There are many different mixtures (alloys) for stainless steel, but a good answer can be found on Wikipedia's page on the related link.
Chromium
Chromium
Compound. All steels are a compound.
steel is steel and there is nothing you can do about it even if it is stainless steel or it i not stainless steel it will rust
Stainless Steel and PoolsEventually, yes, stainless steel will rust if left in a pool. *Yes - bleach will cause stainless steel to rust and chlorine is found in pools. Ergo, pool water will cause rust on stainless steel items.
Yes posibly
When metals are mixed but not chemically combined, a mixture is formed. If this mixture is homogeneous, then it is referred to as an alloy. One of the most common alloys is stainless steel, which contains steel and chromium metals.
No; steel is an iron-carbon alloy. Stainless steel is an alloy of steel with chromium added. Stainless steel is usually 13-25% chromium (by weight).
No, stainless steel is a homogeneous mixture of iron and chromium.YES, actually, stainless steel is a compound, because compounds are HOMOGENEOUS forms of matter. If it were a mixture, by definition, it would be a HETEROGENEOUS form of matter.
Stainless steel is a metal mixture called an alloy. It contains carbon steel and 10.5 to 11.0% chromium by mass.
nope, its a homogenous mixture
stainless steel
A mixture
Stainless steel is a metal alloy. All metal alloys are a Heterogeneous mixture because the elements contained therein are not chemically bonded. If heated, stainless steel forks, for instance, would separate into their component metals according to density.
steel isn't as refined but stainless is well stainless and shiny oohlala hot bod Stainless steel is an alloy (mixture) that has chromium mixed in. The chrome makes ordinary steel harder, more brittle, and more resistant to rust and stains, hense, stainless steel.
Stainless steel mixture, element, ore or mineral is an ally of iron and carbon. The carbon is the primary alloying element.
Yes - it is oxidizing. Stainless steel is "stainless" because of the tough adherent Chromium oxide film. It needs oxygen to remain stainless.
nope, its a homogenous mixture
Ypu think probable to a chromium-nickel stainless steel.