Study the production and structural forms of iron from ferrite and austenite to the alloy steel


Study the production and structural forms of iron from ferrite and austenite to the alloy steel
Study the production and structural forms of iron from ferrite and austenite to the alloy steel
Iron ore is one of the most abundant elements on Earth, and one of its primary uses is in the production of steel. When combined with carbon, iron changes character completely and becomes the alloy steel.
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Transcript

NARRATOR: An important use of iron ore is the production of steel. Iron alone is too soft to be of structural value, but, when combined with less than 2 percent carbon at a very high temperature, it creates the alloy steel.

Steel is a strong, hard material with valuable mechanical properties. It is the most widely used structural metal in the world. Steel owes its diverse properties to the changeable crystalline structure of iron at different temperatures. As iron cools below the melting temperature of 1,538 degrees Celsius, its atoms align themselves in a compact structure. In this form iron is known as ferrite. When iron cools below 1,394 degrees Celsius, it is known as austenite and its structure changes.

In the gaps between the iron atoms, austenite can retain more carbon than ferrite can. And the more carbon in the structure, the harder the resulting steel.