Home
Product Catalog
Trade Message
Reference List
Pipe Specs
 Line Pipe
Seamless Pipe
Stainless Tube
Qualification Certificate
News
Contact Us
 BizVerify
Metals International Limited
Verified By : SMR(HK)
Verified Date : 2011-03-25
Product Catalog 
 
Product Catalog > Stainless Pipe
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Model No.︰-
Brand Name︰-
Country of Origin︰-
Unit Price︰-
Minimum Order︰-

 Total 9 Related Items 
Prev45678Next
Auto next page:   SecondsPlay

Product Description

 

  Composition of Duplex Stainless Steelsa The table lists the duplex stainless steels covered in ASTM specifications for plate, sheet, and bar products.
UNS Number
Duplex Grades
Typeb C Mn P S Si Cr Ni Mo N Cu Other
S31200 ... 0.030 2.00 0.045 0.030 1.00 24.0-26.0 5.5-6.5 1.20-2.00 0.14-0.20 ... ...
S31260 ... 0.03 1.00 0.030 0.030 0.75 24.0-26.0 5.5-7.5 2.5-3.5 0.10-0.20 0.20-0.80 W0.10-0.20
S31803 ... 0.030 2.00 0.030 0.020 1.00 21.0-23.0 4.5-6.5 2.5-3.5 0.08-0.20 ...  
S32001 ... 0.030 4.0-6.0 0.040 0.030 1.00 22.0-23.0 1.00-3.00 0.60 0.05-0.17 1.00  
S32205 2205 0.030 2.00 0.030 0.020 1.00 19.5-21.5 4.5-6.5 3.0-3.5 0.14-0.20 ...  
S32304 2304 0.030 2.50 0.040 0.030 1.00 21.5-24.5 3.0-5.5 0.05-0.60 0.05-0.20 0.05-0.60  
S32520 ... 0.030 1.50 0.035 0.020 0.80 24.0-26.0 5.5-8.0 3.0-4.0 0.20-0.35 0.50-2.00  
S32550 255 0.04 1.50 0.040 0.030 1.00 24.0-27.0 4.5-6.5 2.9-3.9 0.10-0.25 1.5-2.5  
S32750 2507 0.030 1.20 0.035 0.020 0.80 24.0-26.0 6.0-8.0 3.0-5.0 0.24-0.32 0.50  
S32760 ... 0.030 1.00 0.030 0.010 1.00 24.0-26.0 6.0-8.0 3.0-4.0 0.20-0.30 0.50-1.00 c
S32900 329d 0.06 1.00 0.040 0.030 0.75 23.0-28.0 2.5-5.0 1.0-2.0 ... ...  
S32950 ... 0.03 2.00 0.035                


a Weight percent, maximum unless otherwise noted.
b Unless otherwise indicated, a common name, not a trademark, widely used, not associated with any one producer, as listed in ASTM A 240.
c W 0.50-1.00; Cr+3.3Mo+16N=40 min.
d AISI designation
BENEFITS
  • High strength,
  • High resistance to pitting, crevice corrosion resistance.
  • High resistance to stress corrosion cracking, corrosion fatigue and erosion,
  • Excellent resistance to chloride stress-corrosion cracking
  • High thermal conductivity
  • Low coefficient of thermal expansion
  • Good sulfide stress corrosion resistance,
  • Low thermal expansion and higher heat conductivity than austenitic steels,
  • Good workability and weldability,
  • High energy absorption.
APPLICATIONS
  • Heat exchangers, tubes and pipes for production and handling of gas and oil,
  • Heat exchangers and pipes in desalination plants,
  • Mechanical and structural components,
  • Power industry FGD systems,
  • Pipes in process industries handling solutions containing chlorides,
  • Utility and industrial systems, rotors, fans, shafts and press rolls where the high corrosion fatigue strength can be utilized,
  • Cargo tanks, vessels, piping and welding consumables for chemical tankers.
  • High-strength, highly resistant wiring.

     
 

Specifications︰Seamless Pipe
1. ASTM A789/A789M 12.7-1016x 0.5-25.4mm
2. ASTM A790/A790M 10.3-1016x 0.5-36mm

EFW Pipe
1.ASTM A789/A789M:12.7-323.9x0.5-12.7mm
2:ASTM A790/A790M 10.3-610x0.5-18mm
3.ASTM A928/A928M 10.3-610x 0.5-18mm

Material: UNS S31500 S32304 S31803/S2205 S2760 S2750,S 32205, S 32550, S 32750, S 32760,S31042,S30432

Duplex Stainless Steels have a structure that contains both ferrite and austenite. Duplex alloys have higher strength and better stress corrosion cracking resistance than most austenitic alloys and greater toughness than ferritic alloys, especially at low temperatures. The corrosion resistance of duplex alloys depends primarily on their composition, especially the amount of chromium, molybdenum, and nitrogen they contain. Duplex alloys are often divided into three sub-classes: Lean Duplex (AL 2003?alloy), Standard Duplex (AL 2205 alloy), and Superduplex (AL 255 Alloy and UNS S32760).
Standard Met︰Duplex Stainless Steels: Part One


Abstract:
Stainless steel is the name given to a family of corrosion and heat resistant steels containing a minimum of 10.5% chromium. Just as there is a range of structural and engineering carbon steels meeting different requirements of strength, weldability and toughness, so there is a wide range of stainless steels with progressively higher levels of corrosion resistance and strength.
Duplex stainless steels have a mixture of austenitic and ferritic grains in their microstructure; hence they have a duplex structure. This effect is achieved by adding less nickel than would be necessary for making a fully austenitic stainless steel.




Microstructure
Stainless steel is the name given to a family of corrosion and heat resistant steels containing a minimum of 10.5% chromium. Just as there is a range of structural and engineering carbon steels meeting different requirements of strength, weldability and toughness, so there is a wide range of stainless steels with progressively higher levels of corrosion resistance and strength. This results from the controlled addition of alloying elements, each offering specific attributes in respect of strength and ability to resist different environments. The available grades of stainless steel can be classified into five basic families: ferritic, martensitic, austenitic, duplex and precipitation hardenable.
The division based on microstructure is useful because the members within one family tend to have similar physical and mechanical properties. However, the properties for one family can be very different from the properties for another family. For example, austenitic stainless steels are non-magnetic, while ferritic and duplex stainless steels are magnetic.
The difference between the families is fundamental on the atomic level. The arrangement of atoms in the ferrite crystal is different from the one in the austenite crystal:

Figure 1: The ferritic stainless steel on the left has a body centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure. By adding nickel to this stainless steel the structure changes from bcc to face centered cubic (fcc), which is called austenitic.
In the ferritic stainless steel, the iron and chromium atoms are arranged on the corners of a cube and in the center of that cube. In the austenitic stainless steels the atoms, here iron, chromium and nickel, are arranged on the corners of the cube and in the center of each of the faces of the cube. This seemingly small difference profoundly affects the properties of these steels.
Table 1: Select properties of austenitic and ferritic stainless steels
Properties Austenitic Ferritic
Toughness Very high Moderate
Ductility Very high Moderate
Weldability Good Limited
Thermal expansion High Moderate
Stress corrosion cracking resistance Low Very high
Magnetic properties Non-magnetic Ferro magnetic

Because of their good mechanical properties and the ease of fabrication, austenitic stainless steels are much more widely used than ferritic stainless steels. About 75% of all stainless steel used worldwide is austenitic and about 25% is ferritic. The other families, martensitic, duplex and precipitation hardenable stainless steels each represent less than 1% of the total market.
Besides nickel there are other elements that tend to make the structure austenitic. These elements are called austenite formers. Alloying elements that tend to make the structure ferritic are called ferrite formers.
Table 2: Alloying elements formers for stainless steel microstructure
Ferrite formers Austenite formers
Iron Nickel
Chromium Nitrogen
Molybdenum Carbon
Silicon Manganese
Copper

Duplex stainless steels have a mixture of austenitic and ferritic grains in their microstructure; hence they have a duplex structure. This effect is achieved by adding less nickel than would be necessary for making a fully austenitic stainless steel.

Figure 2: Adding 8% nickel to a ferritic chromium stainless steel makes an austenitic chromium-nickel stainless steel, for example Type 304 stainless steel. If less nickel is added to a chromium steel, about four or five percent, a duplex structure, a mixture of austenite and ferrite, is created as in 2205 duplex stainless steel.
Austenitic-ferritic (Duplex) stainless steels contain increased amount of chromium (18% -28%) and decreased (as compared to austenitic steels) amount of nickel (4.5% - 8%) as major alloying elements. As additional alloying element molybdenum is used in some of Duplex steels. Since the quantity of nickel is insufficient for formation of fully austenitic structure, the structure of Duplex steels is mixed: austenitic-ferritic.
The properties of Duplex steels are somewhere between the properties of austenitic and ferritic steels. Duplex steels have high resistance to the stress corrosion cracking and to chloride ions attack. These steels are weldable and formable and possess high strength
In the annealed condition, most wrought duplex stainless steels contain about 40-50% austenite in a ferrite matrix. When these materials solidify, σ ferrite forms first. Depending upon the composition, a varying amount of austenite is expected to form as the last material solidifies.
Additional austenite forms by a solid-phase transformation during subsequent annealing. Accordingly, an annealed product is expected to contain more austenite than as-cast or as-welded material. A sufficient amount of austenite must be maintained to provide satisfactory corrosion resistance and mechanical properties. This amount of austenite may vary with the service application and with alloy composition and thermal history.
Additional phases found in duplex stainless steels can include σ, χ, R, α', carbides and nitrides. These phases have generally been studied using isothermal heat treatments in the laboratory.
Sigma Phase
Sigma is a hard, brittle intermetallic phase which is expected to contain iron, chromium and molybdenum in most duplex stainless steels. In these alloys, σ generally can be formed between about 600 and 950°C, with the most rapid formation occurring between 700 and 900°C.
Sigma typically nucleates in the austenite-ferrite grain boundaries and grows into the adjacent ferrite. Often, additional austenite forms in the areas of chromium depletion adjacent to the σ phase. Elements which stabilize ferrite such as chromium, molybdenum and silicon increase the tendency to form the σ phase. On a weight percent basis, molybdenum can promote σ phase formation much more effectively than chromium, particularly at higher temperatures (e.g. about 900°C). Austenite forming elements such as nickel or nitrogen can also accelerate the nucleation and growth of the σ phase, although these elements may reduce the total amount formed.
The alloy elements are portioned, and increased levels of each element tend to be present in the phases they stabilize. As nickel or nitrogen stabilize additional austenite, the reduced amount of ferrite becomes enriched in chromium and molybdenum. As a result, σ phase formed may be reduced by nickel or nitrogen, however, because of the smaller volume fraction of ferrite.
The σ phase can deplete chromium and molybdenum in surrounding areas and reduce resistance to corrosion. As little as about 1% σ phase may reduce impact toughness, while about 10% can cause complete embrittlement of duplex stainless steels.

Super-Duplex Stainless Steels and their characteristics
The first-generation Duplex stainless steels were developed more than 70 years ago in Sweden for use in the sulfite paper industry. Duplex alloys were originally created to combat corrosion problems caused by chloride-bearing cooling waters and other aggressive chemical process fluids.
Called Duplex because of its mixed microstructure with about equal proportions of ferrite and austenite, Duplex stainless steels are a family of grades, which range in corrosion performance depending on their alloy content. The term "Super-Duplex" was first used in the 1980's to denote highly alloyed, high-performance Duplex steel with a pitting resistance equivalent of >40 (based on Cr% + 3.3Mo% + 16N%).
With its high level of chromium, Super-Duplex steel provides outstanding resistance to acids, acid chlorides, caustic solutions and other environments in the chemical/petrochemical, pulp and paper industries, often replacing 300 series stainless steel, high nickel super-austenitic steels and nickel-based alloys.
The chemical composition based on high contents of chromium, nickel and molybdenum improves intergranular and pitting corrosion resistance. Additions of nitrogen promote structural hardening by interstitial solid solution mechanism, which raises the yield strength and ultimate strength values without impairing toughness. Moreover, the two-phase microstructure guarantees higher resistance to pitting and stress corrosion cracking in comparison with conventional stainless steels.
From the introduction of its first-generation, Duplex steel has seen a steady increase in popularity. Recently, the production of high-strength, corrosion resistant super-duplex coil has been implemented in the marine and chemical industries, architecture and mast riggings, wire lines, lifting and pulley equipment and well service strands. In fact, development of wire processing techniques has enabled the production of steel wires down to 1mm in diameter.
The various Alloys
Super-Duplex falls under the Duplex stainless steel grouping. Duplex stainless steels are graded for their corrosion performance depending on their alloy content. Today, modern Duplex stainless steel can be divided into four groups:
Lean Duplex such as 2304, which contains no deliberate Mo addition;
2205, the work-horse grade accounting for more than 80% of duplex usage;
25 Cr duplex such as Alloy 255 and DP-3;
Super-Duplex; with 25-26 Cr and increased Mo and N compared with 25 Cr grades, including grades such as 2507, Zeron 100, UR 52N+, and DP-3W


Product Image
Select Image
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
Duplex & Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube-S31803,S32750,S32760,S31042,S30432
 
Seamless Pipe 1. ASTM A789/A789M 12.7-1016x 0.5-25.4mm 2. ASTM A790/A790M 10.3-1016x 0.5-36mm 3. API 6L EFW Pipe 1.ASTM A789/A789M:12.7-323.9x0.5-12.7mm 2:ASTM A790/A790M 10.3-610x0.5-18mm 3.ASTM A928/A928M 10.3--610x 0.5-18mm Material: UNS S31500 S32304 S31803 S2205 S2760 S2750,S 32205, S 32550, S 32750, S 32760.
Related Products
Stainless Steel Tube-304/L,316/L, 309,310,321,317,347,TP410,TP430,904L,2205,2507
Stainless Steel Tube-304/L,316/L, 309,310,321,317,347,TP410,TP430,904L,2205,2507
USD $ 6500
S32750(2507) Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube
S32750(2507) Super Duplex Stainless Steel Tube
CNY ¥ 9500
Nickel Alloy Tube-Monel 425, Incoloy 625,Hastelloy 825
Nickel Alloy Tube-Monel 425, Incoloy 625,Hastelloy 825
904L Super Austentic Stainless Steel Tube
904L Super Austentic Stainless Steel Tube
CNY ¥ 5800

Home  |  Product Catalog  |  Trade Message  |  Reference List  |  Pipe Specs  |  Line Pipe  |  Seamless Pipe  |  Stainless Tube  |  Qualification Certificate  |  News  |  Contact Us  |  Sitemap
  English     简体版     繁體版
Powered by DIYTrade.com
HomeContact UsSitemap