinder.

Triple Point
The intersection of the boundaries of three adjoining grains, as observed in a section.

Troosite
Tempered martensite that etches rapidly, usually appears dark, and is not resolved by the microscope.

Troosite (obsolete)
A previously unresolvable rapidly etching fine aggregate of carbide and ferrite produced either by
tempering martensite at low temperature or by quenching a steel at a rate slower than the critical cooling
rate. Preferred terminology for the first product is tempered martensite; for the latter, fine pearlite.

Trowel Steel
Hardened and tempered spring steel. .90 to 1.05 carbon content. Ordinary tolerances, but rolled extra flat --
Rockwell C 50. Used in the manufacture of plastering trowels.

Truss Spring Steel


Supplied cold rolled and bright annealed. Carbon content about .70 -- Manganese .74. Must be formed very
severely and must be as free as possible from decarburization.

Tukon Hardness Test


A method for determining microhardness by using a Knoop diamond indenter or Vickers square-base
pyramid indenter.

Tumbling
Cleaning articles by rotating them in a cylinder with cleaning materials.

Tungsten
Chemical symbol W. Element No. 74 of the periodic system; atomic weight 183.92. Gray metal of high
tensile strength, ductile and malleable when specially handled. It is immune to atmospheric influences and
most acids, but not to strong alkalis. The metal is used as filament and in thin sheet form in incandescent
bulbs and radio tubes. (1) Forms hard abrasion -- resistant particles in tool steels. (2) Promotes hardness
and strength at elevated temperatures.

Tungsten Carbide
Compound of tungsten and carbon, of composition varying between WC and W(2)C; imbedded in a matrix
of soft metal, such as cobalt, extensively used for Sintered Carbide Tools.

Twin
Two portions of a crystal having a definite orientation relationship; one may be regarded as the parent, the
other as the twin. The orientation of the twin is either a mirror image of the orientation of the parent across
a twinning plane or an orientation that can be derived by rotating the twin portion about a twinning axis.

Twin, Annealing
A twin produced as the result of heat treatment.

Twin, Crystal
A portion of a crystal in which the lattice is a mirror image of the lattice of the remainder of the crystal.

Twin, Deformation
A twinned region produced by a shear like distortion of the parent crystal structure during deformation. In
ferrite, deformation twins form on {211} planes.

Twist

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A winding departure from flatness.

Ultimate Strength
The maximum conventional stress, tensile, compressive, or shear, that a material can withstand.

Ultrasonic Frequency
A frequency, associated with elastic waves, that is greater than the highest audible frequency, generally
regarded as being higher than 15 kc per sec.

Ultrasonic Waves
Waves of ultrasonic frequency. They include longitudinal, transverse, surface, and standing waves.

Universal Mill
A rolling mill in which rolls with a vertical axis roll the edges of the metal stock between some of the
passes through the horizontal rolls.

Upset
(1) The localized increase in cross-sectional area resulting from the application of pressure during
mechanical fabrication or welding. (2) That portion of welding cycle during which the cross-sectional area
is increased by the application of pressure.

Upsetting
(1) A metal working operation similar to forging. (2) The process of axial flow under axial compression of
metal, as in forming heads on rivets by flattening the end of wire.

Utility Sheet Aluminum


Mill finish coiled or flat sheet of unspecified composition and properties produced in specific standard sizes
and suitable for general building trade usage.

Vacancy
A type of structural imperfection in which an individual atom site is temporarily unoccupied.

Vacuum Melting
Melting in a vacuum to prevent contamination from air, as well as to remove gases already dissolved in the
metal; the solidification may also be carried out in a vacuum or at low pressure.

Vanadium
Chemical symbol V. Element No. 23 of the periodic system; atomic weight 50.95. Gray-white, hard metal,
unaffected by atmospheric influences or alkalis but soluble in most strong acids; melting point 3119
(degrees) F.; boiling point about 6150 (degrees) F.; specific gravity 5.87. It cannot be electrodeposited. Its
principal functions as an alloy in the making of tool steels. (1) Elevates coarsening temperature of austenite
(promotes fine grain). (2) Increases hardenability (when dissolved) (3) Resists tempering and causes
marked secondary hardening.

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Veining
A type of sub-boundary structure that can be delineated because of the presence of a greater-than-average
concentration of precipitate or solute atoms.

Vibrator Reed Steel


Hardened, tempered and white polished wxtra precision rolled. Carbon content about 1.00. Steel must
withstand great fatigue stresses.

Vickers Hardness (Test)


Standard method for measuring the hardness of metals, particularly those with extremely hard surfaces; the
surface is subjected to a standard pressure for a standard length of time by means of a pyramid shaped
diamond. The diagonal of the resulting indention is measured under a microscope and the Vickers Hardness
value read from a conversion table.

Virgin Metal
Metal obtained directly from ore and not used before.

Waloon Process
An early two-hearth process for making wrought iron by refining cast iron. The conversion proper was
carried out in a hearth furnace known as a finery; re-heating for forging was carried out in a second hearth
furnace known as a chafery.

Wasters
Sheets that have prohibitive defects, for example, seams and buckled plates. Generally fit for re-melting
purposes only.

Watch Main Spring Steel


Usually supplied cold rolled and annealed in large widths and cut and hardened by the spring
manufacturers. Carbon content about 1.15 and Tungsten .17, extra precision rolled.

Water Hardening
Process of hardening high carbon steels by quenching in water or brine, after heating.

Wavy
Not flat. A slight wave following the direction of rolling and beyond the standard limitation for flatness.

Wedge
A hardwood stick used as a forming tool in spinning.

Weld
A union made by welding.

Weld Bead
A deposit of filler metal from a single welding pass.

Weldability
Suitability of a metal for welding under specific conditions.

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Welding
A process used to join metals by the application of heat. Fusion welding, which includes gas, arc, and
resistance welding, requires that the parent metals be melted. This distinguishes fusion welding from
brazing. In pressure welding joining is accomplished by the use of heat and pressure without melting. The
parts that are being welded are pressed together and heated simultaneously, so that recrystallization occurs
across the interface.

Welding
Joining two or more pieces of material by applying heat or pressure, or both, with or without filler metal, to
produce a loxalized union through fusion or recrystallization across the interface.

Wetting
A phenomenon involving a solid and a liquid in such intimate contact that the adhesive force between the
two phases is greater than the cohesive force within the liquid. Thus a solid that is wetted, on being
removed from the liquid bath, will have a thin continuous layer of liquid adherring to it. Foreign substances
such as grease may prevent wetting. Addition agents, such as detergents, may induce wetting by lowering
the surface tension of the liquid.

Wetting Agent
A surface-active agent that produces wetting by decreasing the cohesion within the liquid.

Widmanstatten Structure
A structure characterized by a geometric pattern resulting from the formation of a new phase on certain
crystallographic planes in the parent phase. The orientation of the lattice in the new phase is related
cystallographically to the orientation of the lattice in the parent phase.

Widmanstatten Structure
A structure characterized by a geometrical pattern resulting from the formation of a new phase along
certain crystallographic planes of the parent solid solution. The orientation of the lattice in the new phase is
related crystallographically to the orientation of the lattice in the parent phase. The structure was originally
observed in meteorites but is readily produced in many other alloys with certain heat treatment.

WMB, WHB and Extra WHB Grades


Spring steel wires produced from aced open-hearth steels.

Wootz
A carbon steel containing 1 to 1.6% C produced by melting a bloomery iron or an inhomogeneous steel
with charcoal in a crucible. The process originated in India as early as the 3rd century A.D.

Work Hardening
Increase in resistance to deformation (i.e. in hardness) produced by cold working.

Work Hardening
Same as strain hardening.

Workability
The characteristic or group of characteristics that determines the ease of forming a metal into desired
shapes.

Wrought Iron
An iron produced by direct reduction of ore or by refining molten cast iron under conditions where a pasty
mass of solid iron with included slag is produced. The iron has a low carbon content.

Wrought Iron

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Iron containing only a very small amount of other elements, but containing 1-3% by weight of slag in the
form of particles elongated in one direction, giving the iron a characteristic grain. Is more rust-resistant
than steel and welds more easily.

Wrought Iron
A commercial iron consisting of slag (iron silicate) fibers entrained in a ferrite matrix.

Wustite
The oxide of iron of lowest valence which exist over a wide range of compositions the do not quite include
the stoichiometric composition FeO.

Yellow Brass
65% copper and 35% zinc. Also known as High Brass. A copper-zinc alloy, named for its yellow hue.
Formerly a very popular alloy, but now largely replaced by Cartridge Brass.

Yield Point
The first stress in a material less than the maximum obtainable stess at which an increase in strain occurs
without an increase in stress. Also known as upper yield stress.

Yield Point
The first stress in a material, usually less than the maximum attainable stress, at which an increase in strain
occurs without an increase in stress. Only certain metals exhibit a yield point. If there is a decrease in stress
after yielding, a distinction may be made between upper and lower yield points.

Yield Point
The load per unit of original cross section at which, in soft steel, a marked increase in deformation occurs
without increase in load.

Yield Strength
The stress at which a material exhibits a specified deviation from propertionality of stress and strain. An
offset of 0.2% is used for many metals.

Yield Strength
The stress at which a material exhibits a specified limiting deviation from the proportionality of stress to
strain. The deviation is expressed in terms of strain. Also known as proof stress.

Young's Modulus
The coefficient of elasticity of stretching. For a stretched wire, Young's Modulus is the ratio of the
stretching force per unit cross-sectional area to the elongation per unit length. The values of Young's
Modulus for metals are of the order 10(12) dynes per square cm.

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