Duplex Stainless Steels
Duplex Stainless Steels
Duplex Stainless Steels
GTAW for root and hot pass (or all the passes), and SMAW for subsequent passes are
generally recommended. The shielding gas employed is Argon plus 2% Nitrogen.
Nitrogen is present to fulfill the nitrogen depletion from the welding zones.
The procedure that is followed for welding Duplex Stainless Steels (DSS) incorporating
necessary precautions is as follows.
Joint Design
Preheating
Phase Balance
C. Suitable for heavier sections with SMAW or GMAW. Increase A to 3 mm (0.12 in) for
vertical-up SMAW.
Fig. 1d)
B = 2 mm (0.08 in)
H. Single U Joint. Pipe Welding. Suitable with GTAW.
3. Preheating
Preheating of duplex stainless steel is not recommended because it slows the cooling of
the heat-affected zone. Preheating may not be a part of a procedure unless there is a
specific justification.
Preheating may be beneficial when used to eliminate moisture from the steel as may
occur in cold ambient conditions or from overnight condensation. When preheating to
remove moisture, the steel should be heated to about 95C (200F) uniformly and only
after the weld preparation has been cleaned.
Preheating may also be beneficial in those exceptional cases where there is a risk for
forming a highly ferritic HAZ because of very rapid quenching.
4. Heat Input and Interpass Temperature
Compared to austenitic stainless steels, duplex stainless steels can tolerate relatively high
heat inputs. The duplex solidification structure of the weld metal is resistant to hot
cracking, much more so than that of highly austenitic weld metals. Duplex stainless
steels, with higher thermal conductivity and lower coefficient of thermal expansion, do
not create the same high intensity of local thermal stresses at the welds of austenitic
stainless steels. While it is prudent to avoid severe restraint, hot cracking is seldom a
common problem.
To avoid problems in the HAZ, the weld procedure should allow rapid (but not extreme)
cooling of this region. The temperature of the work piece is important because the plate
itself provides the most effective cooling of the HAZ. Typically, the maximum interpass
temperature is limited to 150C (300F). That limitation should be imposed when
qualifying a weld procedure, and production welding should be monitored to assure that
the interpass temperature is no higher than that used in the qualification. Electronic
temperature probes and thermocouples are the preferred instruments for monitoring the
interpass temperature.
The size of the test piece used in qualifying a weld procedure may affect the cooling rate
and the interpass temperature. There is a risk that the test piece for qualification of a
multipass weld procedure may come to a lower interpass temperature than can be
reasonably or economically achieved during actual fabrication. Therefore, the
qualification might not detect the loss of properties that can occur the higher interpass
temperature slows the cooling and increases the time at temperature for the HAZ in actual
practice.