Need to find out the name of this alloy

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The alloy in question has a composition of 96.23% Fe, 0.623% C, 1.098% Cr, 1.0028% Ni, and 0.4219% Si, suggesting it may belong to the tool steels family, specifically as a high-carbon, low-alloy nickel-chromium steel. The discussion highlights that many similar steels typically contain manganese or molybdenum, which are absent in this alloy. The total composition indicates a potential missing element, likely manganese, or slightly higher chromium or nickel content. Comparisons are made to SAE 3150 and SAE 3250, but the specific alloy appears to be non-standard due to its unique composition. Further research into engineering alloys and metallurgical resources is recommended to identify the alloy accurately.
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I have the composition for this alloy that I have to find out which metallic material it is supposed to be:

Fe:96.23%
C:0.623%
Cr:1.098%
Ni:1.0028%
Si:0.4219

My guess it it is among the tool steels family but I can't be sure...
 
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It's a high-carbon (C > 0.6%, but just barely), low alloy nickel-chromium steel. It is similar to some tool steels.

http://www.keytometals.com/Articles/Art62.htm
nickel-chromium steels

Many steels of this level have some Mn or Mo in them.

I haven't found a carbon steel with 1%Cr, 1%Ni 0.4%Si, although a few are close.

Similar alloy compositions have either higher Ni or Cr.

The sum of the C, Cr, Ni, Si = 3.1457%

The total Fe, C, Cr, Ni, Si = 99.3757%, so is there something missing (e.g., ~0.6243% Mn), or the Cr or Ni is a bit higher?
 
It might be that Cr and Ni are a bit higher since I wrote the composition off of some software that we have at Lab. If that is the case then what will the alloy be?
 
The alloy seems to be a non-standard alloy. Most of what I can readily find contains Mn and less or no Si.

Code:
             C         Mn       Cr         Ni
SAE 3150 0.48/0.53 0.70/0.90 0.70/0.90 1.10/1.40
SAE 3250 0.45/0.55 0.30/0.60 0.90/1.25 1.50/2.00

So it could be a derivative of 3260, but the Ni of one's sample is too low.

Si is not part of the 3100 or 3200 series, and they have Mn. In one's sample, the Si is at the roughly the same mid-range value of the Mn level for 3260.

These may be of use:
http://www.timken.com/en-us/Knowled...s/Timken_Practical_Data_For_Metallurgists.pdf
http://www.secowarwick.com/htdb/HeatTreatingDataEBook.2011.pdf

One could try to find an electronic copy of Woldman's engineering alloys By Norman Emme Woldman, John P. Frick, and search for C 0.6 and then try to find alloys with about 1% each of Cr and Ni, and 0.4% Si.
 
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