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Ledeburite

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ledeburite

[′lā·də‚bu̇‚rīt]
(metallurgy)
The eutectic of the iron-carbon system, the constituents being cementite and austenite at high temperatures; cooling decomposes the austenite to ferrite and cementite.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Ledeburite

 

(named for the German metallurgist A. Ledebur [1837–1906]), one of the principal structural constituents of iron-carbon alloys, primarily cast iron. Ledeburite is a eutectic mixture of austenite and cementite that forms at temperatures below 1145°C (for pure iron-carbon alloys). The austenite is converted into a ferrite-cementite mixture at temperatures below 723°C. In steels, ledeburite, consisting of austenite and carbides, is formed only in the presence of a very high content of alloy components and carbon (0.7–1.0 percent); such steels (for example, high-speed steel) are called ledeburite steels.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
The composition phases contain ledeburite, needle-like martensite, ferrite, dendritic austenite, and blocky cementite.
High speed steel relates to the ledeburite class and is characterized in cast state by low parameters of mechanical and technological properties, especially ductility.
The white eutectic, which occurs at the edges of thin-wall ductile iron plate castings, is the plate-like eutectic, which probably forms at much higher undercooling than ledeburite (the usual structure available in white iron).
These carbides have several names including: ledeburite, chill, primary carbide, carbides, |Fe.sub.3~C, iron carbide and cementite.
6) that in this layer there are carbides (white areas), fine dispersivity ledeburites (grey areas) and martensites-troostites (dark areas).
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