Harry
Harry
The metal was later marketed under the "Staybrite" brand by Firth Vickers in England
[36]
and was used for the new entrance canopy for the Savoy Hotel in London in 1929.
Brearley applied for a US patent during 1915 only to find that Haynes had already
registered one. Brearley and Haynes pooled their funding and, with a group of investors,
formed the American Stainless Steel Corporation, with headquarters in Pittsburgh,
[23]: 360
Pennsylvania.
Rustless steel[edit]
Brearley initially called his new alloy "rustless steel". The alloy was sold in the US under
different brand names like "Allegheny metal" and "Nirosta steel". Even within the
metallurgy industry, the name remained unsettled; in 1921, one trade journal called it
[37]
"unstainable steel".
Brearley worked with a local cutlery manufacturer, who gave it the name "stainless
[38]
steel". As late as 1932, Ford Motor Company continued calling the alloy "rustless steel"
[39]
in automobile promotional materials. However, stainless tended to predominate
worldwide, and even in modern Japan, Western cutlery is simply referred to as "stainless
(without "steel") spoon/fork" etc. [ステンレス: sutenresu].
In 1929, before the Great Depression, over 25,000 tons of stainless steel were manufactured
[40]
and sold in the US annually.
Major technological advances in the 1950s and 1960s allowed the production of large
tonnages at an affordable cost:
● AOD process (argon oxygen decarburization), for the removal of carbon and
sulfur
[41]
● Continuous casting and hot strip rolling
[42][43]
● The Z-Mill, or Sendzimir cold rolling mill
● The Creusot-Loire Uddeholm (CLU) and related processes which use steam
[44]
instead of some or all of the argon
Families[edit]
Stainless steel is classified into five different "families" of alloys, each having a distinct set
of attributes. Four of the families are defined by their predominant crystalline structure -
the austenitic, ferritic, martensitic, and duplex alloys. The fifth family, precipitation
hardening, is defined by the type of heat treatment used to develop its properties.
Austenitic[edit]
[49]
● 200 series are chromium-manganese-nickel alloys that maximize the use of
manganese and nitrogen to minimize the use of nickel. Due to their nitrogen
addition, they possess approximately 50% higher yield strength than 300-series
stainless sheets of steel. Representative alloys include Type 201 and Type 202.
● 300 series are chromium-nickel alloys that achieve their austenitic
microstructure almost exclusively by nickel alloying; some very highly alloyed
grades include some nitrogen to reduce nickel requirements. 300 series is the
largest group and the most widely used. Representative alloys include Type 304
and Type 316.
Ferritic[edit]
[50]
● Automobile exhaust pipes
[51]
● Architectural and structural applications
[citation
● Building components, such as slate hooks, roofing, and chimney ducts
needed]
● Power plates in solid oxide fuel cells operating at temperatures around 700 °C
[52]
(1,300 °F)
Martensitic[edit]
● Fe-Cr-C grades. These were the first grades used and are still widely used in
engineering and wear-resistant applications. Representative grades include Type
410, Type 420, and Type 440C.
● Fe-Cr-Ni-C grades. Some carbon is replaced by nickel. They offer higher
toughness and higher corrosion resistance. Representative grades include Type
431.
● Martensitic precipitation hardening grades. 17-4 PH (UNS S17400), the
best-known grade, combines martensitic hardening and precipitation hardening
to increase strength and toughness.
● Creep-resisting grades. Small additions of niobium, vanadium, boron, and cobalt
increase the strength and creep resistance up to about 650 °C (1,200 °F).
Martensitic stainless steels can be heat treated to provide better mechanical properties. The
[54]
heat treatment typically involves three steps:
Precipitation hardening[edit]