Stainless Steel 420

Material Data Sheet

Grade 420 stainless steel is a high-carbon steel with a minimum chromium content of 12%. Like any other stainless steel, grade 420 can also be hardened through heat treatment. It offers good ductility in its annealed state and excellent corrosion resistance properties when the metal is polished, surface grounded or hardened. This grade has the highest hardness – 50HRC – among all the stainless steel grades with 12% chromium.

Stainless steel grades that are similar to grade 420 stainless steels include martensitic steels such as the other versions of grade 420, having vanadium, sulphur and molybdenum in their composition, and the grade 440 series. Non-standard grade 420C has carbon content that is little higher than that of grade 420.

Martensitic stainless steels are ones with high hardness and high carbon content. These steels are generally fabricated using methods that require hardening and tempering treatments. The operating conditions of martensitic steels are affected by the loss of material’s strength at high temperatures and a decrease in ductility at negative temperatures.

Chemical Composition
Element Content (%)
Iron, Fe 85.0
Chromium, Cr 13.0
Manganese, Mn 1.0
Silicon, S 1.0
Carbon, C ≤ 0.15
Phosphorus, P ≤ 0.04
Sulfur, S ≤ 0.03
Physical Properties
Property Metric Imperial
Density 7.80 g/cc 0.282 lb/in³
Mechanical Properties
Property Metric Imperial
Hardness, Brinell 594 594
Hardness, Knoop 662 662
Hardness, Rockwell C 57 57
Hardness, Vickers 641 641
Tensile Strength, Ultimate 2025 MPa 293700 psi
Tensile Strength, Yield 1360 MPa 197000 psi
Elongation at Break 2.5% 2.5%
Modulus of Elasticity 200 GPa 29000 ksi
Poissons Ratio 0.24 0.24
Shear Modulus 80.7 GPa 11700 ksi
Charpy Impact 14.0 J 10.3 ft-lb
Applications

Stainless Steel 420 is used in the following application areas:

  • Shear blades
  • Needle valves
  • Surgical equipment
  • Cutlery

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