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HTMG - High Technology And Materials Group
Dicionário Técnico
Dicionário Técnico
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  • CD Source - 30/06/2009
    Closed Drift ion source. "Closed-Drift" refers to the physics of the ion source operation. The electrons that maintain the plasma are confined by electric and magnetic fields that interact and captu...
  • CIM - 30/06/2009
    Ceramic Injection Moulding, a production technique where ceramic powders are mixed with a plastic into a pliable paste and forced into a mould.
  • CNC Machining - 30/06/2009
    Computer Numerically Controlled Machining
  • CVD - 30/06/2009
    Chemical Vapour Deposition, a production technique involving the reaction of gaseous chemicals, the product of which will deposit onto a prepared substrate.
  • DLC - 30/06/2009
    Diamond-Like Carbon
  • Glaze - 30/06/2009
    A surface coating that seals any open porosity of the bare ceramic surface from contamination or moisture pickup
  • IBS - 30/06/2009
    Ion Beam System. Equipment to apply a coating to a substrate by way of ion beam.
  • MIM - 30/06/2009
    MIM - Metal Injection Moulding, very similar to CIM, this technique uses specially prepared metal powders to make metal components
  • Piezoelectric - 30/06/2009
    When mechanical pressure is applied to one of these materials, the crystalline structure produces a voltage proportional to the pressure. Conversely, when an electric field is applied, the structure c...
  • Poling - 30/06/2009
    The application of a high electric field resulting in dipole alignment within the material.
  • Sintering - 30/06/2009
    The heating process that transforms a green ceramic and densifies the material into a stronger state.
  • Either volumetric or linear this describes the expansion that occurs with a change in temperature. Volumetric describes the volume change whereas linear describes the change in dimensions.
  • Dielectric Constant - 30/06/2009
    The relative permittivity of a material. Indicates the ability of a material to store electrical energy when a voltage is applied to it.
  • Dielectric Loss - 30/06/2009
    This is the proportion of energy that is dissipated within a dielectric material and lost as heat in an electrostatic field.
  • Dielectric Strength - 30/06/2009
    The minimum electric field that produces breakdown of the insulating properties of the dielectric.
  • Dissipation Factor - 30/06/2009
    The dissipation factor is a measure of the loss of power that takes place in virtually all dielectric materials, usually in the form of heat. It is expressed as the ratio of the resistive (loss) compo...
  • A ceramic part in an unfired state
  • Hermetic Seal - 30/06/2009
    Airtight seal
  • Loss Factor - 30/06/2009
    This is the product of the Dielectric Loss and the Dielectric Constant of a dielectric material.
  • Poisson’s Ratio - 30/06/2009
    When a sample of material is stretched in one axis, it tends to get thinner in the other two axes. Poisson's ratio (?) is a measure of this tendency. It is defined as the ratio of the strain in the di...
  • Porosity - 30/06/2009
    The proportion of the non-solid volume to the total volume of material.
  • Thermal Downshock - 30/06/2009
    Thermal downshock is the name given to cracking resulting from rapid temperature change. It occurs when a thermal gradient causes different parts of an object to expand by different amounts. This diff...
  • Young’s Modulus - 30/06/2009
    Young's modulus (or elastic modulus) is a measure of the stiffness of a given material. It is defined as the limit for small strains of the rate of change of stress with strain. This can be experiment...
  • PBN - 30/06/2009
    Pyrolytic Boron Nitride
  • RBSN - 30/06/2009
    Reaction Bonded Silicon Nitride
  • ZTA - 30/06/2009
    Zirconia Toughened Alumina
  • PZT - 30/06/2009
    a) Piezoelectric Transducer b) Lead Zirconate Titanate, Pb(Zr,Ti)O3
  • Acid Process - 30/06/2009
    A process of making steel, either Bessemer, open-hearth, or electric, in which the furnace is lined with a siliceous refractory and for which low phosphorous pig iron is required as this element is no...
  • Age Hardening - 30/06/2009
    The term as applied to soft or low carbon steels, relates to slow, gradual changes that take place in properties of steels after the final treatment. These changes, which bring about a condition of in...
  • Aging - 30/06/2009
    Spontaneous changes in the physical properties (for example, increase in tensile strength and hardness) of some metals, which occur on standing at atmospheric temperatures after final cold working or ...
  • Air Cooling - 30/06/2009
    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 - 30/06/2009
    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. The term should be r...
  • Steels of the American Iron and Steel Institute. AISI is a North American trade association with 50 member companies and more than 100 associate members. These companies represent the United States, ...
  • Alloy - 30/06/2009
    A substance that has metallic properties and is composed of two or more chemical elements, of which at least one is metal.
  • Alloying Element - 30/06/2009
    The adding of any metallic element in stainless steel production in order to increase hardness, strength, or corrosion resistance. Molybdenum, nickel, and chromium are common alloying elements in stai...
  • Alloy Surcharge - 30/06/2009
    The producer’s selling price plus a surcharge added to offset the increasing costs of raw materials caused by increasing alloy prices.
  • Alpha - 30/06/2009
    In titanium, it is the hexagonally closed packed crystal structure that exists at lower temperatures.
  • Alpha Case - 30/06/2009
    The alpha-stabilized surface (oxygen-, nitrogen-, or carbon-enriched) on titanium that results from elevated temperature exposure in an air furnace.
  • Angularity - 30/06/2009
    The conformity to or deviation from specified angular dimensions in the cross section of a shape.
  • Annealing - 30/06/2009
    A generic term denoting a heat treatment consisting of heating to and holding at a suitable temperature followed by cooling at a suitable rate, used primarily to soften but also to simultaneously prod...
  • Anodic Protection - 30/06/2009
    Polarization to a more oxidizing potential to achieve a reduced corrosion rate by the promotion of passivity.
  • AOD - 30/06/2009
    See Argon-Oxygen-Decarburization
  • A steel refinement process by whereby carbon is removed from molten steel through oxidation when a mixture of argon and oxygen is blown through the heat.
  • A.S.T.M. - 30/06/2009
    American Society for Testing Material, an organization for issuing standard specifications on material, including metals and alloys.
  • As Rolled - 30/06/2009
    The condition the material is in when it comes off the sizing rollers, cooling as it’s being processed. As rolled tends to result in hard spots and higher as-shipped hardness.
  • Austenite - 30/06/2009
    Phase in certain steels, characterized as a solid solution, usually off carbon or iron carbide, in the gamma form of iron. Such steels are known as “austenitic.” Austenite is stable only above 133...
  • Austenitic Steel - 30/06/2009
    Steel which, because of the presence of alloying elements such as manganese, nickel and chromium, shows stability of austenite at normal temperatures.
  • Bar - 30/06/2009
    Semi-finished or finished piece of metal in a straight length.
  • Bath Annealing - 30/06/2009
    Immersion in 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.
  • Beam - 30/06/2009
    Long pieces of squared-off metal, normally stainless steel, which are used in building construction.
  • Bend Test - 30/06/2009
    Various tests used to determine the toughness and ductility of flat rolled metal sheet, strip or plate, in which the material is bent around its axis or around an outside radius. A complete test might...
  • Bessemer Process - 30/06/2009
    A steelmaking process in which air is blown through the molten iron so that the impurities are thus removed by oxidation. Sir Henry Bessemer (1813-1898) was an English inventor who patented the first...
  • Beta - 30/06/2009
    In titanium, this body-centered cubic crystal structure exists at higher temperatures.
  • Billet - 30/06/2009
    An ingot or bloom that has been reduced through rolling or hammering to an approximate size of 2 to 7 inches square, or to an approximate rectangular cross section of an equivalent area. Billets are ...
  • Blank - 30/06/2009
    A section of sheet stainless steel that has the outer dimensions of a specific part but has not yet been stamped by the end user. This lowers stainless steel processor's labor and transportation costs...
  • Blast Furnace - 30/06/2009
    A vertical shaft-type smelting furnace in which an air blast is used, usually hot, for producing pig iron. The furnace is continuous in operation using iron ore, coke, and limestone as raw materials t...
  • Blister - 30/06/2009
    A raised spot on the surface of the metal caused by expansion of gas in a subsurface zone during thermal treatment.
  • Bloom - 30/06/2009
    A semi-finished form of stainless steel that will be further processed into mill products. A bloom generally has a cross section greater than 36 square inches.
  • Blooming Mill - 30/06/2009
    A hot rolling mill that takes continuously cast slabs or ingots and processes them into blooms.
  • Blowhole - 30/06/2009
    A cavity produced during solidification of metal by evolved gas, which, in failing to escape, is held in pockets.
  • Brazing - 30/06/2009
    Brazing and soldering are techniques for joining metals in the solid state by means of a fusible filler metal with a melting point well below that of the base metal.
  • Bright Annealing - 30/06/2009
    A process of annealing usually carried out in a controlled atmosphere so that the surface oxidation is reduced to a minimum and the surface remains relatively bright.
  • Steel wire bright drawn and annealed in controlled, non-oxidizing atmosphere furnace.
  • A common standard method of measuring the hardness of certain metals. The smooth surface of the metal is subjected to indentation by a hardened steel ball under pressure or load. The diameter of the r...
  • Brittle Fracture - 30/06/2009
    A fracture that has little or no plastic deformation.
  • Broken Surface - 30/06/2009
    Surface fracturing, generally most pronounced at sharp corners, and minute cracks on the surface of a drawn product to the direction of drawing.
  • Burr - 30/06/2009
    A subtle ridge on the edge of strip stainless steel resulting from cutting operations such as slitting, trimming, shearing, or blanking. For example, as a stainless steel processor trims the sides of ...
  • Camber - 30/06/2009
    Curvature of a straight plane. Not to be confused with a bow. Standard steel industry tolerance for camber is 1/8 inch in 5 feet.
  • Carbon Steel - 30/06/2009
    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.
  • Carburizing - 30/06/2009
    The oldest method of case hardening in which carbon is added to the surface of iron-base alloys by absorption through heating the metal at a temperature below its melting point, in contact with carbon...
  • Case Hardening - 30/06/2009
    Hardening a ferrous alloy to make the outside (case) much harder than the inside (core). This can be done by carburizing, cyaniding, nitriding, carbon nitriding, induction hardening or flame hardening...
  • Casting - 30/06/2009
    To shape molten metal by pouring into a mold to produce an ingot or a continuously cast slab.
  • Cast Steel - 30/06/2009
    Any object made by pouring molten steel into molds.
  • Cathodic Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    Corrosion caused by a reaction of an amphoteric metal with the alkaline products of electrolysis.
  • Cathodic Inhibitor - 30/06/2009
    A chemical substance that prevents or slows a cathodic or reduction reaction.
  • Cathodic Protection - 30/06/2009
    Reducing the corrosion of a metal by making the particular surface a cathode of an electrochemical cell.
  • Cavitation - 30/06/2009
    The rapid formation and depletion of air bubbles that can damage the material at the solid/liquid interface under conditions of severe turbulent flow.
  • A manufacturing philosophy that puts related processes together to make a finished component in a continuous flow, as opposed to a series of batch operations.
  • Centerless Grinding - 30/06/2009
    An operation whereby the surface of a bar is ground without using a lathe.
  • Chemical Analysis - 30/06/2009
    A report of the chemical composition of the elements and their percentage that form a metal alloy.
  • Charge - 30/06/2009
    The material that is loaded into an electric furnace that will melt into a composition that will produce a stainless molten product. Normally recycled are scrap, iron and alloying elements.
  • Charpy Test - 30/06/2009
    A notched-bar or impact test in which a notched specimen, fixed at both ends, is struck behind the notch by a striker carried on a pendulum. This test is used to determine the pounds of pressure requ...
  • Chatter - 30/06/2009
    An uneven surface on drawn products usually formed by vibration of the metal during drawing.
  • Cracking due to the combination of tensile stress and corrosion in the presence of water and chlorides.
  • Chromium (Cr) - 30/06/2009
    An alloying element that is used in stainless steel to deter corrosion. It is of bright silvery color and is relatively hard. It is strongly resistant to atmospheric and other oxidation. Its principa...
  • 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...
  • Cladding - 30/06/2009
    Application of a stainless steel coating to a lower-alloy steel by means of pouring, welding, or coating to increase corrosion resistance at a lower cost than using steel exclusively.
  • Coil Products - 30/06/2009
    Products that are wound into a spiral of concentric rings.
  • Cold Drawing - 30/06/2009
    The process of passing unheated steel through dies for the purpose of reducing its cross-sectional area, imparting to it a particular shape.
  • Cold Finished Bars - 30/06/2009
    Hot rolled stainless steel bars that are annealed and cold worked to produce a higher surface quality and higher strength. The term “cold finished” is an umbrella definition for any material that...
  • Any mechanical operation that creates permanent deformation, such as bending, rolling, drawing, etc., performed at room temperature that increases the hardness and strength of the stainless steel.
  • Cold Heading - 30/06/2009
    Process of forcing metal to flow cold into dies to form thicker sections and more intricate shapes.
  • Cold Reduction - 30/06/2009
    Reduction of metal size, usually by rolling or drawing, particularly thickness, while the metal is maintained at room temperature or below the recrystallization temperature.
  • Stainless steel that has been run through a cold reduction mill. Sheet is under 3/16th of an inch and 24 inches wide and over. Strip is under 3/16 of an inch and under 24" wide.
  • Cold Rolling - 30/06/2009
    The process of passing unheated steel through pairs of driven rolls for the purpose of reducing its thickness.
  • Cold Working - 30/06/2009
    Any permanent deformation of unheated steel accomplished by the application of mechanical forces to the metal surface.
  • Concentricity - 30/06/2009
    Center to end of the circle. All round bars have three tolerances to consider: size, straightness, and out of round. The “out of round” tolerance could affect the concentricity of a bar.
  • Constituent - 30/06/2009
    A necessary part or element; component.
  • Consumet - 30/06/2009
    Carpenter’s trade name for “consumable electrode vacuum melt.”
  • A steel-forming process whereby molten metal is solidified into a semi-finished(hyphenate) billet, bloom, or slab for subsequent rolling in the finishing mills.
  • Continuous Furnace - 30/06/2009
    Furnace, in which the material being heated moves steadily through the furnace.
  • Converter/Processor - 30/06/2009
    Stainless steel customers demanding stainless steel in a more finished state such as tubing, pipe, and cold-rolled strip from re-rollers and tube makers.
  • Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    Gradual chemical or electrochemical attack on a metal by atmosphere, moisture or other agents.
  • Corrosion Fatigue - 30/06/2009
    Cracking due to repeating and fluctuating stresses in a corrosive environment.
  • Corrosion Potential - 30/06/2009
    The potential of a corroding surface in an electrolyte relative to a reference electrode under open-circuit conditions.
  • A metal's ability to resist corrosion in a particular environment.
  • Creep - 30/06/2009
    Strain caused by the stress that occurs over time. Slow, permanent deformation in a metallic specimen produced by a relatively small steady force below the elastic limit, acting for a long period of t...
  • Crevice Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    Corrosion of stainless steel on the surface that is fully shielded from air, preventing the formation of a passive film.
  • The lowest value of oxidizing potential at which pits can form and grow. The value depends on the test method used.
  • Critical Range - 30/06/2009
    A temperature range in which an internal change takes place within a metal. Also referred to as transformation range.
  • Crucible - 30/06/2009
    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 ...
  • Cut-to-Length - 30/06/2009
    Cutting flat-rolled stainless steel into desired length and then normally shipped flat-stacked.
  • Deburring - 30/06/2009
    Removing the subtle ridge from the edge of strip metal that results from cutting operation such as slitting, trimming, shearing, or blanking.
  • Decarburization - 30/06/2009
    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 ...
  • Degassing Process - 30/06/2009
    In steel making, removing gases from the molten metal by means of a vacuum process in combination with mechanical action.
  • Descaling - 30/06/2009
    A process that removes the oxide scale from the surface of the stainless steel, which develops from hot operations such as forging.
  • Drawing (Drawn) - 30/06/2009
    The process of pulling material through a die to reduce the size, change the cross sectional shape, or harden the material. A forming process that presses metal into or through a die (as in cold draw...
  • Drawing Back - 30/06/2009
    Reheating after hardening to a temperature below critical for the purpose of changing the hardness of the steel (see tempering).
  • Drawn-Over-Mandrel - 30/06/2009
    To produce specialty tubing, this procedure uses a draw bench to pull tubing through a die and over a mandrel, allowing excellent control of the inside diameter and wall thickness.
  • Drill Rod - 30/06/2009
    A term given to an annealed and polished high-carbon tool steel rod, usually round and centerless ground. Drill rods are used principally by machinists and tool and die makers for punches, drills, ta...
  • Ductility - 30/06/2009
    The property that enables metals to be mechanically deformed when cold without fracturing. In steel, ductility is usually measured by elongation, and reduction of area is determined in a tensile test...
  • Duplex - 30/06/2009
    Stainless steel comprised of austenitic and ferritic stainless steels that contain high amounts of chromium and nickel. This combination is stronger than both of the individual stainless steels. Duple...
  • To facilitate customer manipulation, strips of stainless steel are rolled to smooth the edges and remove any burrs.
  • Elastic Springback - 30/06/2009
    When stainless steel is bent, the metal towards the outside of the bend is in tension and the metal towards the inside is in compression. If the applied bending force is not sufficient to cause perman...
  • Melt-down unit which uses the heat of resistance to an electric arc to perform the initial melting of steel.
  • Steel produced in any furnace where heat is generated electrically, almost always by arc.
  • Electrode - 30/06/2009
    An alloy cast into a preliminary shape for later remelting.
  • A refining process which uses the heat of resistance of molten slag to an electric arc to remelt an electrode in open atmosphere. ESR results in metals of higher purity, more uniform grain size and i...
  • Elongation - 30/06/2009
    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.
  • Embrittlement - 30/06/2009
    Loss of malleability of a metal due to chemical treatment or physical change.
  • Custom components that can be made from a wide range of material including advanced ceramics, carbides, specialty alloys or other specialty materials.
  • Erosion - 30/06/2009
    The continuous depletion of a material due to mechanical interaction with a liquid, a multi-component fluid, or solid particles carried with the fluid.
  • Erosion-Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    An accelerated loss of material concerning corrosion and erosion that results from corrosive material interacting with the material.
  • ESR - 30/06/2009
    See Electro-Slag Remelting
  • Extrusion - 30/06/2009
    A shaped piece of stainless steel produced by forcing the bloom, bar or rod through a die of the appropriate shape.
  • Fabricator - 30/06/2009
    An intermediate product producer that purchases and processes material for a specific project.
  • Fatigue - 30/06/2009
    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.
  • Ferrite - 30/06/2009
    The body-centered cubic crystalline phase of iron-based alloys.
  • Has a body centered cubic (BCC) structure. These alloys are the chromium stainless steels containing low carbon levels. They are hardenable primarily by cold working, although some will harden slightl...
  • Ferroalloy - 30/06/2009
    1. Metal products such as ferrochrome, ferromanganese, and ferrosilicon that are commonly used as raw materials to aid various stages in stainless steel production. 2. An alloy of iron with a suffi...
  • Ferrochrome - 30/06/2009
    A common raw material in stainless steel production. This alloy consists of iron and up to 72% chromium.
  • Ferrous - 30/06/2009
    Related to iron (derived from the Latin ferrum). Ferrous alloys are, therefore, iron-base alloys.
  • Fine Grain Steel - 30/06/2009
    Steels that resist grain growth over a considerable temperature range, when held at temperature for a reasonable length of time as is customary in heat treatment of steel.
  • Finishes - 30/06/2009
    The surface appearance of metals after final treatment such as rolling or polishing.
  • These facilities process semi-finished stainless steel into ready-made forms that can be used by others. Some facilities are rolling mills, pickle lines, tandem mills, annealing facilities, and temper...
  • Category of stainless steel that includes shapes such as sheet, strip, and plate.
  • Flat Wire - 30/06/2009
    A flat Cold Rolled, prepared edge section up to 1/4” wide, rectangular in shape. Generally produced from hot rolled rods or specially prepared round wire by one or more cold rolling operations, prim...
  • Flux - 30/06/2009
    An iron-cleaning agent that consists of limestone and lime. These products react with impurities in the metallic pool and float to the top of the liquid iron.
  • Foil - 30/06/2009
    Metal with a maximum width of 0.005 inches.
  • Forging - 30/06/2009
    A form of hot working whereby metal is heated and formed into a desirable shape by pressing or hammering.
  • Forging Press - 30/06/2009
    Type of hot working in which metal is heated until workable and then pressed into the desired shape by compressing it between a pair of dies.
  • Forming - 30/06/2009
    A process that brings about a change in the shape of stainless steel by the application of force (i.e. cold forming, hot forming, wire forming).
  • Fouling - 30/06/2009
    An accumulation of marine organism deposits on a submerged metal surface.
  • Fracture Test - 30/06/2009
    A test for carbon in which a specimen of metal is drawn off, cooled rapidly in water, and broken with a sledge hammer. The appearance of the metal exposed in the fracture permits a fairly accurate es...
  • Free Machining - 30/06/2009
    Grades of stainless steel that, by virtue of their chemistry or processing, are easier to machine into parts.
  • Rating for inclusions and stringers as allowed per each individual grade specification. The quantity of inclusions per square inch equals the frequency. The length of the inclusions per square inch ...
  • Fretting Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    Deterioration at the interface of two contacting surfaces under load that is accelerated by their relative motion.
  • Full Annealing - 30/06/2009
    Heating iron-based alloys above the critical temperature range, holding the temperature above that range for a proper period of time, and then slowly cooling to below the range either in the furnace o...
  • Galvanic Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    Accelerated corrosion of a metal because of an electrical contact with a more noble metal or nonmetallic conductor in a corrosive electrolyte.
  • Galvanizing - 30/06/2009
    Coating steel with zinc and tin (principally zinc) for rust proofing purposes.
  • Gas Carburizing - 30/06/2009
    A method of carburizing carried out in an atmosphere of carburizing gases, including carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons as butane, ethane, methane, and propane.
  • Gauer Bar - 30/06/2009
    (see edge rolling)
  • Gauge - 30/06/2009
    Thickness.
  • General Corrosion - 30/06/2009
    "General corrosion" describes the attack that proceeds in a relatively uniform manner over the entire surface of a metal. Typically, stainless steels do not exhibit general corrosion.
  • Grade - 30/06/2009
    The divisions within different types of steel based on carbon content or mechanical properties.
  • Grain - 30/06/2009
    The individual crystal units in metals. A solid polyhedral (or many sided crystal) consisting of groups of atoms bound together in a regular geometric pattern. In mill practice grains are usually st...
  • Grain Boundary - 30/06/2009
    Bounding surface between crystals. When alloys yield new phases (as in cooling) grain boundaries are the preferred location for the appearance of the new phase. Certain deterioration such as season ...
  • Grain Growth - 30/06/2009
    An increase in the average grain size; resulting from some crystals absorbing adjacent ones when the metal is raised to a temperature above that necessary for re-crystallization and kept at that tempe...
  • Grain Size - 30/06/2009
    The average grain diameter from a random cross-section of material. Grain size is an important property for many alloys, including the titanium commercially pure alloys.
  • Grinding - 30/06/2009
    A term that implies metal removal similar to fast milling in which the surface is removed by abrasion.
  • H-Steels - 30/06/2009
    Steels made under specifications that include hardenability tolerance.
  • HARP - 30/06/2009
    An abbreviation for "hot rolled annealed and pickled."
  • Hardenability - 30/06/2009
    The ability of a metal, usually steel, to harden in depth as distinguished from the term “hardness.”
  • Hardness - 30/06/2009
    A measure of a steel's resistance to indentation: stiffness.
  • Hardness Test - 30/06/2009
    Hardness testing consists of pressing an indenter into a flat surface under a perfectly controlled load, then measuring the dimension of the resulting indentation. The three methods most commonly used...
  • Heat - 30/06/2009
    Term referring to batch of refined stainless steel; a charged oxygen or electric furnace full of stainless steel. A heat of stainless steel can be used to cast several slabs, billets, or blooms.
  • The part of a metal that is not melted during cutting, brazing, or welding, but whose microstructure and physical properties are altered by these processes.
  • Heat Treatment - 30/06/2009
    Altering the properties of stainless steel by subjecting it to a series of temperature changes. To increase the hardness, strength, or ductility of stainless steel so that it is suitable for additiona...
  • Alloy that can withstand very hot operating environments – up to 2000°F (1093°C) for some alloys – and attendant corrosion and oxidation problems.
  • Stainless steel that has been rolled on a hot-strip mill. It can be sold directly to customers or further processed into other finished products.
  • Hot Forming - 30/06/2009
    Hot forming operations are used widely in the fabrication of stainless steel to take advantage of their lower resistance to shape change. High temperature reduces their yield strengths, and this resul...
  • Hot Rolling - 30/06/2009
    A method of hot working that reduces the cross-sectional size of a metal bar or coil by passing it between a series of rolls while the material is hot.
  • Hot Working - 30/06/2009
    The permanent deformation of metal accomplished by applying mechanical forces to the heated metal’s surface.
  • The absorption of hydrogen by a metal resulting in a loss of ductility.
  • Stepwise internal cracks that connect adjacent hydrogen blisters on different planes in the metal, or to the metal surface.
  • Cracking of a metal resulting from the combination of hydrogen and tensile stress.
  • Impact Test - 30/06/2009
    Impact testing is used to measure the toughness of a material, corresponding to the energy necessary to cause fracture under shock loading. Low toughness is generally associated with brittle shear fra...
  • Ingot - 30/06/2009
    An initial cast form that results from a molten alloy being poured into an ingot mold. Remelted alloys also are called ingots.
  • Injection Molding - 30/06/2009
    A part-forming process in which metallic or ceramic powders, mixed with a binder, are pushed into a custom mold to make intricate parts. The parts may have irregular features on all three axes.
  • Integrated Mills - 30/06/2009
    Facilities that combine all the stainless steel making facilities from melt shop through hot rolling and cold finishing, to produce mill products.
  • Preferential corrosion cracking at or along the grain boundaries of a metal.
  • Stress corrosion cracking in which the cracking occurs along grain boundaries.
  • Iron Ore - 30/06/2009
    A mineral that contains enough iron to be a factor in stainless steel production.
  • These alloys are at the highest end of the range of temperature and strength. Additives such as chrome, nickel, titanium, manganese, molybdenum, vanadium, silicon, and carbon may be used. These supera...
  • Leveling Line - 30/06/2009
    A machine that smoothes any physical deficiencies in the sheet before it is shipped to the customer.
  • Life Cycle Costing - 30/06/2009
    An accounting method of costing where expenses are allocated over the life of the product. Life cycle costs are often lower for stainless steel than for alternatives despite a higher initial outlay, b...
  • A very thin sheet of stainless steel that has either been temper rolled or passed through a cold reduction mill.
  • Line Pipe - 30/06/2009
    A pipe extending over long distances that transports oil, natural gas, and other fluids.
  • Long Product - 30/06/2009
    Product made into bar, rod, wire or billet, rather than a flat form.
  • Low Carbon Steels - 30/06/2009
    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.
  • Machining - 30/06/2009
    The cutting away of the surface of metal by means of power-driven machinery. Free-machining stainless steels are easier to machine, extending tool life and improving throughput.
  • Magnetic Alloys - 30/06/2009
    Alloys that have special magnetic properties.
  • Malleability - 30/06/2009
    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 oth...
  • Martensite - 30/06/2009
    A hard supersaturated solid solution of iron characterized by an acicular (needle-like) microstructure.
  • Has a body centered tetragonal (BCT) structure. These alloys are chromium stainless steels with medium to high carbon levels. They work harden slowly in the annealed (soft) condition but can be heat-t...
  • Those properties that reveal the reaction, either elastic or plastic, of a metal to an applied stress. Tensile strength, yield strength, elongation, reduction of area, hardness, impact strength, and b...
  • Formed by infiltrating a ceramic preform with a molten metallic product. Once solidified, the resulting product combines the best features of ceramics and metals.
  • Melting Range - 30/06/2009
    The range of temperature in which an alloy melts is the range between solidus and liquidus temperatures.
  • Mill form - 30/06/2009
    Shapes manufactured by traditional rolling or drawing operations, such as rounds, squares, hexagons and rectangles.
  • Mill Products - 30/06/2009
    Generally mill forms of sheet, strip, plate, bar rod and semi-finished forms.
  • Modulus of Rigidity - 30/06/2009
    Of a material suffering shear, the ratio of the intensity of the shear stress across the section to the shear strain, i.e., to the angle of distortion in radians; expressed in pounds or tons per squar...
  • Molybdenum (Mo) - 30/06/2009
    An alloying element that enhances corrosion resistance along with chromium in stainless steels.
  • Nickel (Ni) - 30/06/2009
    An alloying element used in stainless steels to enhance ductility and corrosion resistance.
  • Alloy metal produced for high-performance, high-temperature applications such as nickel-iron-chrome alloys and nickel-chrome-iron alloys.
  • Nonferrous Metals - 30/06/2009
    Non-iron based metal, including copper, aluminum and their alloys (e.g., brass and bronze).
  • Category of pipe products used by petroleum exploration customers. Labels bearing OCTG are applied to casting, drill pipes, oil well tubing, etc.
  • Ore - 30/06/2009
    An iron-containing material used primarily in the melting furnace.
  • Oscillating - 30/06/2009
    A method of winding a narrow strip of stainless steel over a much wider roll. This allows for more stainless steel per roll and allows the customer to have longer processing runs.
  • Oxidation - 30/06/2009
    Rust or corrosion due to exposure to oxygen.
  • Passivation - 30/06/2009
    When exposed in air, stainless steels passivate naturally (due to the presence of chromium). But the time required can vary. In order to ensure that the passive layer reforms rapidly after pickling, a...
  • Passive - 30/06/2009
    A characteristic condition of stainless steels which impedes normal corrosion tendencies to the point where the metal remains virtually un-attacked — hence passive to its environment.
  • Physical Properties - 30/06/2009
    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 ...
  • A process that removes surface scale and oxidation products by immersion in a chemically active solution, such as sulfuric or hydrochloric acid. Used in titanium to help remove alpha case and/or surf...
  • Pickling Paste - 30/06/2009
    A commercially available product that performs the pickling function when used on the surface of stainless steel.
  • Pipe - 30/06/2009
    Term that originally defined a tube used to transport fluids or gases. Often now, pipe and tube are used interchangeably.
  • Pitting - 30/06/2009
    Localized corrosion (in the form of pits) of a metal surface that is confined to a small area.
  • Plate - 30/06/2009
    Product form in which the metal measures more than 10 inches wide and 3/16 in. thick or more.
  • Heating and cooling a weldment in such a way as to obtain desired properties.
  • Produced by means of a high-pressure gas to break up a molten metal stream into droplets, which rapidly solidify into metal powder particles. These particles are then consolidated to create bar, coil ...
  • Powder Metallurgy - 30/06/2009
    The art of producing metal powders and of utilizing metal powders for the production of massive materials and shaped objects.
  • A small category of stainless steels resembling martensitic stainless steels that have great strength and hardness due to heat treatment.
  • A process in which raw materials are first melted within a vacuum. The metal is often remelted again under a vacuum to produce very pure alloys. Together, these processes result in tighter control of ...
  • Process Annealing - 30/06/2009
    In the sheet and wire industries, a process by which a ferrous alloy is heated to a temperature close to, but below, the lower limit of the transformation range and is subsequently cooled. This proces...
  • Quenching - 30/06/2009
    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 ...
  • 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 ...
  • A commodity-grade stainless steel used to reinforce concrete in highway and building structures.
  • Remelting - 30/06/2009
    The process whereby previously melted electrodes are remelted into higher quality ingot.
  • Residuals - 30/06/2009
    The impurities remaining in mini-mill stainless steels resulting from the wide variety of metals entering the process.
  • Reversing Mill - 30/06/2009
    A stand of rolls that passes stainless steel back and forth between the rolls in order to reduce the stainless steel sheet or plate. The distance between the rolls is reduced after each pass.
  • A standard method for measuring the hardness of metals. 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 l...
  • Rod - 30/06/2009
    Semi-finished product, formed into coils, from which wire is made.
  • The oxide that forms on the surface of stainless steel, after exposure to high temperature.
  • Seamless Pipe - 30/06/2009
    Pipe produced from a solid billet that is heated and rotated under pressure. This rotating pressure creates a hole in the middle of the billet, which is then formed into a pipe by a mandrel.
  • Stainless steel products such as blooms, billets, or slabs that are then rolled and processed into beams, bars, wire, etc.
  • Sensitization - 30/06/2009
    The phenomenon in austenitic stainless steels that causes a change to occur in the grain boundaries when heated in the general range of 850 to 1475 degrees F. This change destroys the passivity in th...
  • Service Center - 30/06/2009
    An operation that buys metal, stores it (often processing it in some way), and then sells it in a slightly different form than it was purchased from the producing mills.
  • Shapes - 30/06/2009
    Bar or coil product that is passed between custom dies and rolls to form half-round, hexagonal, square and other more intricate shapes.
  • Shape Correcting - 30/06/2009
    Levelers, edge trimmers, and temper mills reshape processed stainless steel to meet customers’ specifications. Reshaping is needed from processes that cause deformities in the stainless steel.
  • Shearing - 30/06/2009
    Trimming of sheet strip to make the edges parallel.
  • Sheet - 30/06/2009
    A stainless steel flat rolled product that is under 3/16 inch in thickness and 24 inches or more in width.
  • Shot Blasting - 30/06/2009
    Blast cleaning using stainless steel shot as the abrasive. Not recommended for stainless steel. Glass beads should be used.
  • Sigma Phase - 30/06/2009
    An extremely brittle Fe-Cr phase that can form at elevated temperatures in austenitic and ferritic stainless steels.
  • Six Sigma - 30/06/2009
    Statistical measurement of tightly controlled processes with the goal of generating only 3.4 defects per million opportunities.
  • Slab - 30/06/2009
    A common type of semi-finished stainless steel usually measuring 6-10 inches thick by 30-85 inches wide and averaging 20 feet long. After casting, slabs are sent to a strip mill for rolling into sheet...
  • Slag - 30/06/2009
    A layer formed on the surface of the molten metal which serves as a reservoir for the various metallic oxides formed during melting and refining.
  • Slitting - 30/06/2009
    Cutting a sheet of stainless steel into narrower strips.
  • Heating a metal to a high temperature and maintaining it long enough for one or more constituents to enter the solid solution. The solution is then cooled rapidly to retain the constituents within.
  • Strengthening mechanism used in titanium alpha-beta alloys as well as PH stainless alloys and many nickel-based super alloys. For titanium alloys, the solution treating temperature that is normally 50...
  • Solvent Cleaning - 30/06/2009
    The removal of contaminants such as oil, grease, dirt, salts, etc., by cleaning with a solvent, steam, vapor, alkali or emulsion.
  • Specialty alloys - 30/06/2009
    Alloys composed of two or more chemical elements that typically perform under very rigorous service conditions or that have special electrical, thermal, magnetic, corrosion resistant, or mechanical pr...
  • Specialty Steel - 30/06/2009
    Category of steel that includes high strength, stainless and tool steels.
  • Specialty Tube - 30/06/2009
    A wide variety of high quality, specialized tubular products. It is usually found in the automotive and agricultural industries, construction equipment, hydraulic cylinders, etc.
  • Stainless steel - 30/06/2009
    Grades of steel with more than 10% chromium and often with other alloying elements to resist corrosion, vary strength characteristics, and facilitate fabrication into parts.
  • Steckel Mill - 30/06/2009
    A reversing stainless steel sheet reduction mill with heated coil boxes at each end. Stainless steel sheet or plate is sent through the rolls of the reversing mill and coiled at the end of the mill, r...
  • Strain - 30/06/2009
    The amount of elongation, force or compression that occurs in a metal at a given level of stress. Generally in terms of inches elongation per inch of material.
  • Strength - 30/06/2009
    The ability of stainless steel to oppose applied forces when considering resistance to stretching, forming, compressing, etc.
  • Slowly developing cracks that form in stainless steel due to mechanical stress and exposure to a corrosive environment.
  • Stress Relief - 30/06/2009
    Low temperature annealing for removing internal stresses, such as those resulting in a metal from work hardening or quenching.
  • Stress Relieving - 30/06/2009
    Reducing residual stresses by heating.
  • Strip - 30/06/2009
    Thin, flat steel that resembles hot-rolled sheet but is normally narrower and is produced to more closely controlled thickness.
  • Structurals - 30/06/2009
    An architectural stainless steel product group that includes I-beams, H-beams, wide-flange beams and sheet piling. These products are used in multi-story buildings, bridges and vertical highway suppor...
  • Alloy that can withstand very hot operating environments – up to 2000°F (1093°C) for some alloys – and attendant corrosion and oxidation problems.
  • Tailored Blanks - 30/06/2009
    A section of sheet stainless steel that is cut to the manufacturer’s requirements. Excess stainless steel is trimmed away to save transportation costs and is ready for the stamper to shape with a d...
  • Tandem Mill - 30/06/2009
    A cold-rolling mill that gives greater strength, a more uniform and smoother surface, and a reduced thickness to the stainless steel sheet. This mill rolls stainless steel through a series of rolls, t...
  • Tempered (Temper) - 30/06/2009
    A term applied to cold worked material such as strip, sheet and wire, expressing the range of mechanical properties as produced by the cold work (as is quarter hard, half hard, etc.).
  • Tempering (drawing) - 30/06/2009
    A process of reheating 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 ...
  • The 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, a...
  • Thin wall tubing - 30/06/2009
    Tubes with wall thickness that can be as thin as .005 inches (.127 mm) yet remain structurally sound in many environments. Such thin walls minimize the weight of the tube.
  • Titanium alloys that are either pure (Commercially Pure Ti) or richer in alpha stabilizing elements.(i.e. Al, Sn, Ga ). These alloys can’t be strengthened by heat treat but have good weldability.
  • Titanium alloys that contain at least one alpha stabilizer and one beta stabilizer. These alloys can be strengthened by solution treating and aging. Titanium 6Al-4V is a very common alpha–beta alloy...
  • Lightweight, corrosive-resistant alloys suitable for high temperatures. These alloys have been used for airplane parts. Titanium alloys can blended with aluminium, iron, vanadium, silicon, cobalt, tan...
  • Titanium alloys that are richer in beta stabilizing elements (i.e. Mo, V). These titanium alloys have great forgeability and high hardenability but are higher in density.
  • Titanium - 30/06/2009
    Structural metal that offers excellent corrosion and erosion resistance, superior strength-to-weight ratios, and high heat transfer efficiency.
  • Tool steel - 30/06/2009
    Alloys of iron used in making tools and dies that offer strength and fabrication qualities. Typically, tool steels contain carbon, manganese, chromium, tungsten and other alloying elements.
  • Tolerances - 30/06/2009
    Measures the allowable difference in product specifications between what a customer orders and what the manufacturing company delivers.
  • Ton - 30/06/2009
    Unit of measure for stainless steel scrap and iron ore. Gross Ton: 2,240 pounds. Long (net) Ton: 2,240 pounds. Short (net) Ton: 2,000 pounds. Normal unit of statistical raw material input and stain...
  • Toughness - 30/06/2009
    Property of resisting fracture or distortion. Usually measured by impact test, high impact values indicating high toughness.
  • Trepan - 30/06/2009
    To remove a cylindrical core in a metal bar, creating a hollow bar.
  • Tungsten (W) - 30/06/2009
    A gray metal with high tensile strength. It is ductile, malleable, and resistant to atmospheric elements and all acids except strong alkalis.
  • Tungsten carbide - 30/06/2009
    Advanced material that is very hard and wear resistant, making it suitable for severe service applications such as cutting and grinding tools.
  • Ultimate strength - 30/06/2009
    The maximum load divided by the original cross-sectional area of a sample, resulting in the maximum stress a material can sustain without fracture.
  • A particular type of inspection in which internal and external defects are located by studying the travel pattern of sound waves sent through the material.
  • Vacuum Annealing - 30/06/2009
    Annealing that is done in a vacuum to prevent the alloy from reacting with oxygen while at high temperatures. This process is particularly important for titanium alloys, where alpha-case can form at h...
  • Refining process in which a previously melted electrode is remelted under a vacuum to produce a finer, more uniform grain structure in metals.
  • Manufacturing process in which raw materials are melted within a vacuum using the heat from an induced magnetic field. VIM ensures tight control of a metal’s chemistry and more consistent structural...
  • A refinement of stainless steel that reduces carbon content. Molten, unrefined stainless steel is heated and stirred by an electrical current while oxygen enters from the top. Many undesirable gases e...
  • Vanadium (V) - 30/06/2009
    A grey metal that is normally used as an alloying agent for iron and stainless steel. It is also used as a strengthener of titanium-based alloys.
  • VAR - 30/06/2009
    See Vacuum Arc Remelting
  • VIM - 30/06/2009
    See Vacuum Induction Melting
  • Wire - 30/06/2009
    Finished product that is shipped in coils, can vary in shape, but is typically under one inch (25.4 mm) in diameter.
  • Work Hardening - 30/06/2009
    Increase in resistance to deformation (i.e. in hardness) produced by cold working.
  • Workability - 30/06/2009
    The characteristic or group of characteristics that determine the ease of forming a metal into desired shapes.
  • Yield Strength (YS) - 30/06/2009
    The stress (load/area) at which the metal changes from elastic to plastic in behavior, i.e., takes a permanent set.
  • Zirconium (Zr) - 30/06/2009
    A strong, ductile metal obtained by the chemical processing of zircon-bearing sands. It has good corrosion resistance at high temperatures and is used as a structural material in nuclear reactors and ...
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