Fundamentals

Cementite (Fe₃C) — Iron Carbide: Structure, Hardness and Role in Steel

📅 March 25, 2026 ⏱ 30 min read 👤 metallurgyzone 🏷 cementite   cementite hardness   Fe3C  
March 25, 2026 · 11 min read · Fundamentals

Cementite (Fe₃C) — Iron Carbide: Crystal Structure, Hardness and Role in Steel Microstructure

Cementite — the intermetallic compound iron carbide Fe₃C — is the hardest phase that forms in the equilibrium Fe-C system, reaching approximately 1000–1100 HV, yet it is completely brittle with near-zero fracture toughness. Every carbon steel contains some cementite, whether as lamellar plates within pearlite, as a continuous grain-boundary film in hypereutectoid grades, as spheroidal particles after annealing, or as nanometre-scale precipitates in tempered martensite. The morphology, distribution, and volume fraction of cementite determine whether a steel is machinable, tough, wear-resistant, or catastrophically brittle — making it one of the most consequential phases in ferrous metallurgy.

Key Takeaways
  • Cementite (Fe₃C) has a fixed stoichiometry of 6.67 wt% carbon and an orthorhombic crystal structure (space group Pnma) — not a solid solution, and not adjustable by thermal treatment alone.
  • Its hardness (~1000–1100 HV) rivals tungsten carbide, yet it has essentially zero ductility and a fracture toughness KIC of only ~1–2 MPa√m.
  • Four principal morphological forms exist in steel: lamellar (in pearlite), proeutectoid grain-boundary films or Widmanstätten plates (in hypereutectoid steel), spheroidal (after annealing), and fine precipitates in tempered martensite.
  • Cementite is thermodynamically metastable — the true equilibrium product is graphite — but kinetically stable under all normal steel processing and service conditions below ~650°C.
  • A continuous proeutectoid cementite network at grain boundaries in hypereutectoid steel causes catastrophic embrittlement and must be eliminated by spheroidise annealing or normalising.
  • Interlamellar cementite spacing in pearlite directly governs strength: finer spacing (higher undercooling) gives tensile strengths up to 1400 MPa in pearlitic rail and wire steels.
Cementite (Fe₃C) Unit Cell Orthorhombic — Space group Pnma (No. 62) a = 0.5090 nm c = 0.4523 nm b = 0.6748 nm Fe atoms (12 per cell) C atoms (4 per cell) Fe-C Diagram: Cementite Vertical 400 727 912 1147 1538°C Temp (°C) 0 0.77 2.14 6.67 Carbon (wt%) Fe₃C 6.67 wt%C A1 = 727°C 1147°C (eutectic) Acm γ Austenite α+Fe₃C (Pearlite) γ+Fe₃C Liquid S C
Fig. 1 — Left: Schematic of the cementite (Fe₃C) orthorhombic unit cell (Pnma), showing Fe atoms (blue) at corner and face-centre positions and C atoms (red) in trigonal prism interstitial sites; lattice parameters a, b, c labelled. Right: Fe-C phase diagram with the cementite vertical line at 6.67 wt% C, Acm boundary, A1 eutectoid line, and eutectic temperature. © metallurgyzone.com

Crystal Structure and Bonding

Cementite crystallises in the orthorhombic system with space group Pnma (Hermann-Mauguin notation; alternatively Pbnm in some older texts — the same space group, different axis convention). The unit cell contains 12 iron atoms and 4 carbon atoms, giving the formula Fe₃C with a carbon-to-iron ratio of exactly 1:3.

Crystal system:  Orthorhombic
Space group:     Pnma (No. 62)
Lattice params:  a = 0.5090 nm,  b = 0.6748 nm,  c = 0.4523 nm
Atoms per cell:  12 Fe + 4 C = 16 atoms total
Density:         ρ ≈ 7.67 g/cm³  (vs. 7.87 g/cm³ for α-iron)
Carbon content:  6.67 wt% C  (25 at% C)

Each carbon atom occupies the centre of a trigonal prism formed by six iron atoms — three from one prismatic face and three from the other. This coordination geometry is characteristic of interstitial compounds where the carbon atom is too large to fit in the smaller interstitial sites but not large enough to dominate the crystal structure. The Fe-C bond length within the prism is approximately 0.201–0.218 nm, significantly shorter than the nearest-neighbour Fe-Fe distance (~0.250 nm), indicating a substantial degree of directional (covalent-like) bonding character superimposed on the metallic Fe matrix.

Why Cementite is Hard and Brittle

The extreme hardness (~1000–1100 HV) and complete brittleness of cementite arise directly from its bonding and crystal structure:

  • Limited slip systems: Unlike FCC austenite (12 slip systems) or BCC ferrite (48 possible slip systems), the low-symmetry orthorhombic lattice of cementite has very few geometrically viable slip systems. Dislocation glide requires both a close-packed direction and a close-packed plane; these are scarce in Pnma symmetry.
  • Directional Fe-C bonding: The covalent component of the Fe-C bond within the trigonal prism strongly resists the atomic displacement required for dislocation motion, raising the Peierls-Nabarro stress to levels not achievable before cleavage fracture intervenes.
  • Cleavage fracture: Cementite fractures by cleavage on {001} planes at room temperature and below. The cleavage fracture energy is very low, consistent with its near-zero fracture toughness KIC ≈ 1–2 MPa√m (compared to ~50–200 MPa√m for ferritic steels).
Cementite mechanical properties (bulk, polycrystalline):
  Hardness:              ~1000–1100 HV  (~68–70 HRC equivalent)
  Elastic modulus:       ~195–210 GPa
  Fracture toughness:    K_IC ≈ 1–2 MPa√m
  Compressive strength:  ~2–3 GPa (estimated; tensile strength near zero)
  Thermal expansion:     ~12 × 10⁻⁶ K⁻¹ (anisotropic by axis)
  Melting point:         ~1227°C (decomposes before melting in some conditions)

Alloyed Cementite: Substitution of Fe by Metallic Elements

Iron atoms in the cementite structure can be partially substituted by metallic alloying elements to form (Fe,M)₃C — termed alloyed cementite. Manganese readily substitutes for iron (forming (Fe,Mn)₃C) with minimal lattice distortion because Mn and Fe have similar atomic radii. Chromium and molybdenum substitute less readily, and in higher Cr or Mo steels they preferentially form distinct carbide phases (M₃C₃, M₃C, M₃C, MC type) rather than alloyed cementite. The substitution of strong carbide formers into cementite increases its thermal stability and resistance to dissolution during austenitisation, which has direct consequences for heat treatment soaking times.

Stoichiometry and Position in the Fe-C Phase Diagram

In the Fe-C equilibrium diagram, cementite appears as a vertical line at exactly 6.67 wt% carbon, extending from room temperature to its peritectic decomposition at approximately 1227°C (where it reacts with austenite to form liquid). This vertical line — representing a line compound of fixed composition — is the terminal phase on the iron-rich side of the binary diagram, bounding the two-phase fields (γ + Fe₃C) and (α + Fe₃C).

Two critical invariant reactions involve cementite as a product phase:

1. Eutectoid reaction (727°C, 0.77 wt% C):
   γ (austenite, 0.77%C)  →  α (ferrite, 0.022%C) + Fe₃C (cementite, 6.67%C)
   Product: pearlite (lamellar α + Fe₃C)

2. Eutectic reaction (1147°C, 4.3 wt% C):
   Liquid (4.3%C)  →  γ (austenite, 2.14%C) + Fe₃C (cementite, 6.67%C)
   Product: ledeburite (in cast irons)

The lever rule applied at 727°C gives the cementite volume fraction in fully pearlitic (0.77 wt% C) steel as approximately 12 vol%, with the remainder being ferrite. This low volume fraction — combined with the lamellar distribution — allows pearlite to be both strong and reasonably tough, unlike the brittle cementite-dominated microstructures of white cast iron.

Metastability note: The Fe-C diagram as conventionally drawn represents the metastable Fe-Fe₃C system. The true stable system is Fe-graphite. Cementite is thermodynamically less stable than graphite + iron at all temperatures, but transforms to graphite only under conditions of very slow cooling, high silicon content (cast irons), or prolonged elevated-temperature service (graphitisation embrittlement). In normal steel processing, cementite is the relevant equilibrium phase and the Fe-Fe₃C diagram is the correct tool.

Morphological Forms of Cementite in Steel

The morphology of cementite — the shape, size, and distribution of Fe₃C particles — varies enormously depending on the composition and thermal history of the steel. Each morphology has distinct mechanical consequences.

Lamellar (Pearlitic)
Alternating ferrite-cementite plates within pearlite colonies. Spacing 80–800 nm depending on transformation temperature. Provides high strength via short dislocation mean free path.
Proeutectoid Network
Continuous films at prior austenite grain boundaries in hypereutectoid steel (>0.77%C) slow-cooled through Acm–A1 range. Catastrophically embrittling; eliminated by spheroidising.
Widmanstätten Plates
Plate-shaped proeutectoid cementite growing from grain boundaries into the grain interior along specific crystallographic planes. Forms at intermediate cooling rates in hypereutectoid steel.
Spheroidal (Spheroidite)
Round carbide particles in ferrite matrix after spheroidise annealing below A1. Lowest hardness (≈150 HV), maximum machinability. Preferred pre-condition for high-carbon steel before cold forming or machining.
Tempered Martensite Carbide
Nanometre-scale ε-carbide (Fe₂.⁴C, hexagonal) at 100–200°C tempering, converting to Fe₃C at 200–400°C. Controls hardness-toughness balance in tempered martensite.
Ledeburite Cementite
Eutectic cementite interspersed with austenite/pearlite in white cast irons (>2%C). Forms the interconnected hard brittle matrix responsible for white iron’s extreme wear resistance.

Lamellar Cementite in Pearlite: Spacing and Strength

The most technologically important form of cementite is the lamellar constituent of pearlite. During the eutectoid reaction at and below A1, austenite decomposes by a coupled diffusion-controlled reaction in which ferrite and cementite lamellae grow cooperatively from a common nucleus at an austenite grain boundary. Carbon rejected from the growing ferrite lamella diffuses laterally to feed the adjacent cementite lamella, and vice versa, producing the characteristic lamellar colony structure visible in optical metallography.

The interlamellar spacing S₀ is the key microstructural length scale and is determined by the degree of undercooling below A1:

Interlamellar spacing (Zener-Hillert relationship):
  S₀ = K / ΔT     (S₀ in nm, ΔT = undercooling below A1 in °C)

Approximate S₀ values:
  Near A1 (690–720°C, coarse pearlite):   600–800 nm
  Intermediate (600–650°C):               250–400 nm
  Fine pearlite / sorbite (550–600°C):    80–150 nm

Effect on tensile strength (Langford, 1977 type relationship):
  σ_UTS (MPa) ≈ 770 + 1350 × S₀⁻¹/²    (S₀ in mm)

→ Pearlitic rail steel (S₀ ≈ 100 nm): σ_UTS ≈ 1200–1400 MPa
→ Coarse pearlite (S₀ ≈ 700 nm):      σ_UTS ≈ 700–900 MPa

This spacing-strength relationship underlies the design of pearlitic rail steel (grade 370 LHT, UTS > 1300 MPa) and high-carbon wire rod for prestressed concrete (PC wire, UTS 1570–1860 MPa), where patenting — controlled isothermal transformation at 500–560°C — produces extremely fine pearlite of very high strength and adequate ductility for cold drawing.

Optical micrograph of pearlite in eutectoid steel showing alternating ferrite and cementite lamellae in pearlite colonies with interlamellar spacing visible at 1000x magnification
Optical micrograph of a eutectoid steel (0.77 wt% C) showing pearlite colonies with alternating ferrite (light) and cementite (dark) lamellae. The interlamellar spacing and colony size govern the strength and toughness of the pearlitic microstructure. Picral etch, approximately 1000×. © Wikimedia Commons / public domain.

Proeutectoid Cementite in Hypereutectoid Steel

In steels with carbon content exceeding the eutectoid composition (0.77 wt% C), cementite begins to precipitate from austenite on cooling through the Acm boundary before the eutectoid temperature is reached. This proeutectoid cementite preferentially nucleates at prior austenite grain boundaries, where misfit strain is lower, and grows as thin continuous or semicontinuous films. The volume fraction of proeutectoid cementite increases with carbon content above 0.77 wt%:

Volume fraction of proeutectoid cementite (lever rule at A1):
  f_Ce = (C_steel − 0.77) / (6.67 − 0.77)

Example: 1.2 wt% C steel:
  f_Ce = (1.20 − 0.77) / (6.67 − 0.77) = 0.43 / 5.90 ≈ 0.073  (7.3 vol%)
Engineering Risk — Cementite Network Embrittlement: A continuous cementite network at grain boundaries in hypereutectoid steel provides an uninterrupted brittle fracture path through the material. Charpy impact energy can fall below 5 J even at room temperature. Components made from hypereutectoid steel (tool steels, bearing steels, rail steels >0.9%C) must undergo spheroidise annealing to break up and spheroidise the cementite before machining or hardening, and must never be slow-cooled through the Acm–A1 range in service or during heat treatment without a subsequent spheroidising step.

Spheroidite: Maximum Machinability and Cold Formability

Spheroidite is the equilibrium microstructure of cementite — the state of lowest interfacial energy — in which cementite exists as discrete spherical particles distributed in a ferrite matrix. It is produced by spheroidise annealing, typically at 680–720°C (just below A1) for 4–24 hours depending on section size and starting microstructure. The driving force is the reduction in total ferrite-cementite interfacial area (and energy): a sphere has the minimum surface area for a given volume, so lamellar or plate morphologies spontaneously coarsen and spheroidise via Ostwald ripening.

Starting from a fine lamellar pearlite or tempered martensite microstructure accelerates spheroidisation; starting from coarse pearlite is slower. An alternative cycle — oscillatory annealing just above and below A1 — repeatedly dissolves and re-precipitates cementite, producing rapid spheroidisation in 2–6 hours. Hardness after full spheroidisation of a 1.0 wt% C steel is typically 150–190 HV, compared to 280–320 HV for fully pearlitic microstructure of the same composition.

Cementite in Tempered Martensite

The tempering sequence of as-quenched martensite involves a progressive series of carbide precipitation and coarsening reactions as temperature increases:

Tempering stages (approximate temperature ranges for medium-carbon steel):

Stage 1 (100–200°C): Carbon clustering and ε-carbide (Fe₂.₄C, hexagonal) precipitation
                     as fine plates on {011}α. Hardness reduction: ~50–100 HV.

Stage 2 (200–300°C): Retained austenite → bainite transformation.

Stage 3 (250–400°C): ε-carbide dissolves; Fe₃C (cementite) precipitates as
                     fine rods/plates on {011}α and {112}α habit planes.
                     Continued hardness reduction.

Stage 4 (400–700°C): Cementite spheroidises and coarsens; dislocation density
                     decreases by recovery. Strength drops; toughness improves.
                     At 600–700°C: complete recovery/polygonisation of matrix.

The transition from ε-carbide to Fe₃C during tempering is accompanied by a volume change and a measurable dimensional change — relevant for dimensional tolerancing in precision tool steel components. The tempered martensite embrittlement (TME) phenomenon occurring at 350–400°C is partly attributed to cementite film formation on prior austenite grain boundaries, providing a brittle intergranular fracture path. This is why 350–400°C is avoided as a tempering temperature for high-strength structural steels. See also Martensite Formation in Steel for the full tempering sequence.

Cementite Morphologies in Steel — Schematic Comparison Lamellar (Pearlite) S₀ = 80–800 nm ≈ 280–320 HV P P P Proeutectoid Network >0.77 wt% C Embrittling — K𝐼ᴺ <5 J Spheroidite 680–720°C anneal ≈ 150–190 HV Tempered Martensite 250–400°C temper Fine Fe₃C on lath boundaries Cementite (Fe₃C) Ferrite (α) Austenite/pearlite grain Fe₃C on lath boundaries Scale: schematic — actual dimensions range from nm (tempered martensite carbides) to μm (spheroidite, lamellar pearlite) © metallurgyzone.com
Fig. 2 — Schematic comparison of the four principal cementite morphologies in steel: (1) lamellar cementite in pearlite; (2) proeutectoid grain-boundary network in hypereutectoid steel; (3) spheroidal cementite in spheroidite after sub-A1 annealing; (4) fine Fe₃C precipitates on martensite lath boundaries after tempering at 250–400°C. © metallurgyzone.com

Graphitisation: Long-Term Thermal Instability of Cementite

Cementite is thermodynamically metastable with respect to graphite at all temperatures. Under sufficiently prolonged exposure at elevated temperatures, Fe₃C can decompose:

Fe₃C → 3 Fe (ferrite) + C (graphite)

This graphitisation reaction is significant in two practical engineering contexts:

  • Graphitisation embrittlement of carbon steel: Plain carbon steels containing >0.3 wt% C, particularly those used in boilers and steam pipework at 425–550°C for many years, are susceptible to graphitisation. Graphite nodules nucleate preferentially at grain boundaries, weld HAZ regions, and prior cold-worked zones, creating planes of weakness. ASME B31.1 and ASME Section I address this by restricting the use of plain carbon steel for long-term service above 425°C and requiring inclusion of chromium (0.5–1.0 wt% Cr) or molybdenum to retard graphitisation kinetics.
  • Malleable cast iron production: White iron (fully cementitic, <0.15 wt% Si) is deliberately annealed at 900–970°C for 20–70 hours, causing the cementite to decompose to temper carbon (graphite rosettes) in a ferrite or pearlite matrix, producing a tough malleable iron with useful tensile properties.
Alloying to suppress graphitisation: Chromium stabilises cementite against graphitisation by partitioning strongly into Fe₃C (as (Fe,Cr)₃C), significantly raising the activation energy for decomposition. Even 0.5 wt% Cr provides substantial protection. Silicon and nickel, conversely, promote graphitisation and should be kept low in steels intended for elevated-temperature service.

Cementite in Cast Iron Systems

In hypoeutectic and eutectic white cast irons (2.0–4.3 wt% C, low Si), cementite forms as the eutectic constituent ledeburite — an intimate mixture of cementite and (at room temperature) pearlite. The cementite in ledeburite is a continuous, interconnected brittle network that gives white iron its extreme hardness (500–700 HV) and wear resistance, at the cost of complete brittleness. White iron is used in crushing and grinding media, wear plates, and pump casings where abrasion resistance outweighs all other requirements.

In grey and ductile irons, the addition of silicon (1.5–4.0 wt% Si) promotes graphite formation over cementite by raising the temperature range over which the stable (Fe-graphite) reaction predominates, producing flake graphite (grey iron) or spheroidal graphite (ductile/SG iron) rather than cementite as the carbon-rich phase.

Identification of Cementite in Metallography

Optical Microscopy

In optical metallography, cementite identification depends on etchant selection and morphological context:

  • Nital (2% HNO₃ in ethanol): Ferrite is preferentially etched (appears dark), cementite appears relatively bright (white-grey). Lamellar cementite in pearlite appears as fine bright lines; grain-boundary cementite films appear as bright envelopes at grain boundaries.
  • Picral (4% picric acid in ethanol): Preferentially reveals the ferrite-cementite interface and decorates cementite boundaries more selectively. Generally preferred for revealing lamellar cementite and proeutectoid cementite in tool steels.
  • Alkaline sodium picrate (hot): Selectively darkens cementite, allowing clear distinction from other white-etching phases (ferrite, retained austenite). Particularly useful for identifying cementite in complex carbide microstructures.

Electron Microscopy and Microanalysis

For submicron cementite identification — particularly in tempered martensite, bainite, or nanostructured steels — electron microscopy techniques are required. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with selected area electron diffraction (SAED) confirms the orthorhombic Pnma structure from the diffraction pattern. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX or EDS) in SEM or TEM identifies the high carbon concentration relative to the surrounding matrix. EBSD in SEM can index cementite phases in sufficient-size particles (>100 nm). High-angle annular dark-field (HAADF) STEM imaging resolves individual Fe and C atom columns in <10 nm cementite precipitates in tempered martensite.

Industrial Significance and Engineering Control

Cementite control is central to heat treatment specification, steel selection, and failure analysis across the full range of ferrous applications:

Application Desired Cementite State Process to Achieve It Target Hardness
Pre-machining (high-carbon steel) Spheroidal — maximum machinability Spheroidise anneal 680–720°C, 4–24 h 150–200 HV
Hardened tool steel Fine dissolved C in martensite; coarse undissolved (Fe,Cr)₃C for wear Austenitise at alloy-specific temp; oil/air quench; temper 58–66 HRC
Pearlitic rail steel Fine lamellar (S₀ ≈ 80–120 nm) Head hardening: accelerated water/air cool from >800°C 340–420 HV
PC wire (prestressed concrete) Very fine patented pearlite (S₀ ≈ 80–100 nm) Patenting: austenitise + isothermal transform 500–560°C in lead or fluidised bed; cold draw UTS 1570–1860 MPa
Bearing steel (52100) Fine uniformly distributed spheroidal; no grain-boundary network Controlled rolling + spheroidise anneal; verify microstructure per ASTM A295 190–240 HV (soft anneal)
White cast iron wear parts Continuous cementite network (ledeburite) Rapid solidification (no Si/Mg inoculant); no subsequent anneal 500–700 HV
Tempered martensite structural Fine Fe₃C precipitates; no grain-boundary films Quench + temper >400°C (avoid 350–400°C TME window) 280–450 HV

Internal links for further reading on cementite-related topics: the Pearlite Colony Growth article covers cementite lamellar formation kinetics in detail; Annealing and Normalising covers the spheroidise annealing process cycle; Quenching and Tempering addresses cementite precipitation during martensite tempering; and The Eutectoid Reaction covers the thermodynamics and kinetics of the cooperative ferrite-cementite growth reaction that produces lamellar pearlite.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the crystal structure of cementite (Fe₃C)?
Cementite has an orthorhombic crystal structure with space group Pnma (No. 62) and lattice parameters a = 0.5090 nm, b = 0.6748 nm, c = 0.4523 nm. The unit cell contains 12 iron atoms and 4 carbon atoms, giving the stoichiometric ratio Fe₃C (25 at% C, 6.67 wt% C). Each carbon atom sits inside a trigonal prism formed by six iron atoms. This highly directional Fe-C bonding — combined with the low number of slip systems in the orthorhombic lattice — explains why cementite is extremely hard (~1000–1100 HV) but almost completely brittle, with fracture toughness KIC of only ~1–2 MPa√m.
Why is cementite so hard and brittle?
Cementite hardness (~1000–1100 HV) arises from its mixed metallic-covalent bonding: the Fe-C bonds within the trigonal prismatic coordination strongly resist dislocation glide. The low-symmetry orthorhombic lattice has very few active slip systems compared to FCC or BCC metals, so plastic deformation is essentially impossible at room temperature. Fracture occurs by cleavage on {001} planes. The elastic modulus of cementite is approximately 195–210 GPa — comparable to steel — but its fracture toughness KIC is only ~1–2 MPa√m, making it one of the most brittle structural compounds in ferrous metallurgy.
What is the carbon content of cementite in weight percent?
Cementite has the fixed stoichiometric composition Fe₃C, corresponding to 6.67 wt% carbon (25 at% carbon). This is the terminal phase on the iron-rich side of the Fe-C diagram, appearing as a vertical line at 6.67 wt% C. Alloying elements such as Mn, Cr, and Mo can substitute for iron in the cementite structure to form (Fe,M)₃C alloyed carbides, slightly modifying properties but not the carbon stoichiometry significantly.
What are the different morphological forms of cementite in steel?
Cementite appears in four principal morphologies: (1) Lamellar cementite — alternating ferrite-cementite plates within pearlite, interlamellar spacing 80–800 nm depending on transformation temperature. (2) Proeutectoid cementite — grain-boundary network or Widmanstätten plates in hypereutectoid steels (>0.77 wt% C), severely embrittling. (3) Spheroidal cementite (spheroidite) — round carbide particles in ferrite matrix after sub-A1 annealing, giving maximum machinability and formability. (4) Tempered martensite carbides — very fine ε-carbide (Fe₂.₄C) at low tempering temperatures, transitioning to Fe₃C at 250–400°C as rods and plates on martensite lath boundaries.
Why is proeutectoid cementite network dangerous and how is it eliminated?
A continuous cementite network at prior austenite grain boundaries in hypereutectoid steel provides an uninterrupted brittle fracture path with essentially zero toughness. Charpy impact energies can fall below 5 J even at room temperature. It is eliminated by spheroidise annealing at 680–720°C (just below A1) for 4–24 hours, allowing the thin cementite films to spheroidise into discrete particles via Ostwald ripening driven by interfacial energy reduction. Normalising above Acm dissolves and breaks up the network; however, a subsequent spheroidise anneal is required to prevent re-formation on the next slow cool.
Is cementite thermodynamically stable or metastable?
Cementite (Fe₃C) is metastable with respect to graphite under the equilibrium Fe-C (Fe-graphite) phase diagram. Given sufficient time at elevated temperature, cementite decomposes to iron and graphite — this graphitisation is exploited in malleable iron production and is a degradation mechanism (graphitisation embrittlement) in plain carbon steel boiler components after prolonged service above 425°C. In practice, cementite is kinetically stable under all normal steel processing and service conditions because the activation energy for decomposition is high. Chromium additions strongly suppress graphitisation by stabilising the cementite structure.
How does cementite lamellar spacing affect the mechanical properties of pearlitic steel?
In pearlite, lamellar cementite acts as a barrier to dislocation motion in the ferrite matrix. Finer interlamellar spacing (produced by higher undercooling below A1) increases yield and tensile strength following a Hall-Petch type relationship: tensile strength increases approximately proportionally to S₀¹⁄₂ (where S₀ is the spacing). Fine pearlite (S₀ ≈ 80–150 nm, formed at 550–600°C) achieves tensile strengths of 1200–1400 MPa — used in rail and prestressed wire steels — while coarse pearlite (S₀ ≈ 600–800 nm) reaches only 700–900 MPa. The patenting process (isothermal transformation at 500–560°C) produces very fine pearlite optimised for subsequent cold drawing of high-carbon wire.
How is cementite identified in optical metallography?
Cementite in optical metallography is best revealed by picral (4% picric acid in ethanol), which preferentially attacks the ferrite-cementite interface and leaves cementite relatively bright. With nital (2% HNO₃ in ethanol), cementite appears light/white against darker etched ferrite. In pearlite, lamellar cementite shows as fine bright parallel lines; proeutectoid cementite appears as bright continuous or broken films at grain boundaries; spheroidite appears as discrete white dots in grey ferrite. Hot alkaline sodium picrate selectively darkens cementite, providing the clearest discrimination from other white-etching phases. Electron microscopy (TEM-SAED, SEM-EDX) confirms identity at finer scales.

Recommended References

Steels: Microstructure and Properties — Bhadeshia & Honeycombe (4th Ed.)
The definitive graduate-level treatment of cementite, pearlite, and all steel transformation products, including thermodynamics and kinetics.
View on Amazon
ASM Handbook Vol. 9: Metallography and Microstructures
Comprehensive atlas of steel microstructures including cementite morphologies, etching techniques, and optical micrograph reference library.
View on Amazon
Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance — Krauss (2nd Ed.)
Authoritative coverage of pearlite, bainite, martensite tempering, and the role of cementite in all commercially important steel microstructures.
View on Amazon
ASM Handbook Vol. 4: Heat Treating
Practical reference for spheroidise annealing cycles, patenting, carbide dissolution during austenitisation, and cementite control in tool and bearing steels.
View on Amazon

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