Product
Steel
Names
Carbon Steel; Iron-Carbon Alloy; Alloy Steel
Insight Articles
#PS770
steel iron metal steelalloy carbonsteel blastfurnace electricarcfurnace
Main Product
Ferrous Metals
Segment
Chemicals
Main-Family
Inorganics
Sub-Family
Metals
Physical State

Solid

Description

Steel is an alloy of iron and carbon, and the world's most important structural and engineering material. With annual production exceeding 1.9 billion tonnes, it is the backbone of the built environment, manufacturing, transportation, and energy infrastructure globally. Unlike pure iron, which is relatively soft, steel's properties are tuned across an enormous range through precise control of carbon content, alloying elements, and heat treatment — making it one of the most versatile materials ever developed.

Chemical Identity & Classification

Property Value
Base Metal Iron (Fe)
Primary Alloying Element Carbon (C), 0.02–2.0 wt%
Density 7.75–8.05 g/cm³ (depending on composition)
Melting Range 1,370–1,530 °C
Young's Modulus ~200 GPa
Thermal Conductivity 15–65 W/m·K
Electrical Resistivity 10–130 nΩ·m

 

Steel is technically defined as an iron-carbon alloy with carbon content between 0.02% and 2.0% by weight. Above 2.0% C, the material is classified as cast iron. Below 0.02% C, it is essentially pure iron (ferrite).

Carbon Content & Grade Classification

Carbon content is the primary determinant of steel's mechanical properties:

Classification Carbon Content Key Properties Typical Uses
Low carbon (mild steel) 0.02–0.30% C Ductile, weldable,
soft
Structural sections,
sheet, pipe, rebar
Medium carbon 0.30–0.60% C Stronger,
less ductile
Rails, axles,
gears, machinery
High carbon 0.60–1.00% C Hard, wear-
resistant, brittle
Springs, cutting
tools, wire rope
Ultra-high carbon 1.00–2.00% C Very hard,
very brittle
Specialty cutting
tools, knife blades

 

Alloying Elements

Beyond carbon, a wide range of alloying elements are added to produce alloy steels and specialty steels:

  • Manganese (Mn) — improves hardenability and tensile strength; deoxidiser
  • Chromium (Cr) — corrosion resistance; hardness; forms stainless steel (>10.5% Cr)
  • Nickel (Ni) — toughness, corrosion resistance, low-temperature performance
  • Molybdenum (Mo) — high-temperature strength; hardenability
  • Silicon (Si) — deoxidiser; electrical steels for transformers and motors
  • Vanadium (V) — grain refinement; high-strength low-alloy (HSLA) steels
  • Titanium (Ti) — grain control; interstitial-free (IF) steels
  • Boron (B) — extreme hardenability improvement at very low additions (<0.005%)
  • Tungsten (W) — high-speed tool steels; retains hardness at elevated temperatures

Steel Families

The steel industry classifies products into several broad families:

Family Description Examples
Carbon steel Fe-C only;
no significant alloying
Structural steel,
rebar, wire rod
Alloy steel Fe-C + one or more
alloying elements
High-strength structural, pressure vessels
Stainless steel ≥10.5% Cr; corrosion-resistant Austenitic (304, 316),
ferritic, martensitic, duplex
Tool steel High C + W, Mo, V, Cr; extreme hardness Cutting tools, dies,
moulds
Electrical steel Si-alloyed; low
hysteresis loss
Transformer cores,
motor laminations
High-strength low-alloy (HSLA) Low C + microalloying elements Automotive, pipelines, offshore structures
Advanced high-strength steel (AHSS) Complex microstructures; very high strength Automotive body panels, crash structures

 

Production Routes

Steel is produced by two principal routes:

Blast Furnace — Basic Oxygen Furnace (BF-BOF) — ~70% of global output:

  • Pig iron from the blast furnace (~4% C) is charged into a BOF converter
  • High-purity oxygen is blown at supersonic speed through the molten metal
  • Carbon is oxidised to CO/CO₂, reducing C content to <0.1% in ~20 minutes
  • Alloying elements are added at tapping to achieve the target composition
  • Steel is cast into slabs, billets, or blooms via continuous casting

Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) — ~30% of global output:

  • Steel scrap and/or DRI is melted by high-current electric arcs
  • Refining is performed in the ladle furnace (secondary metallurgy)
  • More flexible than BOF; lower capital cost; lower CO₂ when using renewable electricity
  • Dominant route for long products (rebar, sections, wire rod)

Heat Treatment

Steel's properties are profoundly altered by heat treatment, exploiting the α↔γ iron allotropic transformation at 912°C:

  • Annealing — slow cooling; softens steel; improves machinability
  • Normalising — air cooling; refines grain structure
  • Quenching — rapid cooling (water/oil); produces martensite; maximises hardness
  • Tempering — reheating quenched steel; reduces brittleness while retaining hardness
  • Case hardening (carburising/nitriding) — hard surface layer on tough core

Key Industrial Applications

Steel's combination of strength, ductility, weldability, formability, and low cost makes it irreplaceable across virtually every industrial sector:

  • Construction — structural sections (beams, columns), rebar, roofing, cladding, pipelines
  • Automotive — body panels, chassis, crash structures, suspension (largest single end-use sector)
  • Machinery & equipment — shafts, gears, pressure vessels, machine frames
  • Energy — oil & gas pipelines (line pipe), wind turbine towers, power plant components
  • Packaging — tinplate and tin-free steel for food and beverage cans
  • Railways — rails, wheels, axles, rolling stock
  • Shipbuilding — hull plates, structural members
  • Appliances — white goods casings and internal components

Global Production & Trade

China dominates global steel production, accounting for approximately 54% of world output (~1.0 billion tonnes/yr), followed by India (~140 Mt), Japan (~90 Mt), the USA (~80 Mt), and Russia (~70 Mt). The global steel market is valued at over USD 900 billion annually. Steel is the world's most recycled material — globally, approximately 630 million tonnes of steel scrap are recycled each year, with a theoretical infinite recyclability without degradation of properties.

Relationship to Iron

Steel is produced from iron — either from pig iron (BF-BOF route) or direct reduced iron (EAF route). The transformation from iron to steel consists essentially of removing excess carbon and other impurities, and adding precise alloying elements to achieve target properties.

 

References

  1.  Andre, National Material Company (Jun 15, 2020). Steel Breakdown: Types, Classifications, and Numbering Systems
  2. wordsteel (May 21, 2025). World Steel in Figures 2025
  3. Wikipedia. Steel (Page version Feb 20, 2026)
  4. Scott T., H&K Fabrication (Aug 7, 2023). Steel Grading: Understanding the Types of Steel Grades
  5. Grand View Research. Report GVR-4-68040-508-5: Alloy Steel Market (2025 - 2030)
  6. Zion Market Research. Report ZMR-7701: Alloy Steel Market Size, Share, Growth Analysis Report - Forecast 2034 (Sep 2005)
  7. wordsteel (Mar 2023). Fact sheet: Steel and raw materials

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Clockwise from top left: steel casting, pipeline, cookware, rebar, car body, building structure | Various sources
Identifiers

logo CAS Number
12597-69-2
Chemical Data

Chemical Formula

Fe-C (variable)

Melting Point (°C)
1450
Sulfur Content (wt%)
0
Specific Gravity
7.90
Crude Data

API Gravity
-113.59
Country
Product Settings

Default
Status
A
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Transaction Name Date
Modified by UserPic   Kokel, Nicolas 3/1/2026 12:49 PM
Added by UserPic   Kokel, Nicolas 3/1/2026 9:16 AM