Stainless steel “does it all” — looks good, fights corrosion, and holds up in harsh service. The secret is chromium.
What Makes Steel “Stainless”
Stainless is an iron-based alloy with ≥10.5% chromium. Chromium forms a passive chromium-oxide film on the surface that self-heals in air or water, giving stainless its hallmark corrosion resistance.SSINA+1
The Big Families (and where you see them)
- Austenitic (200/300 series; e.g., 304, 316): very formable, great general corrosion resistance; non-magnetic in annealed state. Think food equipment, tanks, architectural cladding.
- Ferritic (e.g., 409, 430): chromium-rich, no nickel, magnetic; used in appliances and automotive exhaust where cost stability and heat resistance matter.
- Martensitic (e.g., 410, 420): hardenable; cutlery, wear parts.
- Duplex (e.g., 2205): mixed austenite/ferrite structure for high strength + chloride stress-corrosion cracking resistance (oil & gas, chemical processing).
- Precipitation-hardening (PH) (e.g., 17-4PH): very high strength after age-hardening for aerospace and precision components. (Families and behaviors summarized from industry technical resources.)SSINA
304 vs 316 (the most asked question)
- 304 ≈ 18% Cr / 8% Ni; the “default” food/architectural grade.
- 316 adds 2–3% molybdenum, improving resistance to chloride pitting (coastal and chemical splash zones). If you’re near seawater or de-icing salts, 316 outlasts 304.
Forms & Finishes You’ll Order
Forms: sheet, plate, coil, bar (round/square/hex), angle/channel/beam, and pipe/tube (round/square/rectangular).
Common flat finishes:
- No. 1 / HRAP (hot-rolled, annealed, pickled): dull, non-reflective for industrial use.
- 2D: cold-rolled, dull/gray; good for deep draw.
- 2B: cold-rolled, slightly reflective; most common general-purpose finish.
- BA (Bright Annealed): mirror-like from controlled anneal.
- No. 3 / No. 4 / “Super #4” / No. 8 (mirror): progressively finer mechanical polishes; lower Ra improves cleanability for food service and architectural.SSINA
Bar Finishes (why they’re different)
- Hot-rolled: scale, oil — economical.
- Cold-finished / Centerless ground / Turned-ground-polished (TGP): tighter size control and smoother surfaces for precision shafts and guides (cleaner, shinier, tighter tolerance than HR).
When Stainless Shines
- Hygiene & cleanability (food/dairy, pharma, kitchens): smooth polished 304/316 surfaces impede bacterial retention; polishing lowers Ra and helps sanitation.SSINA
- Chloride-bearing environments (coastlines, splash zones): 316 (or duplex) resists pitting/crevice attack better than 304.Unified Alloys+1
- Aesthetics + durability: architectural panels and handrails with 2B/BA/No.4 look sharp and last.
When to Consider Alternatives
- Weight-critical designs → aluminum may save cost and fuel.
- Budget structural strength → carbon steel with coating can be more economical if corrosion risk is low.
Notes on Validation & Alignment with Your Class
- A36’s 36 ksi yield and the idea that ASTM letter/number designations capture mechanics/series match industry guides
- Pipe vs tube sizing/usage differences line up with Steel Tube Institute and other technical resources.Steel Tube Institute
- Aluminum alloy families (1xxx/3xxx/5xxx non-heat-treatable; 2xxx/6xxx/7xxx heat-treatable) track with welding/material references.
- 6061-T6 as a go-to, versatile alloy for frames/fixtures is widely documented.
- Stainless ≥10.5% Cr and the self-healing passive layer are the core reasons it resists rust.SSINA
- 316’s Mo addition improving chloride resistance is consistent across engineering sources.
- Aluminum circularity stats (75% still in use, ~<60-day can loop) validate your sustainability remarks from class.Aluminum Association+1
