GRoberts
Materials
- Apr 22, 2002
- 548
I don't know for sure where the equations came from, but the ones we have apparently used here for a while that seem to work good on a variety of steel alloys are: (temperature in F)
Ac1 = 1333+40Si-25Mn-26Ni+42Cr
Ac3 = 1570-323C-25Nn+80Si-32Ni-3Cr
Ms = 1042-853C-60Mn-30Cr-30Ni-38Mo
Mf = Ms-483
Grampi1 in an earlier post provided a very interesting link that had some equations on a Nippon steel website as follows: (temperature in C)
Ac1=750.8-26.6C+17.6Si-11.6Mn-22.9Cu-23Ni+24.1Cr+22.5Mo-39.7V-5.7Ti+232.4Nb-169.4Al-894.7B
Ac3=937.2-436.5C+56Si-19.7Mn-16.3Cu-26.6Ni-4.9Cr+38.1Mo+124.8V+136.3Ti-19.1Nb+198.4Al+3315B
Ms=521-353C-22Si-24.3Mn-7.7Cu-17.3Ni-17.7Cr-25.8Mo
The two sets of equations get somewhat different results in some leaner low alloy steels, but not as significant differences for some higher alloy (but still low alloy) steels. The Nippon steel equations do not seem to work for Martinsitic stainless steels either.
So the question is, which equations are best for which types of alloys? Are there other equations that work better for a particular alloy family? Does anyone know where the first set of equations originated and what range of composition they were intended to be used for?
Ac1 = 1333+40Si-25Mn-26Ni+42Cr
Ac3 = 1570-323C-25Nn+80Si-32Ni-3Cr
Ms = 1042-853C-60Mn-30Cr-30Ni-38Mo
Mf = Ms-483
Grampi1 in an earlier post provided a very interesting link that had some equations on a Nippon steel website as follows: (temperature in C)
Ac1=750.8-26.6C+17.6Si-11.6Mn-22.9Cu-23Ni+24.1Cr+22.5Mo-39.7V-5.7Ti+232.4Nb-169.4Al-894.7B
Ac3=937.2-436.5C+56Si-19.7Mn-16.3Cu-26.6Ni-4.9Cr+38.1Mo+124.8V+136.3Ti-19.1Nb+198.4Al+3315B
Ms=521-353C-22Si-24.3Mn-7.7Cu-17.3Ni-17.7Cr-25.8Mo
The two sets of equations get somewhat different results in some leaner low alloy steels, but not as significant differences for some higher alloy (but still low alloy) steels. The Nippon steel equations do not seem to work for Martinsitic stainless steels either.
So the question is, which equations are best for which types of alloys? Are there other equations that work better for a particular alloy family? Does anyone know where the first set of equations originated and what range of composition they were intended to be used for?