A 316L stainless steel plate item

Posted by sanny111 on November 16th, 2014

A 316L stainless steel plate item – from a kitchen countertop to a building structure – remains 100% recyclable even after decades of use, and the 316L stainless steel plate that is made from scrap does not lose any of its material properties. Today the recycled content of Outokumpu 316L stainless steel plate is more than 80%. Add to this long life and low maintenance costs and it is easy to see why 316L stainless steel plate is a material that lasts forever. 
In the late 1890s Hans Goldschmidt of Germany developed an aluminothermic (thermite) process for producing carbon-free chromium. Between 1904 and 1911 several researchers, particularly Leon Guillet of France, prepared alloys that would today be considered 316L stai​nless steel plate. 
Similar developments were taking place contemporaneously in the United States, where Christian Dantsizen and Frederick Becket were industrializing ferritic 316L stainless steel plate. In 1912, Elwood Haynes applied for a US patent on a martensitic 316L stainless steel plate alloy, which was not granted until 1919. 
for more information you can find http://www.angussteel.com

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sanny111
Joined: July 18th, 2014
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