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Low Carbon Steel Etchants

Guide to etching low carbon steels and weld steels. Covers Nital and Picral for revealing ferrite grain boundaries, pearlite, bainite, and weld zone microstructures in steels with less than 0.30% carbon.

1018 Low Carbon Steel Microstructure, etched, 100X

Classification & Preparation

Low carbon steels (<0.30% C) consist primarily of ferrite and pearlite microstructures.

AISI/SAE Designations

Low carbon steels classified by carbon content and alloying.

View designations
  • 1005–1015 — Very low carbon – Excellent formability
  • 1016–1030 — Low carbon – Good machinability, structural
  • 10xx series — Plain carbon steels
  • 11xx series — Resulfurized – Improved machinability
  • 12xx series — Resulfurized/rephosphorized
  • 15xx series — Manganese steels (1.00–1.65% Mn)

Common Microstructural Phases

Phases present in low carbon steels after various processing.

View phases
  • Ferrite — BCC iron – Soft, ductile, appears light after etching
  • Pearlite — Ferrite + cementite lamellae – Appears dark
  • Bainite — Intermediate cooling – Acicular or feathery
  • Widmanstätten ferrite — Plate-like from high cooling rates
  • Martensite — Only if quenched rapidly – Needle-like or lath

Preparation Tips

Low carbon steels are relatively soft and susceptible to mechanical deformation.

View key considerations
  • Avoid excessive grinding pressure to prevent smearing of ferrite grains
  • Use SiC papers or diamond grinding disks for initial grinding
  • Finish with diamond polishing and colloidal silica or alumina
  • Ensure thorough cleaning between preparation steps

Recommended Etchants

For a comprehensive searchable list, visit the Etchant Database.

EtchantCompositionConditionsApplications
Nital
  • Ethanol: 100 ml
  • Nitric acid: 1–10 ml
  • Immerse or swab for seconds to minutes
  • Rinse in water
  • Dry with alcohol
  • General purpose for low carbon and weld steels
  • Reveals ferrite grain boundaries and pearlite
  • Do not exceed 10% nitric acid – explosive
Picral
  • Ethanol: 100 ml
  • Picric acid: 2–4 g
  • Immerse or swab for seconds to minutes
  • Rinse in water
  • Dry with alcohol
  • Reveals pearlite and bainite structures
  • Does not reveal ferrite boundaries as strongly as Nital
  • Do not let etchant dry – explosive

Troubleshooting

Common etching issues and how to resolve them.

Over-etching

Surface too dark or grainy. Use lower Nital concentration (1–2%). Re-polish and re-etch if necessary.

Under-etching

Grain boundaries not visible. Increase time by 15–30 seconds or use higher Nital concentration (up to 5%).

Uneven Etching

Ensure sample is dry before etching with consistent immersion motion. Check surface is uniformly polished.

Staining

Rinse immediately with water and dry with compressed air or alcohol to prevent water spots.

Ferrite/Pearlite Contrast

Nital gives best contrast (ferrite light, pearlite dark). If insufficient, increase etch time or concentration slightly.

Weld Zone Etching

Different weld regions etch at different rates. Consider sequential etching with fresh solution for base metal, HAZ, and fusion zone.