What is the use of nm500 carbon element content
After heating, a billet is refined for several passes of rolling, then edge cutting and straightening to become a NM500 carbon element content steel plate, which is called hot rolling. Due to its high strength, good toughness, easy processing, good weldability and other excellent properties, hot rolled steel plate products are widely used in shipbuilding, automobile, bridge, construction, machinery, pressure vessel and other manufacturing industries.
NM500 carbon element content, Wear-resistant steel plate has good heat resistance:The alloy wear-resistant layer is recommended to be used under ≤600℃. If vanadium, molybdenum and other alloys are added to the alloy wear-resistant layer, it can withstand high temperature wear of ≤800℃. The recommended operating temperature is as follows: Ordinary carbon steel base plate is recommended to be used in working conditions not higher than 380℃; Low-alloy heat-resistant steel plates (15CrMo, 12Cr1MOV, etc.) substrates are recommended to be used in working conditions not higher than 540℃; The heat-resistant stainless steel substrate is recommended to be used at no higher than 800℃.
The steel such as NM500 carbon element content delivered in the hot-rolled state has a certain degree of corrosion resistance due to the high temperature, so it can be stored in the open air. However, this layer of oxide scale also makes the hot-rolled steel surface rough and the size fluctuates greatly. Therefore, the steel with smooth surface, accurate size and good mechanical properties is required to be produced by using hot-rolled semi-finished products or finished products as raw materials and then cold rolling.
The Brazil steel is facing a "crisis of demand" as the epidemic of new crown pneumonia spreads in Brazil. The demand for NM500 carbon element content and so on steel will be reduced by 50% in April. The demand for the second quarter will be 40% lower than that in the first quarter. The demand for this year will be reduced by 20% compared with the same period this year. In 2019, Brazil's apparent steel consumption was 20.6 million tons, a year-on-year decrease of 2.7%; crude steel production dropped to 32.33 million tons, the lowest since 2016 (30.2 million tons).