SPCE is the deep-drawing grade within JIS G3141 cold-rolled steel — the grade that takes over when SPCC tears. The difference is not just formability by degree but by mechanism: SPCE achieves its deep-drawing capability through systematically lower carbon (≤0.08%), manganese (≤0.45%), phosphorus (≤0.030%), and sulfur (≤0.030%) compared to SPCC. The result is a ferritic microstructure with fewer interstitial atoms and fewer inclusions impeding dislocation movement. Combined with a required minimum r-value (Lankford coefficient) of ≥1.4, SPCE produces the anisotropic plastic flow that deep drawing demands — material that thickens at the flange and thins at the wall uniformly rather than necking at the punch corner. The decision to step from SPCC to SPCE should be based on draw ratio and the failure mode observed during forming trials.
| Property | SPCC | SPCD | SPCE |
|---|---|---|---|
| C (max) | 0.15% | 0.12% | 0.08% |
| P (max) | 0.100% | 0.040% | 0.030% |
| Elongation (t ≥ 1.0 mm) | ≥ 34% | ≥ 38% | ≥ 42% |
| r-value (min, t ≥ 0.6 mm) | Not specified | Not specified | ≥ 1.4 |
| ASTM equivalent | CS Type B | DS Type B | DDS |
| EN equivalent | DC01 | DC03 | DC04 |
- What the r-Value Means and Why It Matters
- Chemical Composition
- Mechanical Properties
- SPCE vs SPCF vs SPCG: When SPCE Isn’t Enough
- Deep Drawing Limit — Draw Ratio and Failure Mode
- ASTM and EN Equivalents
- Common Mistakes
- FAQ
1. What the r-Value Means and Why It Matters
The r-value (plastic strain ratio or Lankford coefficient) is the ratio of true strain in the width direction to true strain in the thickness direction during a uniaxial tensile test:
r = ε_width / ε_thickness
A high r-value means the material prefers to strain in the plane of the sheet (changing shape in width) rather than thinning through the thickness. For deep drawing, this is exactly what’s needed at the punch radius and in the cup wall — you want the metal to flow inward from the flange rather than thin at the most stressed point (punch corner), which is where fracture initiates.
| r-value | Behavior | Deep Drawing Suitability |
|---|---|---|
| < 1.0 | Thickens more than it flows in-plane | Poor — excessive thinning, early fracture |
| 1.0–1.3 | Roughly isotropic | Moderate — SPCC/SPCD territory |
| 1.4–1.8 | Strong preference for in-plane flow | Good — SPCE range |
| > 2.0 | Highly anisotropic | Excellent — IF steel (SPCG) territory |
JIS G3141 mandates r ≥ 1.4 for SPCE (measured as the average of 0°, 45°, and 90° to rolling direction: r̄ = (r₀ + 2r₄₅ + r₉₀) / 4). Achieving this requires the correct crystallographic texture — SPCE production is controlled to develop a {111} fiber texture in which {111} planes are parallel to the sheet surface, the texture associated with high r-values in BCC ferrite.
2. Chemical Composition
| Element | SPCE (JIS G3141) | DC04 (EN 10130) | DDS (ASTM A1008) |
|---|---|---|---|
| C (max) | 0.08% | 0.08% | 0.06% |
| Mn (max) | 0.45% | 0.40% | 0.35% |
| P (max) | 0.030% | 0.030% | 0.020% |
| S (max) | 0.030% | 0.030% | 0.025% |
| Al (min) | — | 0.010% | — |
ASTM A1008 DDS has somewhat tighter limits than SPCE, particularly on C (0.06% vs 0.08%). EN 10130 DC04 requires a minimum aluminum of 0.010% — aluminum-killed steel is required to guarantee the grain structure needed for the r-value specification. JIS G3141 does not explicitly mandate Al-killed steel for SPCE but in practice all SPCE is aluminum-killed to meet the r-value requirement.
3. Mechanical Properties
| Property | SPCE (JIS G3141) | Test Method |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength | Not specified (typically 270–370 MPa) | JIS Z 2241 |
| Yield strength | Not specified (typically 130–210 MPa) | JIS Z 2241 |
| Elongation (t < 0.6 mm) | ≥ 36% | JIS Z 2241 |
| Elongation (0.6 ≤ t < 1.0 mm) | ≥ 39% | JIS Z 2241 |
| Elongation (t ≥ 1.0 mm) | ≥ 42% | JIS Z 2241 |
| r-value (r̄, t ≥ 0.6 mm) | ≥ 1.4 | JIS Z 2254 |
| n-value (strain hardening exp.) | Not specified (typically 0.21–0.24) | — |
The elongation jump from SPCC (34%) to SPCE (42%) is significant — it represents approximately 25% more plastic strain capacity before fracture. Combined with the r-value guarantee, SPCE reliably draws to depth ratios that cause SPCC to tear at the punch radius or neck prematurely in the wall.
4. SPCE vs SPCF vs SPCG: When SPCE Isn’t Enough
| Grade | r̄ (min) | Special Feature | Trigger to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| SPCE | ≥ 1.4 | Deep drawing | Draw ratio 1.8–2.1; moderate redraws |
| SPCF | ≥ 1.6 | Non-aging + deep drawing | Same as SPCE but storage > 2 months before stamping, or Lüders bands observed after skin-pass aging |
| SPCG | ≥ 1.9 | Interstitial-free (IF); extreme draw | Draw ratio > 2.1; multiple redraws; automotive body panels; beverage cans |
SPCG (Super Deep Drawing) is produced as interstitial-free (IF) steel: all dissolved C and N are fixed by Ti or Nb additions, leaving a nearly IF ferrite matrix with the maximum achievable r-value. IF steel has essentially zero Lüders band tendency and can be drawn, flanged, and re-drawn to an extent impossible with conventional SPCE. The cost premium over SPCE is 20–40% — worth it for complex automotive stampings, not warranted for simple housings.
5. Deep Drawing Limit — Draw Ratio and Failure Mode
The limiting draw ratio (LDR) is the maximum blank diameter divided by punch diameter that can be drawn without fracture:
| Grade | Approximate LDR |
|---|---|
| SPCC | ~1.8–2.0 |
| SPCD | ~2.0–2.1 |
| SPCE | ~2.1–2.2 |
| SPCG (IF) | ~2.2–2.4 |
When SPCC fails in a draw:
- Fracture at punch radius: Thinning failure — r-value too low; upgrade to SPCE or SPCG
- Wrinkling at flange: Blank holder force too low, or material too thick — adjust process first before upgrading grade
- Earing (uneven cup height at rim): Crystallographic anisotropy — Δr high; IF steel reduces Δr
6. ASTM and EN Equivalents
| JIS | ASTM A1008 | EN 10130 | ISO 3574 |
|---|---|---|---|
| SPCE | DDS (Deep Drawing Steel) | DC04 | CR3 |
| SPCF | EDDS (Extra Deep Drawing Steel) | DC05 | CR4 |
| SPCG | IF (Interstitial-Free) | DC06 | CR5 |
7. Common Mistakes
8. FAQ
Q: Does SPCE cost significantly more than SPCC?
SPCE typically carries a 5–15% premium over SPCC from the same supplier. The cost difference comes from tighter chemistry control (lower C, P, S require cleaner raw materials and more precise steelmaking), Al-killed practice, and the controlled annealing cycle needed to develop the {111} texture. SPCG (IF steel) carries a larger premium (15–30%) due to the Ti or Nb microalloying and more stringent process control.
Q: Can SPCE be welded?
Yes — SPCE’s lower carbon (≤0.08%) makes it highly weldable, with lower risk of heat-affected zone hardening than higher-carbon grades. Spot welding performance is excellent. TIG/MIG welding of thin SPCE requires low heat input to avoid burn-through and distortion. The material is not hardenable by heat treatment — there is no advantage to controlled cooling after welding.
Summary
- SPCE (JIS G3141) — deep-drawing grade: C ≤0.08%, P ≤0.030%, elongation ≥ 42%, r̄ ≥ 1.4
- The r-value guarantee is the key difference from SPCC/SPCD — it is the metric that determines whether deep drawing will succeed or fail
- Use SPCE when draw ratio exceeds ~1.9 or when SPCC/SPCD produces fracture at the punch radius
- SPCF adds non-aging property (Ti/Nb IF); SPCG (r̄ ≥ 1.9) for extreme draws and automotive body panels
- ASTM DDS / EN DC04 — functional equivalents; ASTM has tighter C limit (0.06% vs 0.08%)
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