Prealloyed Sintered Steels
Prealloyed sintered steels are produced from steel powders that are already alloyed, mainly with molybdenum, nickel, manganese or chromium. They are intended for medium to high-performance mechanical parts, especially when heat treatment must provide strength, hardness and wear resistance.
A family for demanding mechanical parts
Prealloyed steels are used when the required performance exceeds that of conventional carbon steels, iron-copper or iron-nickel grades. They are suitable for components subjected to higher loads, wear or demanding post-treatment requirements.
- Transmission parts and heavily loaded mechanical components
- Gears, cams, hubs, levers and functional components
- Applications requiring high strength and wear resistance
- Parts intended for heat treatment to achieve the targeted performance level
Better hardenability than admixed grades
Since the alloying elements are integrated into the powder before atomization, the particles exhibit a more homogeneous composition. This structure improves hardenability, metallurgical consistency and post-heat-treatment performance.
Application areas
This overview summarizes the typical uses of prealloyed sintered steels, with a focus on mechanical performance and industrial cost efficiency.
| Family | Typical applications | Main advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Mo / Ni-Mo prealloyed steels | Structural parts, hubs, supports, transmission components | Good balance of strength, density and heat-treatment response |
| Heat-treated prealloyed steels | Gears, cams, parts subjected to wear or repeated stress | Significant increase in strength and hardness after treatment |
| High-strength prealloyed steels | Compact mechanical parts, highly stressed technical components | High levels of bending strength and apparent hardness |
| Cr / Cr-Mo prealloyed steels | Mechanical applications requiring strength and metallurgical stability | More technical solution when performance justifies material cost |
Indicative mechanical properties
The ranges below summarize typical values for prealloyed sintered steels in SI units. They are provided for preliminary design purposes; final validation depends on density, composition, carbon content and selected heat treatment.
| Material family | Typical density | Apparent hardness | Tensile strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mo prealloyed steel | 6.70 – 7.10 g/cm³ | 60 – 73 HRB | 360 – 460 MPa |
| Heat-treated Mo prealloyed steel | 6.70 – 7.10 g/cm³ | 24 – 34 HRC | 760 – 1100 MPa |
| Mo-Ni prealloyed steel | 6.75 – 7.15 g/cm³ | 60 – 71 HRB | 360 – 460 MPa |
| Heat-treated Cr-Mo prealloyed steel | 6.75 – 7.20 g/cm³ | 29 – 39 HRC | 760 – 1070 MPa |
Economic approach to material selection
Prealloyed steels offer higher performance, but their economic benefit strongly depends on the actual stress level and on the possibility of eliminating or reducing certain secondary operations.
| Industrial requirement | Material orientation | Compromise to monitor |
|---|---|---|
| Replace an insufficient iron-copper or iron-nickel grade | Sintered Mo or Ni-Mo prealloyed steel | Strength improvement, but material cost and compaction must be monitored |
| Achieve high strength after treatment | Heat-treated prealloyed steel | Very high performance with higher process cost |
| Wear resistance or repeated loads | High-strength or Cr-Mo prealloyed steel | Relevant choice if the function justifies density and treatment |
| Technical mass-produced part with high functional value | Prealloyed steel selected according to density and treatment | Optimization required between material, tooling, treatment and service life |
Design considerations
For prealloyed steels, final density and heat treatment are critical. The selection must consider actual loads, wear, target hardness, geometry and the ability of the part to withstand treatment without excessive distortion.
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