FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to high-carbon steel wire rod of high post-hot-rolling ductility
having a metallographic structure mainly of pearlite. Specifically, this invention
relates to piano wire or high-carbon steel wire complying with JIS, more particularly
to hot-rolled wire of high-carbon steel that, as the final product steel wire, is
a fine wire of a diameter of around 0.1 to 2 mm usable, for example, in steel cord,
saw wire, hose wire, fine rope and the like.
DESCRIPTION OF THE RELATED ART
[0002] Steel cords and other reinforcing wires used to reinforce rubber products such as
tires, conveyor belts and heavy-duty hoses are manufactured from high-carbon steel
wire rods. The high-carbon steel wire rods are manufactured by hot rolling, followed
by descaling and then borax coating or Bonde coating to provide a carrier coating,
whereafter processing to a steel wire of 0.8 to 1.2 mm is optionally conducted by
use of intermediate patenting. As termed with respect to the present invention, the
hot-rolled steels are called "wire rods" and the steels of smaller diameter than the
hot-rolled steels fabricated by subsequent processing are called "steel wires."
[0003] When the steel wires are to be used for steel cord, the patenting is followed by
brass plating and then further drawing to steel wires of 0.15 to 0.35 mm diameter,
whereafter the wires are stranded into steel cord that is embedded in a rubber product
for use. Research is being continued on, for example, improvement of workability in
the secondary processing step and improvement of the abrasion property of the drawing
dice.
[0004] Japanese Patent Publication (A) No.
H3-60900, for example, teaches a wire rod whose C content is 0.59 to 0.86%, tensile strength
is 87.5 x C equivalent + 27 ± 2 (kg/mm
2) (C equivalent = C + Mn/5), and area accounted for by coarse pearlite in the wire
rod metallographic structure as measured under a microscope at x500 is adjusted to
-60 x C equivalent + 69.5 ± 3 (%). This wire rod is directed to enabling the drawing
dice to have excellent service life and increases dice service life by specifying
tensile strength and controlling the volume fraction of coarse pearlite to within
a certain range. Although this patent publication focuses on coarse pearlite structure
with an eye to improving drawing dice service life, it teaches nothing whatsoever
regarding relationship with the cause of breakage after direct drawing, which is the
issue dealt with by the present invention.
[0005] Japanese Patent Publication (A) No.
2000-6810 teaches a high-carbon steel wire rod excellent in wire drawability wherein 90% or
greater of the metallographic structure is pearlite structure, and the pearlite has
an average lamellar spacing of 0.1 to 0.4 µm and an average colony diameter of 150
µm or less. The fact is, however, that the colony diameter obtained by ordinary hot
rolling is smaller than 150 µm, and an improvement in breakage property cannot necessarily
be expected because the ductility obtained when the colony diameter is controlled
to 150 µm or less is inconsistent.
[0006] Japanese Patent No.
3681712 teaches a high-carbon steel wire rod excellent in drawability wherein 95% or greater
of the wire rod metallographic structure is pearlite structure, the pearlite has an
average nodule diameter (P) of 30 µm or less and an average lamellar spacing (S) of
100 nm or greater, and the value of F obtained by the equation

is F > 0, where P is represented in µm and S in nm.
[0007] The invention taught by this patent publication controls the lamellar spacing and
nodule size by incorporating a cooling process for isothermal holding during Stelmor
cooling at the time of hot rolling. However, in ordinary Stelmor cooling the cooling
is continuous, so that the range of lamellar spacing values is wide and the range
of nodule size values also becomes wide. In such a case, good workability cannot be
obtained no matter how small the average values are made, and what is more, a problem
of attendant internal defects arises. Moreover, the patented invention is directed
to obtaining a wire rod excellent in high-speed drawability by varying the cooling
conditions after wire rod rolling so as to adjust the structure into the range of
F defined by the foregoing equation. This is problematic, however, because bringing
the structure into the range of the equation requires use of special heat treatment
that is generally difficult to implement.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] Owing to the importance of good economy in secondary processing, recent years have
seen an increasing need for the development of wire rod that resists occurrence of
internal defects during drawing and wire rod that even when processed with a relatively
large amount of working during primary drawing does not experience an increase in
breakage thereafter.
[0009] The present invention relates to high-carbon steel wire rod utilized as piano wire
rod, hard steel wire rod and the like for use in finely drawn applications such as
steel cord, belt cord, rubber hose wire, rope wire and the like, and in light of the
foregoing circumstances, provides high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility that
is excellent in post-hot-rolling drawability, resists occurrence of internal defects
at the time of drawing, and enables omission of intermediate patenting.
[0010] The inventors achieved the present invention based on the results of in-depth research
regarding pearlite structure hot-rolled wire rod whose secondary processability is
unaffected by omission of intermediate patenting. A summary of the invention follows:
- 1) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility, which is a high-carbon steel wire
rod having a carbon content of 0.7 mass% or greater, wherein 95% or greater of the
wire rod metallographic structure is pearlite structure and maximum pearlite block
size at a core of a cross-section perpendicular to the wire rod axis is 65 µm or less.
- 2) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to 1), having a tensile
strength in a range of {248 + 980 x (C mass%)} ± 40 MPa} and a reduction of area of
{72.8 - 40 x (C mass%) %} or greater.
- 3) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to 1) or 2), wherein an
average pearlite block size at the core of the cross-section perpendicular to the
wire rod axis is 10 µm or greater and 30 µm or less.
- 4) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to any of 1) to 3), wherein
the wire rod metallographic structure includes pro-eutectoid ferrite at a volume percentage
of 2% or less.
- 5) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to any of 1) to 4), wherein
the wire rod comprises, in mass%, C: 0.7 to 1.1%, Si: 0.1 to 1.0%, Mn: 0.1 to 1.0%,
P: 0.02% or less, S: 0.02% or less, and a balance of Fe and unavoidable impurities.
- 6) A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to 5), wherein the wire
rod further comprises, in mass%, one or more of Cr: 0.05 to 1.0%, Mo: 0.05 to 1.0%,
Cu: 0.05 to 1.0%, Ni: 0.05 to 1.0%, V: 0.001 to 0.1%, Nb: 0.001 to 0.1%, Ti: 0.005
to 0.1%, B: 0.0005 to 0.006%, O: 18 to 30 ppm, and N: 0 to 40 ppm.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
FIG. 1 shows correspondence between (a) cracks occurring during drawing in the case
of conducting ordinary Stelmor processing and (b) pearlite block size.
FIG. 2 is shows change in pearlite block size between the surface and core of a rolled
wire rod.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The inventors discovered that when steel wire is drawn from wire rod to a wire diameter
at which final patenting is conducted without conducting intermediate patenting, the
steel wire may at first sight appear not to decline in ductility with increasing amount
of working, but defects nevertheless occur internally and are promoted during the
ensuing patenting and the drawing thereafter, sometimes leading to breakage.
[0013] Also in the case where severe working (i.e., working in terms of true strain equal
to or exceeding 2) is conducted during primary drawing, it is necessary to ensure
that the patenting and other ensuing processes are not affected by controlling the
wire rod metallographic structure so as to prevent occurrence of internal defects
in primary drawing to the utmost, and also to conduct primary drawing that minimizes
occurrence of defects.
[0014] The inventors observed the internal defect sites after primary drawing and studied
the associated conditions, which are complexly affected by numerous factors such as
the mechanical properties, processing conditions and wire rod structure. As a result,
they discovered that among these conditions, it is the pearlite block size of the
pearlite structure at the core of the wire rod, as measured with an EBSP (Electron
Back Scatter Pattern) analyzer, that characterizes the structure readily experiencing
internal defects. A measurement method using an ordinary light microscope cannot accurately
ascertain the pearlite block size and therefore does not enable determination of the
structure that impairs workability. An EBSP analyzer must therefore be used to measure
the pearlite block size.
[0015] Pearlite block size was measured with a system using a TSL (TexSEM Laboratories)
EBSP analysis unit in combination with a Hitachi thermal FE-SEM (model S-4300SE).
The pearlite block was measured with the EBSP analyzer as the region with the same
ferrite crystal orientation, in accordance with the definition given by
Takahashi et al. in The Journal of the Japan Institute of Metals, Vol. 42 (1978),
p702. Since measurement using the structure observed with a light microscope or the secondary
electron image obtained by SEM observation was found to be extremely difficult, the
pearlite block size was determined from the ferrite crystal orientation map obtained
by EBSP analysis. Differently from in the ferrite single phase of low-carbon steel,
countless small angle boundaries are present in the ferrite crystal grains of pearlite
steel, even after patenting.
[0016] An investigation was therefore made regarding an appropriate threshold angle above
which the grain boundaries that have an orientation difference of 15 degrees or greater
and can be recognized as ordinary crystal grain boundaries account for around 90%
or greater of all grain boundaries. The best results were obtained when the grain
boundaries were defined as those obtained using a boundary orientation difference
of 9 degrees or greater. Units constituted by boundaries having orientation differences
of 9 degrees or greater were therefore defined as pearlite block grains.
[0017] Through an extensive study of ways to control the pearlite block size, the inventors
discovered that occurrence of coarse pearlite blocks can be prevented by control of
oxygen amount along with control of post-rolling finish-rolling temperature so as
to carry out Stelmor cooling with the γ grain size in a granulated state on the finish
rolling exit side. When the γ grains are of mixed grain size, pearlite transformation
occurs more readily at small γ grain regions, in which case the pearlite transformation
nuclei are present heterogeneously, so that pearlite blocks grow easily to make the
grain size large.
[0018] In order to make the γ grain size after finish rolling small, the steel is required
to have an oxygen content of 18 ppm or greater, preferably 20 ppm or greater. However,
increasing oxygen content increases the amount of inclusions and causes formation
of large inclusions. As this degrades ductility, the upper limit of oxygen content
is defined as 30 ppm.
[0019] When ordinary continuous cooling is used, the pearlite block size varies from the
surface layer toward the center of the wire rod. And, as shown in FIG. 2, the pearlite
block size varies at locations outward from the center also in the case where the
ordinary Stelmor cooling process is conducted. In FIG. 2, each pearlite block size
shown is the average of values measured at eight locations. Since the pearlite block
size at the core differs greatly even when the average value is the same, the inventors
studied what criteria should be used for the control in the case of continuous cooling.
They learned that the pearlite lamellae are also coarse at the core region where the
pearlite block size is large and that the coarse pearlite portions become starting
points of breakage during drawing. Therefore, in order not to leave any defects following
primary drawing, it is necessary to control the maximum value of the pearlite block
size to 65 µm or less. An investigation of the relationship between the pearlite block
size and the breakage index of the final drawn wire showed that making the pearlite
block size at the core 65 µm or less improves drawability and enables reduction of
wire breakage in the ensuing drawing process.
[0020] The reasoning behind specification of the average value of the pearlite block grains
will now be explained. Owing to the use of continuous cooling, the pearlite block
grains are present in a mixture of sizes. If the average pearlite block size is determined
by simple averaging based on the measurement of pearlite block size made in this mixed
condition, the numerous small pearlite blocks present will make the average value
so small that it does not reflect the breakage property. The Johnson-Saltykov method
of calculating the average diameter of particle groups of mixed particle size was
therefore used to determine the average value of the obtained pearlite block size
as the average of values at 8 sites in each of the wire rod surface layer, 1/4 diameter
region and core region (1/2 diameter region), i.e., at a total of 24 sites. Details
regarding the
Johnson-Saltykov method can be found in Quantitative Microscopy, R.T. DeHoff and F.N.
Rhines, Ed., McGraw Hill Publishers, New York, NY, 1968, p169.
[0021] When the obtained average value is 10 µm or less, achievement of pearlite structure
of 95% or greater is difficult and the volume percentage of ferrite in the pearlite
structure becomes 2% or greater. The average pearlite block size therefore needs to
be made 10 µm or greater. Moreover, if the average value exceeds 30 µm, the probability
of coarse blocks being included is very high in the case of continuous cooling, so
that the average must be controlled to 30 µm or less.
[0022] At a tensile strength of less than {248 + 980 x (C mass%) - 40 MPa}, the lamellar
spacing of the pearlite structure becomes so large as to make attainment of good workability
impossible. The tensile strength must therefore be controlled to not less than {248
+ 980 x (C mass%) - 40 MPa}. At a tensile strength of greater than {248 + 980 x (C
mass%) + 40 MPa}, large work hardening makes post-drawing strength high so that ductility
declines. The tensile strength must therefore be controlled to not greater than {248
+ 980 x (C mass%) + 40 MPa}.
[0023] Reduction of area is preferably controlled to not less than {72.8 - 40 x (C mass%)}.
At a reduction of area of less than 40%, internal defects occur readily during wire
drawing. In order to keep the reduction of area from falling below 40%, the volume
fraction of pro-eutectoid ferrite observed inside the wire rod obtained by Stelmor
cooling is controlled to 2% or less. When present at a volume fraction exceeding 2%,
the pro-eutectoid ferrite tends to act as starting points of internal defects during
drawing and as starting points of internal defects during tensile testing. Pro-eutectoid
ferrite is therefore controlled to 2% or less. Pro-eutectoid ferrite becomes a problem
in the carbon content region below 0.85 mass%. In the carbon content region of 0.85
mass% and greater, pro-eutectoid ferrite is generally held to 2% or less owing to
the presence of abundant carbon content.
[0024] The reasons for limiting the components of the steel of the high-carbon steel wire
rod according to the present invention will now be explained. All contents are expressed
in mass%.
[0025] C is an element that effectively enhances strength. For obtaining a high-strength
steel wire, C content must be made 0.7% or greater. However, when C content is excessive,
ductility tends to be lowered by ready precipitation of pro-eutectoid cementite. The
upper limit of C content is therefore specified as 1.1%.
[0026] Si is an element required for deoxidation of the steel. Since the deoxidation effect
is insufficient at too low a content, Si is added to a content of 0.1% or greater.
Moreover, Si increases post-patenting strength by dissolving into the ferrite phase
in the pearlite formed after heat treatment. But it also impairs heat treatability.
It is therefore kept to a content of 1.0% or less.
[0027] P easily segregates and P concentrating at the segregation sites dissolves into the
ferrite to lower workability. P content is therefore controlled to 0.02% or less.
[0028] S, if contained in a large amount, lowers the ductility of the steel by forming much
MnS. It is therefore controlled to a content of 0.02% or less.
[0029] Mn is added to a content of 0.1% or greater in order to impart hardenability to the
steel. However, heavy addition of Mn excessively prolongs transformation time during
patenting. Addition is therefore limited to 1.0% or less.
[0030] Cr is added to enhance steel strength. When included, it is added to a content at
which this effect is exhibited, namely to a content of 0.05% or greater, and to a
content of 1.0% or less, namely to a content that does not give rise to a decrease
in steel wire ductility.
[0031] Mo is added to enhance steel strength. When included, it is added to a content at
which this effect is exhibited, namely to a content of 0.05% or greater, and to a
content of 1.0% or less, namely to a content that does not give rise to a decrease
in steel wire ductility.
[0032] Cu is added to enhance corrosion resistance and corrosion fatigue property. When
included, it is added to a content at which these effects are manifested, namely to
a content of 0.05% or greater. However, heavy addition tends to cause brittleness
during hot rolling, so the upper limit is defined as 1.0%.
[0033] Ni has an effect of increasing steel strength. When included, it is added to a content
at which the effect of addition is manifested, namely to a content of 0.05% or greater.
However, since excessive addition lowers ductility, Ni content is held to 1.0% or
less.
[0034] V has an effect of increasing steel strength. When included, it is added to a content
at which the effect of addition is manifested, namely to a content of 0.001% or greater.
However, excessive addition lowers ductility, so the upper limit is defined as 0.1%.
[0035] Nb has an effect of increasing steel strength. When included, it is added to a content
at which the effect of addition is manifested, namely to a content of 0.001% or greater.
However, excessive addition lowers ductility, so the upper limit is defined as 0.1%.
[0036] B has an effect of refining γ grain size during austenitization, and by this, of
improving reduction and other ductility properties. Therefore, when included, B is
added to a content at which its effect is manifested, namely to a content of 0.0005%
or greater. However, addition to a content exceeding 0.006% makes the transformation
time at the time that transformation is effected by heat treatment too long. The upper
limit of B content is therefore defined as 0.006%.
[0037] As the production method for obtaining the high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility
according to the present invention, it is preferable in hot rolling a billet having
the aforesaid chemical composition to conduct the hot rolling at a hot finish temperature
of 800 °C or greater and 1050 °C or less, then carry out coiling at 800 to 830 °C
within 10 seconds, and thereafter conduct Stelmor cooling or direct patenting by immersion
in 500 to 570 °C molten salt.
EXAMPLES
[0038] The chemical compositions of specimen steels used in prototyping are shown Table
1. Steels No. 1 to No. 18 are of compositions controlled in accordance with the invention.
Steels No. 19 and No. 20 are Comparative Steels. Comparative Steel 19 is lower in
oxygen content than the Invention Steels and Comparative Steel 20 is higher in oxygen
content than the Invention Steels.
[0039] The steels were prepared in a full-scale furnace to have the compositions shown in
Table 2 and continuously cast into bloom of 500 x 300 mm cross-sectional dimensions.
The bloom was thereafter reheated and rolled with a billeting mill to obtain a 122
mm-square billet. The steel was then reheated to the γ region, hot rolled to 5.5 mm-diameter
wire rod, finish rolled, controlled to a coiling temperature of 850 to 900 °C in 10
seconds, and continuously subjected to Stelmor cooling divided into four zones. The
wire rod manufacturing conditions are shown in Table 2. Table 2 also shows the mechanical
properties and the maximum and average values of the measured pearlite block sizes
of the wire rods obtained under the manufacturing conditions shown in the same Table.
[0040] Wire rods No. 1, No. 2 and, No. 6 to No. 21 in Table 2 were manufactured in accordance
with the invention. Wire rods No. 3 to No. 5, No. 22 and No. 23 were manufactured
for comparison.
[0041] In Table 2, the symbol ○ indicates that when, for the purpose of investigating primary
drawability, the wire rod was drawn from the diameter of 5.5 mm to a diameter of 1.0
mm with the die approach angle at 20 degrees, neither breakage nor abnormality in
the tensile tests conducted at the individual passes occurred. In addition, for the
purpose of investigating secondary drawability, the wire rod was drawn from the diameter
of 5.5 mm to a diameter of 1.56 mm, brass plated and further drawn from the diameter
of 1.56 mm to a diameter of 0.2 mm, whereafter the 0.2 mm-diameter wire was subjected
to drawing under a weight of 100 kg or greater to determine the wire breakage index.
When the wire breakage index was good, it was designated by the symbol ○. In Table
2, the symbol X indicates that the result for the item concerned was unsatisfactory.
[0042] The invention wire rods No. 1, No. 2, and No. 6 to No. 21 exhibited good results
for both primary drawability and secondary drawability.
[0043] Comparative wire rod No. 3, made with a comparative steel, had a maximum pearlite
block size value exceeding 65 µm owing to the high finishing temperature and therefore
exhibited poor results for both primary drawability and secondary drawability.
[0044] Comparative wire rod No. 4 had a maximum pearlite block size value exceeding 65 µm
owing to the high coiling temperature and therefore exhibited poor results for both
primary drawability and secondary drawability.
[0045] Comparative wire rod No. 5 had a tensile strength (TS) below the invention range
because the air flow in Stelmor cooling was at a moderate level. In this case, too,
poor results were exhibited for both primary drawability and secondary drawability.
[0046] Comparative wire rod No. 22 was made of a steel of a chemical composition whose oxygen
content was below the invention range. The maximum value of the pearlite block size
at the core region of the wire rod was greater than that defined by the invention.
[0047] Comparative wire rod No. 23 was made of a steel of a chemical composition whose oxygen
content was below the invention range. Although the maximum value of the pearlite
block size at the core region of the wire rod met the requirement of the invention,
the total amount of inclusions was large owing to the high oxygen content and the
secondary drawability was therefore low.
Table 1
| Steel No. |
C |
Si |
Mn |
P |
S |
Cr |
N |
O |
Other |
Remark |
| 1 |
0.72 |
0.19 |
0.49 |
0.010 |
0.009 |
- |
21 |
23 |
|
Invention |
| 2 |
0.82 |
0.18 |
0.51 |
0.010 |
0.007 |
- |
21 |
24 |
- |
Invention |
| 3 |
0.92 |
0.19 |
0.51 |
0.008 |
0.008 |
- |
19 |
23 |
- |
Invention |
| 4 |
0.92 |
0.19 |
0.31 |
0.009 |
0.009 |
0.21 |
19 |
24 |
- |
Invention |
| 5 |
0.96 |
0.19 |
0.31 |
0.008 |
0.009 |
0.22 |
20 |
22 |
- |
Invention |
| 6 |
1.02 |
0.19 |
0.31 |
0.009 |
0.009 |
0.19 |
19 |
23 |
- |
Invention |
| 7 |
0.92 |
0.90 |
0.32 |
0.009 |
0.008 |
0.19 |
29 |
21 |
B:0.002 |
Invention |
| 8 |
1.02 |
0.90 |
0.60 |
0.009 |
0.009 |
0.1 |
29 |
23 |
- |
Invention |
| 9 |
1.02 |
0.90 |
0.32 |
0.009 |
0.009 |
0.1 |
34 |
23 |
Mg:0.05,B:0.0025 |
Invention |
| 10 |
0.82 |
0.19 |
0.21 |
0.010 |
0.008 |
- |
26 |
28 |
Mo:0.1 |
Invention |
| 11 |
0.82 |
0.20 |
0.49 |
0.011 |
0.008 |
- |
24 |
18 |
Cu:0.1 |
Invention |
| 12 |
0.82 |
0.20 |
0.48 |
0.009 |
0.007 |
- |
23 |
22 |
Ni:0.1 |
Invention |
| 13 |
0.82 |
0.21 |
0.49 |
0.009 |
0.006 |
- |
26 |
24 |
V:0.07 |
Invention |
| 14 |
0.82 |
0.19 |
0.49 |
0.009 |
0.005 |
- |
28 |
26 |
Nb:0.05 |
Invention |
| 15 |
0.82 |
0.19 |
0.49 |
0.015 |
0.004 |
- |
21 |
25 |
- |
Invention |
| 16 |
0.82 |
0.20 |
0.30 |
0.010 |
0.008 |
0.15 |
34 |
25 |
V:0.07,B:0.002 |
Invention |
| 17 |
0.82 |
0.19 |
0.50 |
0.010 |
0.009 |
- |
22 |
23 |
Ti:0.002,B:0.002 |
Invention |
| 18 |
0.82 |
0.20 |
0.55 |
0.012 |
0.008 |
- |
21 |
22 |
- |
Invention |
| 19 |
0.82 |
0.21 |
0.30 |
0.009 |
0.008 |
- |
38 |
17 |
- |
Comparative |
| 20 |
0.82 |
0.20 |
0.32 |
0.010 |
0.008 |
- |
23 |
45 |
- |
Comparative |
Table 2
| Wire Rod No. |
Steel No. (see Table 1) |
Finishing temp (°C) |
Coiling temp (°C) |
Air flow (Stelmor vane opening) |
TS (MPa) |
RA (%) |
Max pearlite block size (µm) |
Average pearlite block size (µm) |
Primary drawing |
Secondary drawing |
Remark |
| 1 |
1 |
1048 |
890 |
All-100 |
1020 |
46 |
54 |
28 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 2 |
2 |
1045 |
880 |
All-100 |
1032 |
44 |
58 |
29 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 3 |
2 |
1120 |
890 |
All-100 |
1032 |
42 |
67 |
26 |
× |
× |
Comparative |
| 4 |
2 |
1052 |
900 |
All-100 |
1101 |
41 |
67 |
27 |
× |
× |
Comparative |
| 5 |
2 |
1049 |
890 |
50-50-100-100 |
1018 |
38 |
78 |
36 |
× |
× |
Comparative |
| 6 |
3 |
1038 |
880 |
All-100 |
1124 |
39 |
43 |
23 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 7 |
4 |
1040 |
880 |
All-100 |
1132 |
38 |
54 |
25 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 8 |
5 |
1065 |
880 |
All-100 |
1190 |
36 |
57 |
28 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 9 |
6 |
1043 |
880 |
All-100 |
1220 |
34 |
58 |
26 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 10 |
7 |
1066 |
880 |
All-100 |
1116 |
38 |
62 |
25 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 11 |
8 |
1059 |
880 |
All-100 |
1215 |
37 |
61 |
25 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 12 |
9 |
1072 |
880 |
All-100 |
1253 |
36 |
64 |
26 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 13 |
10 |
1041 |
880 |
All-100 |
1063 |
43 |
56 |
27 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 14 |
11 |
1062 |
880 |
All-100 |
1074 |
44 |
59 |
28 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 15 |
12 |
1053 |
880 |
All-100 |
1076 |
42 |
58 |
24 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 16 |
13 |
1052 |
880 |
All-100 |
1058 |
41 |
57 |
25 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 17 |
14 |
1063 |
880 |
All-100 |
1062 |
41 |
62 |
24 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 18 |
15 |
1037 |
880 |
All-100 |
1088 |
45 |
63 |
27 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 19 |
16 |
1039 |
880 |
All-100 |
1087 |
43 |
61 |
26 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 20 |
17 |
1047 |
880 |
All-100 |
1071 |
44 |
57 |
26 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 21 |
18 |
1061 |
880 |
All-100 |
1066 |
43 |
54 |
28 |
○ |
○ |
Invention |
| 22 |
19 |
1054 |
880 |
All-100 |
1054 |
41 |
72 |
31 |
× |
× |
Comparative |
| 23 |
20 |
1067 |
880 |
All-100 |
1076 |
39 |
66 |
28 |
○ |
× |
Comparative |
[0048] The high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to the present invention
enables manufacture of excellent extra fine wire of high fatigue strength that is
capable of reducing the weight and prolonging the service life of rubber products.
1. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility, which is a high-carbon steel wire
rod having a carbon content of 0.7 mass% or greater, wherein 95% or greater of the
wire rod metallographic structure is pearlite structure and maximum pearlite block
size at a core of a cross-section perpendicular to the wire rod axis is 65 µm or less.
2. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to claim 1, having a tensile
strength in a range of {248 + 980 x (C mass%)} ± 40 MPa} and a reduction of area of
{72.8 - 40 x (C mass%) %} or greater.
3. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to claim 1 or 2, wherein
an average pearlite block size at the core of the cross-section perpendicular to the
wire rod axis is 10 µm or greater and 30 µm or less.
4. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to any of claims 1 to 3,
wherein the wire rod metallographic structure includes pro-eutectoid ferrite at a
volume percentage of 2% or less.
5. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to any of claims 1 to 4,
wherein the wire rod comprises, in mass%, C: 0.7 to 1.1%, Si: 0.1 to 1.0%, Mn: 0.1
to 1.0%, P: 0.02% or less, S: 0.02% or less, and a balance of Fe and unavoidable impurities.
6. A high-carbon steel wire rod of high ductility according to claim 5, wherein the wire
rod further comprises, in mass%, one or more of Cr: 0.05 to 1.0%, Mo: 0.05 to 1.0%,
Cu: 0.05 to 1.0%, Ni: 0.05 to 1.0%, V: 0.001 to 0.1%, Nb: 0.001 to 0.1%, Ti: 0.005
to 0.1%, B: 0.0005 to 0.006%, O: 18 to 30 ppm, and N: 0 to 40 ppm.