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SAE 304 stainless steel: Difference between revisions

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'''SAE 304 [[stainless steel]]''', also known as '''A2 stainless steel''' (not the same as A2 [[tool steel]]) or '''18/8 stainless steel''', European norm 1.4301, is the most common stainless steel. The steel contains both [[chromium]] (usually 18%) and [[nickel]] (usually 8%) metals as the main non-[[iron]] constituents. It is an [[austenite]] steel. It is not very electrically or thermally [[conductive]], and is non-magnetic. It has a higher [[corrosion]] resistance than regular steel and is widely used because of the ease in which it is formed into various shapes. It contains 17.5–20% [[chromium]], 8–11% [[nickel]], and less than 0.08% [[carbon]], 2% [[manganese]], 1% [[silicon]], 0.045% [[phosphorus]], and 0.03% [[sulfur]].
'''SAE 304 [[stainless steel]]''', also known as '''A2 stainless steel''' (not the same as A2 [[tool steel]]) or '''18/8 stainless steel''', European norm 1.4301, is the most common stainless steel. The steel contains both [[chromium]] (usually 18%) and [[nickel]] (usually 8%) metals as the main non-[[iron]] constituents. It is an [[austenite]] steel. It is not very electrically or thermally [[conductive]], and is non-magnetic. It has a higher [[corrosion]] resistance than regular steel and is widely used because of the ease in which it is formed into various shapes. It contains 17.5–20% [[chromium]], 8–11% [[nickel]], and less than 0.08% [[carbon]], 2% [[manganese]], 1% [[silicon]], 0.045% [[phosphorus]], and 0.03% [[sulfur]].


The composition was developed by [[William Herbert Hatfield|W.H. Hatfield]] at [[Firth_Brown_Steels#Stainless_steels|Firth-Vickers]] in 1924.
The composition was developed by [[William Herbert Hatfield|W.H. Hatfield]] at [[Firth_Brown_Steels#Stainless_steels|Firth-Vickers]] in 1924.


== Corrosion resistance ==
== Corrosion resistance ==

Revision as of 11:03, 20 June 2016

SAE 304 stainless steel, also known as A2 stainless steel (not the same as A2 tool steel) or 18/8 stainless steel, European norm 1.4301, is the most common stainless steel. The steel contains both chromium (usually 18%) and nickel (usually 8%) metals as the main non-iron constituents. It is an austenite steel. It is not very electrically or thermally conductive, and is non-magnetic. It has a higher corrosion resistance than regular steel and is widely used because of the ease in which it is formed into various shapes. It contains 17.5–20% chromium, 8–11% nickel, and less than 0.08% carbon, 2% manganese, 1% silicon, 0.045% phosphorus, and 0.03% sulfur.

The composition was developed by W.H. Hatfield at Firth-Vickers in 1924 and was marketed under the trade name "Staybrite".[1]

Corrosion resistance

304 stainless steel has excellent resistance to a wide range of atmospheric environments and many corrosive media. It is subject to pitting and crevice corrosion in warm chloride environments, and to stress corrosion cracking above about 60 °C. It is considered resistant to potable water with up to about 200 mg/L chlorides at ambient temperatures, reducing to about 150 mg/L at 60 °C.

Application

304 stainless steel is used for a variety of household and industrial applications such as screws, machinery parts, car headers, and food-handling equipment. 304 stainless steel is also used in the Architectural field for exterior accents such water and fire features.

References

[1] [2] [3]

  1. ^ "Stainless Steel Fasteners". Australian Stainless Steel Development Association. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-08-13.
  2. ^ "304 Stainless Steel". TubingChina.com Stainless Steel Directory. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  3. ^ *http://www.makeitfrom.com/material-data/?for=AISI-304-SUS304-1.4301-S30400-Stainless-Steel Data sheet on SAE 304 stainless steel