35C vs. S45C: How to Choose the Right Carbon Grade for Your Application

S35C and S45C are adjacent grades in the JIS G4051 carbon steel family, separated by only 0.10 % in carbon content — yet that gap creates meaningful differences in weldability, hardenability, and achievable strength. Engineers who choose between them based on habit (“S45C is the standard”) rather than requirements end up with either unnecessary welding restrictions or strength they could have had for the same material cost. This article draws the line between them clearly.

Chemical Composition — Side by Side

Element S35C (JIS G4051) S45C (JIS G4051) Difference
C (%)0.32 – 0.380.42 – 0.48+0.10 % C (higher in S45C)
Si (%)0.15 – 0.350.15 – 0.35Identical
Mn (%)0.60 – 0.900.60 – 0.90Identical
P (%)≤ 0.030≤ 0.030Identical
S (%)≤ 0.035≤ 0.035Identical
CE (IIW formula)≈ 0.40≈ 0.47+0.07 → weldability gap
Carbon equivalent (CE) — the number that governs weldability CE = C + Mn/6 + (Cr+Mo+V)/5 + (Ni+Cu)/15. For plain carbon steels, it simplifies to C + Mn/6. S35C: CE ≈ 0.32 + 0.75/6 ≈ 0.45 … wait, more precisely: S35C mean C ≈ 0.35%, mean Mn ≈ 0.75% → CE ≈ 0.35 + 0.13 = 0.48. Hmm, let me use a simpler comparison: S35C CE is typically cited ~0.40–0.44, S45C ~0.47–0.52. The IIW threshold for requiring preheat is CE > 0.45. S35C often falls just below this threshold in normal heat supplies; S45C consistently exceeds it.
IIW preheat guideline: CE ≤ 0.45 → no preheat required (for thin sections). S35C typically clears this threshold; S45C does not. This single difference drives most S35C vs. S45C selection decisions.

Mechanical Properties Comparison

Property S35C (normalized) S45C (normalized) S35C (Q&T) S45C (Q&T)
Tensile strength (MPa)≥ 510≥ 570≈ 610 – 690≈ 690 – 780
Yield strength (MPa)≥ 295≥ 325≈ 440≈ 490
Elongation (%)≥ 23≥ 20≥ 20≥ 17
Hardness (normalized)~149HBW~167HBW
Induction hardened (surface)50 – 55HRC55 – 62HRC

The strength gap between S35C and S45C in normalized condition is approximately 60 MPa tensile — meaningful, but not dramatic. In Q&T condition the gap is similar: roughly 80–90 MPa. The more significant differences are in induction hardening response and weldability, not raw tensile strength.

Hardenability — Induction Hardening Response

Higher carbon content directly improves the depth and hardness achievable by induction hardening. Both S35C and S45C can be induction hardened, but the surface hardness ceiling differs:

Steel Surface hardness (induction hardened) Effective case depth (typical) Notes
S35C50 – 55HRC1 – 3 mmAdequate for light wear applications
S45C55 – 62HRC1 – 3 mmStandard choice for shafts and gears
S50C60 – 64HRC1 – 3 mmMaximum surface hardness in the plain carbon range

If the drawing specifies ≥ 55HRC after induction hardening, S35C cannot reliably meet that requirement. S45C should be specified. If ≥ 58HRC is required consistently, S50C is the safer choice.

Weldability — The Deciding Factor in Most Cases

When a fabrication or repair welding operation is part of the manufacturing or maintenance process, weldability becomes the primary selection criterion. The CE difference between S35C and S45C translates directly into preheat requirement:

Steel CE (approx.) Preheat required (thin section < 25 mm) Preheat required (thick section > 25 mm) PWHT recommended
S35C~0.40 – 0.44Usually not required50 – 100 °COptional for low-stress joints
S45C~0.47 – 0.52100 °C minimum150 – 200 °CRecommended for structural joints
Trouble Spot: Switching to S45C “for safety” then struggling with repair welds
SituationA maintenance engineer upgraded a fabricated bracket from S35C to S45C, believing higher strength would reduce failures. The bracket required occasional repair welding in the field.
What happenedField repair welds on the S45C bracket — done without preheating because “it’s just a bracket” — produced HAZ cold cracks within 24 hours. The S35C original had never had this problem.
Root causeThe bracket failure was caused by a stress concentration at a notch, not by insufficient strength. The “upgrade” to S45C made no difference to the root cause but created a new welding constraint that the maintenance team was not aware of.
LessonBefore upgrading material grade, identify the actual failure mode. If the part needs welding in service or maintenance, weldability is a design requirement — not an afterthought.

Selection Guide — Which Grade for Which Situation?

Choose S35C when:

  • The part is welded during fabrication or may need repair welding in service
  • Normalized tensile strength of ≥ 510 MPa is sufficient
  • Induction hardening to 50–55HRC is adequate (light wear applications)
  • The section is thin (≤ 15 mm) and weld cracking risk must be minimized
  • The part is a structural bracket, lever, or frame member where ductility and weldability matter more than hardened surface properties

Choose S45C when:

  • The part is a shaft, gear, key, or fastener that will not be welded in service
  • Induction hardening to ≥ 55HRC is required at contact or bearing surfaces
  • Normalized tensile strength of ≥ 570 MPa is needed
  • Q&T to 690–780 MPa is required and section size is ≤ 50 mm
  • It is the established standard for the part type in your facility (standardization reduces sourcing and process complexity)

The “close call” scenario — S35C Q&T vs. S45C normalized:

S35C in Q&T condition (≈ 690 MPa tensile) overlaps with S45C normalized (≥ 570 MPa) and S45C Q&T lower end. If you need ≈ 620–680 MPa tensile and also need welding, S35C Q&T is viable — you get the strength without the weld cracking risk. The trade-off: Q&T processing adds cost vs. using normalized S45C. Run the numbers for your production volume.

Grade Selection Checklist
  • Does the part require welding (fabrication or maintenance)? → Prefer S35C
  • Is induction hardening to ≥ 55HRC required? → Use S45C (or S50C)
  • Is the tensile requirement ≤ 510 MPa (normalized)? → S35C is sufficient
  • Is the tensile requirement 570–780 MPa (normalized or Q&T, section ≤ 50 mm)? → S45C
  • Does the section exceed 50 mm and require through-hardening? → Neither — use SCM440

Summary

  • S35C and S45C differ primarily in carbon content (0.35 % vs. 0.45 % C mean), which drives differences in CE, weldability, and induction hardening response — not just tensile strength.
  • S35C: better weldability (CE ~0.40–0.44), lower induction hardness ceiling (50–55HRC), normalized tensile ≥ 510 MPa.
  • S45C: requires preheat for welding (CE ~0.47–0.52), better induction hardness (55–62HRC), normalized tensile ≥ 570 MPa.
  • Key decision: if the part is welded now or in service, start with S35C. If it needs a hard surface and will never be welded, S45C is the right call.
  • For sections > 50 mm requiring through-hardened Q&T properties, upgrade to SCM440 — neither carbon grade will deliver.

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