Steel is melted or vaporized, not burned.
beryllium is a metal similar in colour and appearance to magnesium.
You can burn it with the torch but that will give it a powdery substance, it wont stay black of you touch it, but put sealer over it, you can also use powder coating, and heat it in the proper oven.
they burn and sometime change colour or state, but they do this at a higher teperature
If the fire is hot enough, and there is enough oxygen, the steel will burn. (think cutting torch) The simplest answer is that the steel heats up. A cutting torch doesn't "burn" the metal away... it melts the metal along your cutting line. Very few chemicals can oxidize steel with enough ferocity to burn it with a flame. A couple of exceptions that I have seen in my career were F2 and ClF3. Of course those are very strong oxidizers. Heating steel to a prescribed temperature then either quenching it quickly or holding the temperature a a certain level for a period of time will alter the grain structure and therefore the properties of the steel. Think tempering. You can learn much more about that by researching steel phase diagrams. Time-temperature relationships are the oldest and most common methods of changing a metals strength and hardness.
A nail made of steel.
beryllium is a metal similar in colour and appearance to magnesium.
what is the long form of wps steel
Stainless Steel
Corrosion is a gradual destruction of metal by chemical reactions mixed with the environment. How long stainless steel can withstand corrosion depends on the thickness of the metal.
Steel is mostly iron, which is a metal, but a lot of steel contains carbon, which is a nonmetal.
Steel is a type of metal.
Well steel is metal.
A non-ferrous metal is a metal which doesn't contain carbon. Mild steel does contain carbon. So mild steel is a ferous metal. Mild steel is NOT a non ferous metal
No, steel is a metal.
The metal supports in the World Trade Centers melted when the fires exceeded 2000 degrees fahrenheit.
Steel. (Usually has a coating, but the metal is steel)
Stainless steel or WHICH metal? BTW, there are numerous grades of stainless steel. Some are stronger than others.