Incoloy 825 is highly resistant to corrosion. It has a high nickel content, sufficient to resist chloride ion stress corrosion cracking, and a very stable austenite structure. The levels of molybdenum and copper enable the alloy to resist reducing agents and acids. Chromium gives resistance to oxidising conditions, such as nitric acid solutions, nitrates and oxidising salts. The alloy is titanium stabilised to resist pitting and intergranular attack after fabrication, particularly welding, which includes heating in the critical sensitisation temperature range (650°C – 760°C).
Alloy 825 offers exceptional resistance to corrosion by sulphuric and phosphoric acids and is often the most cost effective alloy in sulphuric acid service. Inconel 690 Tubes
Austral Wright Metals can supply this alloy as plate, sheet, strip, bar, rod, wire, tube, pipe, fittings, fasteners.
Incoloy 825 is approved for pressure vessel operating temperatures up to 525°C (AS1210, AS4041), 538°C (ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code, Sections I, III, VIII, IX, Cases 1936, N-188). Brittle phases may form in alloy 825 at temperatures above ~ 540°C, so it is not normally used at these temperatures, where creep-rupture properties would be design factors.
Typical Applications of Incoloy Alloy 825 include:
Table 1. Chemical composition of Incoloy Alloy 825 (ASTM B163 – Heat exchanger tube)
Table 2. Typical room temperature tensile properties (not for design. Consult the relevant material or product specification for design values)
Figure 1. High temperature tensile properties of annealed Incoloy 825 bar.
The outstanding property of Incoloy 825 is its corrosion resistance. In reducing & oxidising conditions, Incoloy 825 resists general corrosion, pitting & crevice corrosion, intergranular corrosion and stress corrosion cracking. It is particularly useful in sulphuric & phosphoric acids, sulphur containing flue gases, sour gas and oil wells and sea water.
Figure 2. Isocorrosion chart in laboratory pure sulphuric acid.
Incoloy 825 can be readily hot or cold worked. Hot working should be in the range 870 – 1180°C, finishing at 870 – 980°C. For maximum corrosion resistance hot worked parts should be stabilise annealed before use. The alloy is easier to cold form than stainless steels.
Incoloy 825 is classed as a ‘C’ alloy, and is reasonably easy to machine.
The alloy is readily weldable by the normal processes (GMAW (MIG), GTAW (TIG), SMAW (manual), SAW). The joint must be clean to avoid contamination of the weld pool.
Table 5. A guide to welding consumables to be used with Incoloy Alloy 825 under various conditions.
Incoloy 825 is stabilise annealed at 940°C. The softest structure is obtained at 980°C. Sections heavier than sheet, strip and wire should be quenched to avoid sensitisation.
Please consult Austral Wright Metals for specific advice on your application.
Table 6. ASM specifications for Incoloy Alloy 825.
Seamless Nickel and Nickel Alloy Condenser and Heat-Exchanger Tubes
Nickel-Iron-Chromium-Molybdenum-Copper Alloy (UNS N08825 and N08221)* Seamless Pipe and Tube
Ni-Fe-Cr-Mo-Cu Alloy (UNS N08825 and UNS N08221)* Plate, Sheet, and Strip
Welded UNS N06625 and UNS N08825 Alloy Tubes
Nickel-Alloy (UNS N06625 and N08825) Welded Pipe
General Requirements for Nickel and Nickel Alloy Welded Tube
Table 7. Other international grades that are equivalent to Incoloy Alloy 825.
This information has been sourced, reviewed and adapted from materials provided by Austral Wright Metals - Ferrous, Non-Ferrous and High Performance Alloys .
For more information on this source, please visit Austral Wright Metals - Ferrous, Non-Ferrous and High Performance Alloys .
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Austral Wright Metals - Ferrous, Non-Ferrous and High Performance Alloys. 2020. Incoloy 825 – Properties, Applications, Fabrication, Machinability and Weldability of Incoloy 825. AZoM, viewed 23 January 2024, https://www.azom.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=4245.
Very useful data and information. Thanks...
Very useful information. Thank you.
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