Because of its high vanadium content, ferrovanadium 80 is primarily used as an alloying additive in metallurgy to improve the mechanical properties of other metals, especially steel and cast iron.
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High-Strength Low-Alloy (HSLA) Steels
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Added to structural steels to increase strength, toughness, and resistance to fatigue and impact loading. Used in pipelines, bridges, automotive chassis, and construction.
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Tool Steels & High-Speed Steels
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Improves wear resistance, hardness, and high‑temperature strength of drill bits, cutting tools, dies, and molds.
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Steel for Aerospace & Defense
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Enhances performance of landing gear, armor plate, and aircraft components where high strength‑to‑weight ratio and toughness are critical.
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Cast Iron Alloying
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Increases tensile strength and wear resistance of nodular (ductile) cast iron and alloy cast irons used in automotive powertrains and heavy machinery.
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Specialty Alloys
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Used in manufacturing certain nickel‑base superalloys and titanium alloys where vanadium contributes to high-temperature stability and strength.
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Vanadium Redox Flow Batteries (VRFB)
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While not a direct use of FeV80, the high‑purity vanadium extracted from such alloys can be used in energy storage systems; however, this is a secondary market compared to metallurgy.
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Higher vanadium content means less alloy is needed to achieve target properties, improving cost efficiency in production.
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Produces cleaner steel with fewer inclusions when added in controlled amounts.
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Application Area |
Benefit of Using FeV80 |
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HSLA steels |
Higher strength & toughness |
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Tool & high-speed steels |
Greater wear resistance & hardness |
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Aerospace/defense steels |
Superior mechanical performance |
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Cast iron |
Improved ductility & wear resistance |
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Specialty alloys |
Enhanced high‑temp stability |
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VRFB (indirect) |
Source of high‑purity vanadium |

