Microstructural study of medieval crucible steels from archaeological sites in Central and Northwest Asia: identifying the bulat

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The microstructure of 9th-15th century artifacts made of crucible steel, found at sites in Central and Northwest Asia, is described. Metallographic study of items from settlements and burials with precise data on chronology, location, and accompanying artifacts are important for reconstructing the history of bulat and the technology of melting and processing ultra-high-carbon crucible steels. The study of macroand microstructure, and the chemical analysis of such items indicate an extremely high content of carbon-1.7-2.1 %. The characteristic feature of their microstructure is dark matrix with white inclusions of ledeburite and iron carbides. The combination of structural components is mirrored by patterned structure of metal. These properties suggest that such metal is identical with bulat steel. Findings of macro-structural analysis extend our knowledge of the varieties of this metal, its structural features, phase composition of separate groups of ultra-high-carbon crucible steel, smelting technology, plastic and thermal treatment, and physical properties.

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Central and northwest asia, middle ages, ferrous metallurgy, metallographic analysis, crucible steel, bulat steel

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/145147203

IDR: 145147203   |   УДК: 904   |   DOI: 10.17746/1563-0102.2024.52.3.082-090