How to Select the Right Steel Grade for Extreme Temperature Applications
Temperature is one of the most critical factors in steel material selection. Standard carbon steels can become brittle at sub-zero temperatures and lose significant strength at elevated temperatures.
1. Understanding Temperature Effects on Steel
- Below -20°C: Carbon steels enter the ductile-to-brittle transition zone
- Above 300°C: Carbon steel begins to lose yield strength significantly
- Above 600°C: Creep becomes the dominant failure mechanism
2. Steel Grades for Cryogenic Service (-196°C to -40°C)
| Grade | Min. Temp | Type | Key Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9% Nickel Steel | -196°C | Low-alloy | LNG tanks |
| 304L Stainless | -196°C | Austenitic SS | Cryogenic piping |
| 316L Stainless | -196°C | Austenitic SS | Chemical processing |
3. Steel Grades for High-Temperature Service (400°C to 1000°C+)
| Grade | Max. Temp | Type | Key Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| SA210 Gr.C | 450°C | Carbon-Moly | Boiler tubes |
| T91 (9Cr-1Mo-V) | 620°C | Advanced Cr-Mo | Ultra-supercritical boilers |
| 310S | 1100°C | Austenitic SS | Furnace components |
| Inconel 625 | 1000°C+ | Nickel alloy | Gas turbine parts |
4. Key Selection Criteria
- Corrosive environment dictates chromium content
- Pressure requires creep-strength-rated materials
- Thermal cycling requires good fatigue resistance
- Cost optimization using the lowest adequate grade
Need Help Selecting?
CoreMetal supplies temperature-rated steel products. Contact Tracy: tracy@coremetalsteel.com | +86 18291910632
