What is alloy steel?
Alloy steel is a type of material based on iron, which has several additional elements. In fact, alloy steel is one of the types of steel that, except for carbon, has elements such as chromium, vanadium, nickel, molybdenum, silicon and boron. This alloy has different mechanical properties, which has several characteristics, the most important of which are strength, resistance and anti-corrosion and rust. This type of steel is more resistant to thermal and mechanical forces than carbon steels.
Applications of alloy steel
• Use of low-alloy steels due to their affordability and strength Use in ships, pipelines and pressure tanks Construction of military vehicles Production of construction equipment and oil drilling platforms

Alloy steel category
Steel alloy is very important and widely used due to its strength, cost-effectiveness, cheaper and more available, ease of extraction and production. Steel alloys are divided into low-alloy and high-alloy categories.
The purpose of steel alloy is to have raw materials that are more resistant to corrosion and mechanical forces. In this type of steel elements such as aluminum, copper, silicon, nickel and chromium will be added to carbon and iron. Each of these elements will lead to a special composition and a special application. 4 advantages of low alloy steel Creep strength Oxidation resistance
• Hydrogen resistance
• Formability at low temperature


