Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Smart answers
Smart people
Member Login
HANDLE
PASSWORD
Remember Me
Forgot Password?
Join Us!
Come Join Us!
Are you an
Engineering professional?
Join Eng-Tips now!
Talk With Other Members
Be Notified Of Responses
To Your Posts
Keyword Search
One-Click Access To Your
Favorite Forums
Automated Signatures
On Your Posts
Best Of All, It's Free!
Join our
LinkedIn Group!
Go
Find A Forum
Go
Join
Directory
Search
Tell A Friend
Whitepapers
Jobs
Home > Forums > Materials Engineers > Materials > Metal and Metallurgy engineering Forum
Forum
Search
FAQs
Links
Jobs
Whitepapers
MVPs
FEA Training
Back To Forum
Back To Metal and
Metallurgy engineering
Metal Iron
JasonLouie (Materials)
13 Aug 07 17:22
What is the difference between vacuum degassed steel and fully killed steel? We have asked for fully killed
steel and have been offered vacuum degassed instead. This is for SA516-70N in sour service.
Thanks.
13 Aug 07 17:45
metengr (Materials)
The vacuum degassed steel will be a much better product in terms of overall steel cleanliness (inclusion
content) and sulfur removal. Fully killed steel normally will not have the cleanliness as vacuum degassed
steel. In this application, vacuum degassing may not be required, but I would take it.
metengr (Materials)
13 Aug 07 17:53
To answer your question regarding a fully killed steel, this is a steel that contains either Si or Al and Si
additions to deoxidize the melt to avoid outgassing during solidification. You can read more about this and
steel making in general, see below;
http://www.key-to-steel.com/default.aspx?ID=Articles#p1
steelmtllrgst (Materials)
17 Aug 07 10:02
Vacuum degassing is used primarily for removal of hydrogen from steel. The liquid steel is exposed to an
evacuated atmosphere for a period of time, typically reducing the hydrogen value to <2 ppm.
Fully killed steel, as stated, is steel that has been deoxidized using either Al or Si. The deoxidant (Al or Si
will create oxides that will for the most part float into the slag, but some residual non-metallics will
definitely remain in the final product as inclusions and affect the cleanliness. This prevents
blowholes/porosity from forming during solidification due to the low solubility of oxygen in solid steel.
Degassin a fully killed steel (a combination of both) will aid in removal of the deoxidation product and can
aid in obtaining excellent cleanliness as well as low dissolved gas content.
steelmaking (Materials)
22 Aug 07 5:18
Vacuum degassing gives opportunity to use technology "vacuum carbon deoxidation" - it means more clean
steel, because the product of deoxidation is CO instead of Al2O3 or SiO2. The adding of Al and FeSi is only
to cover needings required to the steelgrade. Also content of hydrogen is less than 2.5 ppm and the level of
the nytrogen is 20-30 ppm, which is not possible to reach in full killed steels in normal atmosphere
steelmtllrgst (Materials)
23 Aug 07 9:29
The only problem with VCD is that you are still working to the C-O equilirium, it is just under low
pressure. This method is excellent for steels where deox products are not wanted at all, but in most cases
precipitation deox gives lower total oxygen.
INPIDI (Materials)
6 Sep 07 19:27
IF U CHECK ASTM 516 GRADE 70 SPEC U WILL NOTICE THAT BY DEFINITION IT IS KILLED STILL(THE NON
KILLED/RIMMED EQUIVALENT IS 515 GR 70
Get your
Eng-Tips Forums
SWAG here!
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com