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Steel Alloys: The Complete List

In workshops, mills and field jobs around the world, material choice shapes performance and longevity—whether you’re building bearings, pipelines, or heavy machinery. A clear, compact list helps you match metallurgy to application without digging through scattered datasheets.

There are 65 Steel Alloys, ranging from 100Cr6 to X65. For each entry, data are shown as Main composition,Typical properties (MPa, HRC),Standards/equivalents — you’ll find below.

How should I prioritize properties when choosing an alloy for strength or wear resistance?

Look first at the Typical properties column (tensile strength in MPa and hardness in HRC) to set targets, then check Main composition for alloying elements that provide toughness or wear resistance (e.g., chromium, carbon, vanadium). Use the Standards/equivalents column to confirm availability and interchangeability, and consider required heat treatment and service environment before final selection.

What does each column tell me and how can I use that information quickly?

Main composition highlights key alloying elements that control behavior; Typical properties give measurable performance metrics for design comparisons; Standards/equivalents link grades to common specifications so you can source or substitute reliably. Together they let you filter candidates by chemistry, performance, and supply compatibility.

Steel Alloys

Name Main composition Typical properties (MPa, HRC) Standards/equivalents
A36 Fe, C ≤0.26%, Mn 0.8–1.2% Tensile 400–550 MPa, HRC 10–15 ASTM A36; EN S275 approximate
1018 Fe, C 0.15–0.20%, Mn 0.6–0.9% Tensile 440–620 MPa, HRC 10–18 SAE/AISI 1018; EN C20–C22 equivalents
1045 Fe, C 0.43–0.50%, Mn 0.6–0.9% Tensile 570–850 MPa, HRC 20–30 (heat treated) SAE/AISI 1045; EN C45
S355 Fe, C ≤0.22%, Mn ≤1.6% (others trace) Tensile 470–630 MPa, HRC 12–16 EN S355JR; ASTM A572 Gr50 similar
A572-50 Fe, C ≤0.23%, Mn 1.0–1.6% Tensile 400–550 MPa, HRC 12–16 ASTM A572 Grade 50; EN S355 comparable
4140 Fe, C 0.38–0.43%, Cr 0.8–1.1%, Mo 0.15–0.25% Tensile 655–1,270 MPa, HRC 20–55 SAE/AISI 4140; EN 42CrMo4 equivalent
4340 Fe, C 0.38–0.43%, Ni 1.6–2.0%, Cr 0.7–0.9%, Mo 0.2–0.3% Tensile 850–1,450 MPa, HRC 28–52 SAE/AISI 4340; EN 34CrNiMo6 analog
300M Fe, C 0.25–0.35%, Si ~0.3%, Mn 0.6–0.9%, Cr 0.8–1.2% Tensile 1,400–1,800 MPa, HRC 36–44 SAE AMS 6508; modified 4340
8620 Fe, C 0.18–0.23%, Ni 0.4–0.7%, Cr 0.4–0.7%, Mo 0.15–0.25% Core tensile 750–1,050 MPa, surface HRC 58–62 (carburized) SAE 8620; EN 16MnCr5 comparable
52100 Fe, C 0.98–1.10%, Cr 1.30–1.60% Tensile 1,600–2,000 MPa, HRC 60–66 SAE 52100; EN 100Cr6 equivalent
5160 Fe, C 0.56–0.64%, Cr 0.7–1.0% Tensile 900–1,400 MPa, HRC 40–55 SAE 5160; EN 51CrV4 analog
1095 Fe, C 0.90–1.03% Tensile 1,200–1,800 MPa (quenched), HRC 50–64 SAE 1095; JIS SK95 comparable
1075 Fe, C 0.72–0.80% Tensile 1,000–1,600 MPa, HRC 48–60 SAE 1075; JIS SK75 analog
17-4PH Fe, Cr 15–17.5%, Ni 3–5%, Cu 3–5%, Nb 0.15–0.45% Tensile 930–1,300 MPa, HRC 28–44 ASTM A564; UNS S17400
304 Fe, Cr 18–20%, Ni 8–10.5%, C ≤0.08% Tensile 520–750 MPa, HRC ~18–22 ASTM A240; UNS S30400; JIS SUS304
316 Fe, Cr 16–18%, Ni 10–14%, Mo 2–3% Tensile 520–700 MPa, HRC ~18–22 ASTM A240; UNS S31600; JIS SUS316
316L Fe, Cr 16–18%, Ni 10–14%, Mo 2–3%, C ≤0.03% Tensile 480–690 MPa, HRC ~16–20 ASTM A240; UNS S31603
301 Fe, Cr 17–19%, Ni 6–8% Tensile 620–1,200 MPa (cold‑worked), HRC 20–28 ASTM A240; UNS S30100
303 Fe, Cr 17–19%, Ni 8–10%, S additions Tensile 520–620 MPa, HRC ~20 ASTM A240; UNS S30300
2205 Fe, Cr 22% approx, Ni 4–6%, Mo 3% Tensile 620–900 MPa, HRC 28–36 EN 1.4462; ASTM F51; UNS S32205
410 Fe, Cr 11–13%, C ≤0.15% Tensile 480–760 MPa, HRC 20–50 (hardened) ASTM A240; UNS S41000
420 Fe, Cr 12–14%, C 0.15–1.2% Tensile 585–1,400 MPa, HRC 48–60 (heat treated) ASTM A240; UNS S42000
430 Fe, Cr 16–18%, low Ni Tensile 450–600 MPa, HRC 16–24 ASTM A240; UNS S43000
H13 Fe, C 0.32–0.45%, Cr 4.75–5.5%, Mo ~1.1%, V ~1% Tensile 1,000–1,400 MPa, HRC 38–52 ASTM A681 H13; DIN X40CrMoV5‑1
D2 Fe, C 1.40–1.60%, Cr 11–13%, V & Mo small Tensile 1,200–1,800 MPa, HRC 55–62 AISI D2; ASTM A681 equivalent
O1 Fe, C 0.90–1.10%, Cr 0.5–1.0% Tensile 900–1,250 MPa, HRC 58–62 AISI O1; ASTM A681 O1
A2 Fe, C 0.95–1.05%, Cr 4.75–5.5%, V 0.9–1.3% Tensile 1,100–1,600 MPa, HRC 56–62 AISI A2; ASTM A681 A2
S7 Fe, C 0.45–0.55%, Cr 3.0–3.5%, Mo 0.3–0.6% Tensile 1,100–1,600 MPa, HRC 50–58 AISI S7; DIN 1.2363 analog
M2 Fe, C 0.85–0.95%, W ~6.0%, Mo ~5.0%, V ~2.0% Tensile high; HRC 62–66 (hardened) AISI M2; ASTM F128
M42 Fe, C ~1.0%, Mo 9%, W 1.3%, V 2.1%, Co 8–10% HRC 64–67 (hardened), excellent hot hardness AISI M42; ASTM F106
Maraging 300 Fe, Ni ~18%, Co ~8–10%, Mo, Ti additions Tensile 1,900–2,200 MPa, HRC 42–52 UNS K30030; ASTM A687
Maraging 250 Fe, Ni ~18%, Co ~8%, lower strength vs 300 Tensile 1,400–1,700 MPa, HRC 38–48 UNS K25030; AMS standards exist
Corten A Fe, C 0.10–0.25%, Cu, Cr, Ni trace Tensile 460–620 MPa, HRC 12–18 ASTM A242; A588 similar
Corten B Fe, C ~0.12–0.20%, Cu & Cr additions Tensile 460–600 MPa, HRC 12–18 UNS G10180; EN counterparts
A516-70 Fe, C ≤0.30%, Mn ≤1.65% Tensile 485–620 MPa, HRC 12–18 ASTM A516 Grade 70 (pressure vessel)
X65 Fe, C low, Mn & microalloys Tensile 620–760 MPa, HRC 18–24 API 5L X65; pipeline standard
X52 Fe, low C, Mn & microalloys Tensile 480–620 MPa, HRC 14–20 API 5L X52; pipeline standard
EN8 Fe, C 0.35–0.45% Tensile 540–720 MPa, HRC 18–28 BS EN8; roughly SAE 1045 analog
12L14 Fe, C ~0.12%, Pb additions for machinability, Mn Tensile 400–550 MPa, HRC 10–18 SAE 12L14; ASTM specifications exist
1215 Fe, C 0.12–0.18%, S additions Tensile 380–520 MPa, HRC 8–16 SAE 1215; JIS SUJ1 equivalents
P91 Fe, C 0.08–0.12%, Cr ~9%, Mo ~1%, V, Nb Tensile 600–800 MPa, HRC 20–28 ASTM A335 P91; EN 1.4903
S235JR Fe, C ≤0.17%, Mn ≤1.4% Tensile 360–510 MPa, HRC 10–14 EN S235JR; ASTM A36 similar
S690QL Fe, C ≤0.23%, microalloyed Tensile ~690 MPa, yield 690 MPa, HRC 18–24 EN S690QL high‑strength steel
100Cr6 Fe, C 0.95–1.05%, Cr 1.35–1.65% Tensile 1,500–1,900 MPa, HRC 60–66 EN 100Cr6; SAE 52100 equivalent
EN24 (4340 analog) Fe, C 0.36–0.44%, Ni 1.4–1.8%, Cr, Mo Tensile 850–1,400 MPa, HRC 28–52 EN24; SAE 4340 similar
15CDV6 Fe, C ~0.15%, Cr ~2%, V ~0.2%, Ni Tensile 900–1,200 MPa, HRC 30–40 MIL‑SPEC 15CDV6; EN equivalents exist
52100 (alt) Fe, C 0.98–1.10%, Cr 1.30–1.60% Tensile 1,600–2,000 MPa, HRC 60–66 SAE 52100; EN 100Cr6
17-7PH Fe, Cr 16–18%, Ni 7–8%, Al & Ti additions Tensile 850–1,150 MPa, HRC 30–44 AMS 5659; UNS S17700
EN31 Fe, C 1.00–1.10%, Cr ~0.3% Tensile 1,200–1,600 MPa, HRC 58–64 BS EN31; AISI 52100 similar
SANDVIK 12C27 (knife steel) Fe, C 0.60–0.70%, Cr 12–14% Tensile 900–1,400 MPa, HRC 56–62 EN Swedish knife steels analog
420HC Fe, Cr 12–14%, C ~0.35–0.45% Tensile 800–1,200 MPa, HRC 54–58 Proprietary variant of 420 series common in cutlery
S355J2G3 Fe, low C, Mn ≤1.6% Tensile 470–630 MPa, HRC 12–16 EN S355J2G3; structural standard
SAE 8620 (alt) Fe, C 0.18–0.23%, Ni, Cr, Mo traces Case hardness HRC 58–62, core toughness SAE 8620; AMS standards used
AISI 52100 (dup) Fe, C 0.98–1.10%, Cr 1.30–1.60% Tensile 1,600–2,000 MPa, HRC 60–66 AISI 52100; EN 100Cr6
EN9 Fe, C 0.70–0.80% Tensile 800–1,200 MPa, HRC 45–60 BS EN9; SAE 1075 similar
718M40 (aircraft steels) Fe, Cr, Mo, Ni in controlled amounts Tensile 1,200–1,600 MPa, HRC 30–44 Aerospace specification steels (varies)
12Cr1MoV (P22 analog) Fe, C ~0.05–0.12%, Cr 1%, Mo 0.5%, V trace Tensile 450–650 MPa, HRC 18–26 EN 12Cr1MoV; ASTM P22 analog
4340 (alt) Fe, C 0.38–0.43%, Ni 1.6–2.0%, Cr, Mo Tensile 850–1,450 MPa, HRC 28–52 SAE 4340; EN 34CrNiMo6
EN 45 (CrS? wheel steels) Fe, Cr, C medium Tensile 600–900 MPa, HRC 20–40 Various EN wheel steels standards
Tool Steel H10/H11 Fe, C 0.35–0.45%, Cr 2–3%, Mo, V Tensile 900–1,300 MPa, HRC 44–55 AISI H10/H11; ASTM variants
EN 1.2343 (H11 analog) Fe, C 0.36–0.44%, Cr 4%, Mo 1% Tensile 900–1,300 MPa, HRC 45–55 DIN 1.2343; AISI H11 equivalent
SAE 8620 (entry repeated?) Fe, C 0.18–0.23%, Ni, Cr, Mo Case hardness HRC 58–62, core toughness SAE 8620; AMS standards
EN41B Fe, C 0.90–1.10%, Cr 0.3% Tensile 1,000–1,600 MPa, HRC 58–64 BS EN41B; bearing/tool analog
EN19 (4340 analog) Fe, C 0.36–0.44%, Ni, Cr, Mo Tensile 850–1,350 MPa, HRC 28–52 EN19; SAE 4340 similar
AISI 4140 (alt) Fe, C 0.38–0.43%, Cr, Mo Tensile 655–1,270 MPa, HRC 20–55 AISI 4140; EN 42CrMo4

Images and Descriptions

A36

A36

General structural carbon steel with good weldability and machinability. Used for beams, plates, and general construction where moderate strength and low cost are primary needs.

1018

1018

Low‑carbon mild steel used for shafts, studs, and cold‑formed parts. Offers good machinability and can be case‑hardened or normalized for improved strength.

1045

1045

Medium‑carbon steel commonly used for gears, axles, and shafts. Responds well to heat treatment for higher strength and wear resistance.

S355

S355

European structural steel with a guaranteed yield of 355 MPa. Used in welded structures, cranes, and heavy fabrications requiring higher strength than A36.

A572-50

A572-50

High‑strength low‑alloy structural steel for bridges, buildings, and plates where weight reduction and weldability are important.

4140

4140

Chromium‑molybdenum alloy steel with good toughness and fatigue resistance. Widely used for shafts, gears, and hardened tooling.

4340

4340

Nickel‑chromium‑molybdenum alloy offering high toughness and strength after quench and temper. Used in aircraft landing gear, fasteners, and heavy shafts.

300M

300M

Vacuum‑treated alloy steel used in aerospace for landing gear and critical components. High strength and fracture toughness with controlled composition.

8620

8620

Low‑alloy case‑hardening steel intended for carburizing. Produces tough cores and hard wear‑resistant surfaces for gears and shafts.

52100

52100

High‑carbon chromium bearing steel, hardened to high hardness and excellent rolling contact fatigue resistance. Used for bearings, races, and precision rollers.

5160

5160

Chromium spring steel with good toughness and fatigue resistance. Common for leaf springs, large coil springs, and some knife blades.

1095

1095

High‑carbon tool/spring steel that attains high hardness and edge retention after quench and temper. Often used in knives, springs, and cutting tools.

1075

1075

Medium‑high carbon spring steel with a balance of toughness and hardness. Used for coil springs, blades, and tempering applications.

17-4PH

17-4PH

Precipitation‑hardening stainless steel combining corrosion resistance and high strength. Used in aerospace, oil & gas, and tooling requiring toughness and corrosion resistance.

304

304

Common austenitic stainless steel with good corrosion resistance, formability, and weldability. Used for kitchenware, tanks, and general corrosion‑resistant components.

316

316

Austenitic stainless with molybdenum for improved pitting resistance. Preferred in chemical, marine, and medical equipment.

316L

316L

Low‑carbon 316 variant to avoid sensitization during welding. Used in welded structures, piping, and biomedical implants.

301

301

Austenitic stainless that work‑hardens strongly; used for spring strips, fasteners, and applications that exploit its high strength after cold forming.

303

303

Free‑machining austenitic stainless with sulfur for improved machinability. Common for turned components and fasteners where corrosion resistance and machining are needed.

2205

2205

Duplex stainless steel with mixed austenitic‑ferritic microstructure offering high strength and superior chloride stress‑corrosion resistance; used in chemical processing and seawater services.

410

410

Martensitic stainless steel that can be hardened for moderate strength and wear resistance. Used for cutlery, valves, and pump shafts.

420

420

High‑carbon martensitic stainless used where sharp edges and polishability matter (cutlery, surgical instruments). Achieves high hardness after heat treatment.

430

430

Ferritic stainless steel with good formability and moderate corrosion resistance. Common in domestic appliances and trim where nickel avoidance is beneficial.

H13

H13

Hot‑work tool steel with excellent thermal fatigue and toughness. Widely used for die casting dies, extrusion tooling, and hot forging punches.

D2

D2

Cold‑work, high‑carbon, high‑chromium tool steel offering excellent wear resistance and dimensional stability. Used for dies, shear blades and forming tools.

O1

O1

Oil‑hardening tool steel with good toughness and ease of heat treatment. Common for general purpose cutting and tooling applications.

A2

A2

Air‑hardening tool steel combining good wear resistance and toughness with easier heat treatment. Used for punches, dies, and gauges.

S7

S7

Shock‑resisting tool steel engineered for high impact toughness. Ideal for shock tools like hammers, chisels, and punches.

M2

M2

High‑speed tool steel offering high hot hardness and wear resistance for cutting tools, drills, and taps operating at elevated temperatures.

M42

M42

Cobalt‑alloyed high‑speed steel with superior red hardness. Used for long‑life cutting tools and high‑temperature tooling.

Maraging 300

Maraging 300

Precipitation‑hardened steel offering exceptional strength with good toughness and low carbon. Used in aerospace, tooling, and high‑performance shafts.

Maraging 250

Maraging 250

Lower‑strength maraging alloy used where high toughness and moderate strength are required, often in tooling and missile components.

Corten A

Corten A

Weathering steel that forms a protective rust patina, reducing need for painting. Common in bridges, architectural facades, and outdoor sculptures.

Corten B

Corten B

Alternate weathering steel grade with similar protective patina formation, used in structural and decorative outdoor applications.

A516-70

A516-70

Low‑alloy carbon steel for welded pressure vessels and boilers. Good notch toughness and weldability at moderate temperatures.

X65

X65

High‑strength pipeline steel used for oil and gas transmission. Balances yield strength, weldability, and toughness for long pipelines.

X52

X52

Common pipeline grade offering good toughness and weldability for medium‑pressure gas and oil transmission lines.

EN8

EN8

General engineering medium‑carbon steel used for shafts, studs, and machined parts. Offers a balance of strength and machinability.

12L14

12L14

Leaded free‑machining steel optimized for turning and screw production. Good surface finish and high productivity in machining.

1215

1215

Free‑cutting carbon steel with sulfur for improved machinability. Used for fasteners and small turned components.

P91

P91

Ferritic martensitic heat‑resistant steel for power plant boilers and piping at high temperatures. Offers creep strength and oxidation resistance.

S235JR

S235JR

Common low‑carbon structural steel with good weldability and ductility. Used in light structural applications and welded constructions.

S690QL

S690QL

Ultra high‑strength structural steel used where very high yield strength and good toughness are required, such as heavy machinery and cranes.

100Cr6

100Cr6

European bearing steel equivalent to 52100. Hardened and ground for precision bearings and rolling elements.

EN24 (4340 analog)

EN24 (4340 analog)

Through‑hardened alloy steel used for high‑stress components like gears and shafts requiring fatigue resistance and toughness.

15CDV6

15CDV6

Airframe quality, low‑alloy steel with good strength, toughness and weldability used in aerospace landing gear and critical structural parts.

52100 (alt)

52100 (alt)

High‑carbon chromium bearing steel known for excellent hardness and fatigue life after heat treatment. Used in bearings and precision rollers.

17-7PH

17-7PH

Precipitation‑hardening stainless used for springs and aerospace components where corrosion resistance and moderate high strength are needed.

EN31

EN31

High‑carbon chromium alloy often used for bearings, shafts and precision components that require high hardness and wear resistance.

SANDVIK 12C27 (knife steel)

SANDVIK 12C27 (knife steel)

High carbon stainless grade optimized for knives and cutlery; balances corrosion resistance with good edge retention and toughness.

420HC

420HC

Higher carbon version of 420 stainless offering improved hardenability and edge holding for knives and surgical instruments.

S355J2G3

S355J2G3

Structural steel with enhanced impact toughness at lower temperatures. Used in bridges, offshore platforms, and heavy construction.

SAE 8620 (alt)

SAE 8620 (alt)

Versatile carburizing steel widely used for gears, pinions and hollow shafts needing hard wearing surfaces and tough cores.

AISI 52100 (dup)

AISI 52100 (dup)

See 52100: preferred bearing steel for high contact fatigue resistance and hardness after quench and temper.

EN9

EN9

Medium‑carbon engineering steel used for axles, shafts, and gears; responds well to heat treatment for improved strength and wear resistance.

718M40 (aircraft steels)

718M40 (aircraft steels)

High‑strength, airframe steels produced to tight specs for landing gear and critical structural elements where fracture toughness and controlled composition are needed.

12Cr1MoV (P22 analog)

12Cr1MoV (P22 analog)

Pressure‑vessel and steam‑pipe steel with improved creep and high‑temperature strength. Used in power plants and boilers.

4340 (alt)

4340 (alt)

High‑strength, tough alloy used in aerospace and automotive components requiring fatigue resistance and high fracture toughness.

EN 45 (CrS? wheel steels)

EN 45 (CrS? wheel steels)

Used historically for railway wheels and axles; medium‑carbon steels with good toughness and ability to be surface hardened.

Tool Steel H10/H11

Tool Steel H10/H11

Hot‑work tool steels used for forging dies and die casting tooling. Good thermal fatigue resistance and toughness.

EN 1.2343 (H11 analog)

EN 1.2343 (H11 analog)

Hot‑work tool steel often specified for tooling where thermal shock resistance and strength are required.

SAE 8620 (entry repeated?)

SAE 8620 (entry repeated?)

Case‑hardening steel for gears and shafts; widely used where a ductile core and hard wear surface are needed.

EN41B

EN41B

High‑carbon steel used historically in bearings and tooling; maintains high hardness and wear resistance after heat treatment.

EN19 (4340 analog)

EN19 (4340 analog)

Through‑hardened alloy for high‑stress shafts and gears with good fatigue and fracture toughness.

AISI 4140 (alt)

AISI 4140 (alt)

Versatile low‑alloy steel for automotive, oilfield and general engineering applications requiring strength and toughness after heat treatment.