I. Four Main Types of Carbon Steel
Based on carbon content and performance characteristics, carbon steel can generally be divided into the following four categories:
Low Carbon Steel
Medium Carbon Steel
High Carbon Steel
Alloy Carbon Steel
II. Low Carbon Steel (C ≤ 0.25%)
- Characteristics
Low carbon content, good toughness and ductility
Strong weldability, easy to process and form
Low hardness, difficult to quench to increase strength - Typical Applications
Construction steel (e.g., reinforcing bars, structural components)
Welded pipes, thin plates, automotive parts
General mechanical parts
III. Medium Carbon Steel (C = 0.25–0.55%)
- Characteristics
Moderate strength and hardness, better toughness than high carbon steel
Mechanical properties can be adjusted through heat treatment (normalizing, quenching and tempering)
Suitable for mechanical structural components subjected to medium loads - Typical Applications
Mechanical parts (gears, shafts, connecting rods)
Medium-pressure pipelines, structural components
Automotive chassis and wheel hubs
IV. High Carbon Steel (C = 0.55–1.0%)
- Characteristics
High hardness and strength
Poor toughness and weldability
Brittle, usually requiring heat treatment or surface treatment - Typical Applications
High-strength tools (cutting tools, stamping dies, springs)
High-load mechanical parts
Special structural components
V. Alloy Carbon Steel
- Characteristics
Carbon steel with the addition of one or more alloying elements (such as Cr, Ni, Mo, V)
Improved wear resistance, corrosion resistance, toughness, and strength
Chemical composition can be adjusted according to requirements - Typical Applications
High-pressure boiler tubes, oil and gas pipelines
Shipbuilding, automotive, machinery
Corrosion-resistant and high-temperature applications
VI. Comparison of the main differences among the four types of carbon steel
| Type | Carbon Content | Strength | Toughness | Weldability | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Carbon Steel | ≤ 0.25% | Low | High | Good | Construction, Pipelines, Automotive Parts |
| Medium Carbon Steel | 0.25–0.55% | Medium | Medium | Moderate | Machinery Components, Medium-Pressure Pipes |
| High Carbon Steel | 0.55–1.0% | High | Low | Poor | Tools, Dies, High-Load Components |
| Alloy Carbon Steel | 0.2–1.0% + Alloying Elements | High | High | Controllable | High-Pressure Pipes, Corrosion-Resistant Components |
VII. How to choose the appropriate type of carbon steel
i. Define usage requirements
- Mechanical Strength and Load Requirements:
High strength, high load → High carbon steel or alloy carbon steel
Medium strength → Medium carbon steel
Ordinary structure or low load → Low carbon steel - Toughness and Ductility:
Requires bending, stretching, or welding → Low carbon steel or medium carbon steel
Low toughness requirements but high hardness → High carbon steel - Processing Methods:
Hot working (hot rolling, forging) → Low carbon steel and medium carbon steel
Cold working (cold drawing, precision machining) → Cold-drawn medium carbon steel
High welding requirements → Low carbon steel or alloy carbon steel - Environmental Conditions:
High temperature, high pressure → Alloy carbon steel or medium carbon steel
Corrosive environment → Corrosion-resistant carbon steel containing alloying elements
ii. Select according to carbon steel type
| Carbon Steel Type | Key Characteristics | Recommended Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Low Carbon Steel | High toughness, good weldability, low hardness | Structural construction, welded pipelines, automotive parts |
| Medium Carbon Steel | Balanced strength and toughness, heat-treatable | Machinery components, medium-pressure pipelines, automotive chassis |
| High Carbon Steel | High hardness and strength, low toughness, poor weldability | Tools, dies, high-load mechanical components |
| Alloy Carbon Steel | High strength, good toughness, corrosion and wear resistance | High-pressure boiler tubes, oil and gas pipelines, corrosion-resistant components |
iii. Considering Cost and Economy
- Low Carbon Steel
Low cost, easy to process, and widely applicable; the most commonly used type of carbon steel. - Medium Carbon Steel
Moderate cost; performance can be improved through heat treatment; suitable for parts requiring high strength. - High Carbon Steel
Slightly higher cost; more difficult to process; suitable for special high-strength tools or machine parts. - Alloy Carbon Steel
Highest cost; suitable for demanding conditions, ensuring long-term safety.
iv. Selection Process Recommendations
Define the application scenario → Determine performance requirements (strength, toughness, corrosion resistance)
Select carbon steel type → Low, medium, high carbon or alloy carbon steel
Match standards and specifications → ASTM, GB, EN, etc.
Assess costs and processing technology → Ensure economic viability and feasibility