2205 Duplex | UNS S31803 / S32205 | DIN 1.4462 | PREN ≥ 35 | YS 450 MPa | 2× Strength of 316L | Chloride SCC Resistant | Max 315°C | Class 150–2500
ASTM A182 F51 (ASME SA182 F51) is the 2205 duplex stainless steel specification for forged flanges, fittings, and valve bodies. It carries dual UNS designations S31803 / S32205 and is equivalent to DIN 1.4462 in European standards. The "2205" trade name reflects its nominal composition of 22% chromium and 5% nickel — but the additions of 3% molybdenum and 0.14–0.20% nitrogen are equally critical to its exceptional performance.
The defining characteristic of F51 is its duplex (two-phase) microstructure — approximately 50% austenite and 50% ferrite. This carefully controlled phase balance delivers a combination of properties that neither austenite nor ferrite alone can achieve: the minimum yield strength of 450 MPa is roughly twice that of 316L stainless steel (170 MPa), while the Pitting Resistance Equivalent Number (PREN) of approximately 35 far exceeds 316L's ~23, providing decisive superiority in chloride-containing environments. Crucially, the ferritic phase provides inherent resistance to chloride stress corrosion cracking (SCC) — the primary failure mode of austenitic stainless steels in warm chloride-bearing environments.
Tesco Steel & Engineering manufactures and exports F51 duplex flanges in all types — WNRF, SORF, BLRF, SWRF, LJTF, THRF — from NPS ½ to 60, Class 150 to 2500, per ASME B16.5 and B16.47, with full EN 10204 3.1/3.2 material certification and optional ASTM G48 corrosion testing.
The duplex microstructure harnesses the complementary properties of its two constituent phases to overcome the limitations of single-phase stainless steels:
| Element | Min % | Max % | Role in Duplex Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon (C) | — | 0.030 | Very low — prevents sensitisation (carbide precipitation at grain boundaries); allows welding without PWHT |
| Manganese (Mn) | — | 2.00 | Austenite stabiliser; replaces some nickel |
| Silicon (Si) | — | 1.00 | Deoxidation; some oxidation resistance |
| Phosphorus (P) | — | 0.030 | Controlled — reduces toughness and corrosion resistance at higher levels |
| Sulfur (S) | — | 0.020 | Low — pitting initiation sites at MnS inclusions; controls corrosion resistance |
| Chromium (Cr) | 21.0 | 23.0 | Primary corrosion resistance element; forms protective Cr₂O₃ passive film; main PREN contributor |
| Nickel (Ni) | 4.5 | 6.5 | Austenite phase stabiliser; toughness and ductility contribution; corrosion resistance in reducing acids |
| Molybdenum (Mo) | 2.5 | 3.5 | Pitting resistance (3.3× Cr weight in PREN); crevice corrosion resistance |
| Nitrogen (N) | 0.08 | 0.20 | Critical austenite stabiliser; pitting resistance (16× Cr in PREN); increases strength; prevents sigma phase |
| Property | F51 (2205 Duplex) | F53 (2507 Super Duplex) | 316L Austenitic | 304 Austenitic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UTS (min) | 620 MPa | 795 MPa | 485 MPa | 515 MPa |
| YS / 0.2% PS (min) | 450 MPa | 550 MPa | 170 MPa | 205 MPa |
| Elongation (min) | 25% | 15% | 40% | 40% |
| Hardness (max) | 290 HBW | 310 HBW | 187 HBW | 187 HBW |
| PREN (typical) | ~35 | ≥ 40 | ~23 | ~18 |
| Max Service Temp | 315°C | 300°C | 870°C (ox.); ~450°C (SCC risk) | 870°C (ox.) |
| Min Service Temp | –40°C | –50°C | –196°C | –196°C |
| Chloride SCC resistance | Excellent | Excellent | Poor | Very poor |
| Relative weight saving vs 316L | Up to 40% at same pressure rating | Up to 55% | Baseline | Similar |
F51's corrosion resistance arises from multiple, complementary mechanisms unique to its duplex composition:
PREN ~35 (vs 316L ~23). F51 can withstand chloride concentrations and temperatures that rapidly pit 316L. Suitable for produced water, brackish water, and coastal environments. Not recommended for concentrated seawater in stagnant conditions above 25°C where F53 is preferred.
The ferritic phase provides inherent SCC resistance in chloride environments where austenitic SS (304, 316) fails. F51 resists SCC at chloride concentrations and temperatures far beyond 316L's safe range — a critical advantage in offshore process piping and chemical plant environments above 60°C.
PREN ~35 provides crevice corrosion resistance significantly above 316L in chloride environments. However, in stagnant seawater (flanged joints, under gaskets), crevice attack can occur above ~20–25°C. For seawater immersion service, F53 super duplex or cathodic protection should be considered.
The high yield strength (450 MPa) and duplex microstructure provide superior erosion-corrosion resistance compared to austenitic grades in two-phase or sand-laden flow conditions — particularly important in produced water and sand-carrying oil & gas streams.
The most critical service limitation of F51 duplex steel is its maximum service temperature of 315°C, imposed by two distinct embrittlement mechanisms that degrade the ferritic phase:
| Mechanism | Temperature Range | Effect | Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| 475°C Embrittlement (α / α' spinodal decomposition) |
300–500°C (peak kinetics ~475°C) |
Chromium-rich α' precipitates in ferrite → dramatic loss of toughness and ductility at ambient temperature. Fast kinetics — hours of exposure at 475°C can cause significant embrittlement. | Partially recoverable by re-annealing at 1020–1100°C + water quench — but NOT recoverable in service. |
| Sigma Phase (σ) (Fe-Cr intermetallic) |
600–1000°C (peak ~850°C) |
Hard, brittle Fe-Cr-Mo intermetallic forms at ferrite/austenite boundaries → loss of toughness and pitting corrosion resistance. Slower kinetics than 475°C embrittlement. | Dissolved by solution annealing at 1020–1100°C + water quench — full property recovery possible if caught early. |
| Face Type | Code | Gasket | Typical F51 Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raised Face | RF | Spiral wound (316L + PTFE or graphite filler) | Standard for most offshore process piping; most widely used |
| Ring Type Joint | RTJ | Oval / octagonal ring (316L SS ring) | High-pressure Class 600–2500 in offshore and wellhead service |
| Flat Face | FF | Full-face PTFE or elastomer gasket | Fibre-reinforced plastic (FRP) equipment connections; low-pressure utility |
| Large Tongue / Groove | LT/G | Flat ring enclosed | Heat exchangers and vessel nozzle connections in chemical service |
| Small Tongue / Groove | ST/G | Flat ring enclosed | High-pressure chloride-containing chemical circuits |
| Large Male / Female | LM/F | Flat ring gasket | Vessel-to-piping connections requiring alignment; desalination |
| Nubbin | — | Soft metallic or elastomer | Special service per purchaser specification |
| Standard | Designation | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ASTM / ASME (Flanges) | A182 / SA182 Grade F51 | Forged flanges, fittings, valve bodies |
| UNS (Dual cert.) | S31803 / S32205 | S32205 has tighter N ≥ 0.14% — specify dual certification |
| Common Trade Name | 2205 Duplex | Nominal 22%Cr-5%Ni composition |
| DIN / EN | 1.4462 / X2CrNiMoN22-5-3 | European designation per EN 10088 |
| ASTM (Pipe) | A790 Grade S31803 / S32205 | Seamless and welded duplex SS pipe |
| ASTM (Fittings) | A815 Grade WPS31803 / WPS32205 | Wrought duplex SS fittings |
| ASTM (Plate) | A240 Grade S31803 / S32205 | Duplex SS plate and sheet |
| ASME B16.5 Group | Group 2.3 | Duplex stainless steel pressure-temperature ratings |
| Weld Filler — GTAW | ER2209 (AWS A5.9) | Over-alloyed in Ni to ensure weld phase balance; FN 30–70 |
| Weld Filler — SMAW | E2209-XX (AWS A5.4) | Low-hydrogen duplex electrode |
| Weld Filler — FCAW | E2209T1-X (AWS A5.22) | For flat and horizontal positional welding |
| Corrosion Test | ASTM G48 Method A / E | Pitting corrosion test at 22°C and 40°C respectively |
Flange dimensions are defined by ASME B16.5 independent of material. Full dimensional tables for all classes (150–2500) are available on our Flange Dimensions page.
| NPS | OD (mm) | BC (mm) | Bolts (no.) | Bolt ⌀ (mm) | Flange Thick. (mm) | Approx. Wt. (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ½" | 88.9 | 60.3 | 4 | 15.7 | 9.7 | 0.4 |
| ¾" | 98.4 | 69.8 | 4 | 15.7 | 11.2 | 0.6 |
| 1" | 107.9 | 79.4 | 4 | 15.7 | 12.7 | 0.8 |
| 1½" | 127.0 | 98.4 | 4 | 15.7 | 14.3 | 1.3 |
| 2" | 152.4 | 120.6 | 4 | 19.0 | 15.9 | 2.2 |
| 3" | 190.5 | 152.4 | 4 | 19.0 | 19.0 | 4.0 |
| 4" | 228.6 | 190.5 | 8 | 19.0 | 22.4 | 7.0 |
| 6" | 279.4 | 241.3 | 8 | 22.2 | 25.4 | 13.0 |
| 8" | 342.9 | 298.4 | 8 | 22.2 | 28.6 | 21.0 |
| 10" | 406.4 | 362.0 | 12 | 25.4 | 31.8 | 36.0 |
| 12" | 482.6 | 431.8 | 12 | 25.4 | 35.0 | 54.0 |
| 14" | 533.4 | 476.2 | 12 | 28.6 | 38.1 | 75.0 |
| 16" | 596.9 | 539.7 | 16 | 28.6 | 41.4 | 105.0 |
| 18" | 635.0 | 577.8 | 16 | 31.7 | 44.4 | 135.0 |
| 20" | 698.5 | 635.0 | 20 | 31.7 | 47.6 | 165.0 |
| 24" | 812.8 | 749.3 | 20 | 35.0 | 50.8 | 270.0 |
NPS 26–60 available per ASME B16.47. Custom bores, NACE-compliant and G48-tested materials on request. Request dimensional drawings.
| Parameter | Requirement / Value |
|---|---|
| Filler — GTAW | ER2209 (AWS A5.9) — 22Cr-9Ni-3Mo-0.15N; always use 2209 — NOT 316L or 309 |
| Filler — SMAW | E2209-XX (AWS A5.4) — low-hydrogen duplex electrode; bake at 300°C if stored > 4 hrs |
| Filler — FCAW | E2209T1-X (AWS A5.22) — for flat/horizontal position; confirm phase balance in PQR |
| Preheat | None required (ambient temperature ≥ 10°C) — preheat above ambient is NOT needed or beneficial |
| Max Interpass Temperature | 150°C (300°F) — strictly controlled; higher temps destroy phase balance and reduce corrosion resistance |
| Heat Input | 0.5–2.0 kJ/mm — too low gives excessive ferrite; too high promotes sigma phase and nitrogen loss |
| GTAW Back-Purge Gas | Argon (99.99% purity) — nitrogen (1–5% N₂ in Ar) optional for root pass to compensate N loss |
| Ferrite Number Target | FN 30–70 (approximately 35–65% ferrite) in weld metal — verify by WRC-1992 diagram or Fischer ferritescope |
| PWHT / Stress Relief | NOT applicable — no stress relief in 300–1000°C range. If full solution anneal is needed: 1020–1100°C + immediate water quench |
| Hardness (NACE sour service) | Base metal ≤ 28 HRC (310 HBW); weld/HAZ ≤ 36 HRC per ISO 15156 Part 3 (higher limits than carbon steel) |
| Standard | Scope |
|---|---|
| ASTM A182 / ASME SA182 | Primary material specification for F51 forged duplex flanges and fittings |
| ASME B16.5 | Pipe flanges NPS ½–24, Class 150–2500 (Group 2.3 P-T ratings) |
| ASME B16.47 | Large diameter flanges NPS 26–60, Series A & B |
| ASME B16.20 | Metallic gaskets including spiral wound and RTJ types for duplex flanges |
| ASME Section IX | Welding qualification — WPS/PQR for F51 duplex base metal with ER2209 filler |
| ASME B31.3 | Process piping — references Group 2.3 P-T ratings; special consideration for duplex welding |
| NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 | Sour service requirements for duplex — hardness limits per Part 3 (higher than carbon steel) |
| ASTM G48 | Standard test method for pitting and crevice corrosion resistance of SS — Method A (pitting at 22°C), Method E (pitting at 40°C) |
| ASTM A790 | Companion seamless and welded duplex pipe — S31803/S32205 |
| ASTM A815 | Companion wrought duplex fittings — WPS31803/WPS32205 |
| ASTM A240 | Companion duplex plate / sheet — S31803/S32205 |
| EN 10088 / 1.4462 | European stainless steel standard — DIN 1.4462 / X2CrNiMoN22-5-3 |
| EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2 | Mill test report certification — 3.2 recommended for offshore and critical service |
| DNV-GL / Lloyd's / BV | Classification society approval for offshore and marine applications |
| Parameter | Range / Options |
|---|---|
| Size | NPS ½" to NPS 60" (½–24 per B16.5; 26–60 per B16.47) |
| Pressure Class | 150, 300, 600, 900, 1500, 2500 (ASME B16.5); PN 6–PN 250 (EN 1092-1) |
| Flange Types | WN, SO, BL, SW, TR, LJ, LWN, Reducing, Spectacle Blind, Paddle Blind |
| Face Types | RF, RTJ, FF, LT/G, ST/G, LM/F, Nubbin |
| UNS Certification | S31803 only, S32205 only, or dual certification S31803/S32205 (recommended) |
| Ferrite Testing | Ferritescope measurement or metallographic examination; target 35–65% ferrite |
| Corrosion Testing | ASTM G48 Method A (22°C) and/or Method E (40°C) for critical offshore service |
| Documentation | EN 10204 3.1 standard; 3.2 for offshore/critical service; DNV-GL / Bureau Veritas approval on request |
| Special Requirements | PMI (Cr, Ni, Mo, N verification), impact testing at –40°C, NACE sour service hardness survey, PREN calculation on MTR |
For a quote with dual S31803/S32205 certification or ASTM G48 corrosion test results, please submit an inquiry or WhatsApp +91-9223366922.
Questions sourced from AI search platforms, engineering procurement queries, and offshore / chemical industry materials practice.
ASTM A182 F51 is the 2205 duplex stainless steel specification (UNS S31803/S32205, DIN 1.4462) for forged flanges. "Duplex" means the steel has a two-phase (dual-phase) microstructure of approximately 50% austenite and 50% ferrite. This deliberate phase balance — achieved through precise control of Cr (22%), Ni (5%), Mo (3%), and N (0.14%) — delivers properties superior to either phase alone: the austenite provides toughness and corrosion resistance, while the ferrite provides high yield strength (450 MPa) and critical resistance to chloride stress corrosion cracking (SCC), the primary failure mode of 316L in warm chloride environments.
The Pitting Resistance Equivalent Number for F51 is typically 34–36 (formula: PREN = %Cr + 3.3×%Mo + 16×%N = 22 + 9.9 + 2.2 = ~34.1 at nominal composition). This compares to 316L's PREN of ~23. A higher PREN indicates better resistance to localised pitting attack in chloride environments. F51's PREN of ~35 means it can withstand significantly higher chloride concentrations and temperatures before pitting initiates, making it suitable for produced water, desalination brine, and coastal environments where 316L would rapidly fail. For aggressive seawater or concentrated chloride service above 25°C, F53 super duplex (PREN ≥ 40) is preferred.
The maximum continuous service temperature for F51 duplex is 315°C (600°F) as recognised in ASME B16.5 Group 2.3 ratings. Above this temperature, the ferritic phase undergoes 475°C embrittlement (chromium-rich α' precipitation) and sigma-phase formation, both causing catastrophic loss of toughness. Duplex steel is therefore primarily used in low-to-moderate temperature applications (ambient to ~300°C) where its chloride corrosion resistance and high strength provide the most benefit. For higher-temperature service in corrosive environments, austenitic 316L/317L or nickel alloys are required.
No — conventional PWHT is not applied to F51 duplex and is specifically prohibited in the 300–1000°C range as it causes embrittlement. However, welding requires strict control of heat input (0.5–2.0 kJ/mm), maximum interpass temperature (150°C), and use of ER2209 filler to maintain the correct austenite/ferrite phase balance (FN 30–70). If full solution annealing is required for restoration of properties after heavy fabrication, it must be done at 1020–1100°C followed immediately by water quenching — not an in-situ or partial heat treatment. For routine pressure-service welds, correct welding procedure is sufficient without post-weld heat treatment.
The standard filler is ER2209 (AWS A5.9) for GTAW/GMAW and E2209-XX (AWS A5.4) for SMAW. The 2209 designation means nominally 22%Cr, 9%Ni, 3%Mo — over-alloyed in nickel relative to the F51 base metal to compensate for the faster austenite solidification kinetics in the weld pool and ensure the correct phase balance (FN 30–70) in the as-welded joint. Never use 316L, 308L, or 309L fillers for F51 duplex welds — these produce a weld with inadequate strength, insufficient corrosion resistance, and wrong phase ratio. Argon back-purging is required for GTAW root passes to prevent nitrogen loss and oxidation.
F51 (2205, UNS S31803/S32205, PREN ~35) vs F53 (2507, UNS S32750, PREN ≥ 40): F53 contains higher Cr (25%), Ni (7%), Mo (4%), and N — providing about 15–25% better pitting and crevice corrosion resistance than F51. F53 is also stronger (YS 550 MPa vs 450 MPa). Select F53 when process conditions include concentrated chloride, H₂S + CO₂ simultaneously (sour-wet gas), seawater temperature above 25°C, or stagnant seawater (dead-leg risk). Select F51 when moderate-chloride service and cost efficiency are priorities — F51 costs less per kg and is more widely available in standard sizes. Both grades require ER2209 (F51) and ER2594 (F53) fillers respectively and similar welding controls.
Both designate 2205 duplex stainless steel but with different minimum nitrogen levels: S31803 (original 1980s designation): N 0.08–0.20% minimum. S32205 (refined 1996 designation): N 0.14–0.20% minimum — tighter lower bound ensures consistent austenite stability and PREN above ~34. Modern practice is to specify dual certification S31803/S32205, which ensures the steel meets both designations simultaneously. This is now standard for offshore and chemical plant procurement, as material that only meets S31803 (N as low as 0.08%) may have variable phase balance and lower PREN in some heats.
Yes — F51 duplex is permitted for sour H₂S service per NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 Part 3. The hardness limits for duplex stainless steels are higher than those for carbon and alloy steels: base metal ≤ 28 HRC (310 HBW) and weld/HAZ ≤ 36 HRC. These higher limits reflect the superior SCC resistance of the duplex microstructure compared to carbon steel. However, duplex is sensitive to hydrogen embrittlement in cathodically protected systems (e.g., subsea) where excessive cathodic protection can cause hydrogen uptake in the ferritic phase. Verify environmental conditions and hydrogen embrittlement risk for subsea and cathodically protected systems.
Any heating of duplex steel in the range 300–1000°C causes embrittlement: the 300–500°C range causes 475°C embrittlement (chromium α' precipitation in ferrite), and the 600–1000°C range causes sigma-phase (brittle Fe-Cr intermetallic) formation. Both dramatically reduce toughness and can also degrade corrosion resistance. Unlike carbon/alloy steels where stress relief at 650°C restores properties, the same temperature range destroys duplex properties. The only valid post-weld heat treatment for duplex is full solution annealing at 1020–1100°C with immediate water quenching — which completely dissolves precipitates and restores the 50/50 phase balance.
F51 duplex and titanium Grade 2 both resist seawater corrosion, but with different strengths and limitations. F51 is significantly stronger (YS 450 MPa vs Ti Gr.2's ~275 MPa), magnetic (slightly, due to ferrite), more readily weldable and available in standard flange dimensions at lower cost. Titanium provides absolute immunity to pitting and crevice corrosion even in hot stagnant seawater where F51 may suffer crevice attack. For flowing clean seawater at moderate temperatures, F51 is cost-effective. For hot seawater (above 25°C), stagnant conditions, or highly aggressive chloride environments where even F53 super duplex may be marginal, titanium (Grade 2 or Grade 5) is the preferred choice.
| Grade | A182 F51 |
| Common Name | 2205 Duplex |
| UNS | S31803 / S32205 |
| DIN | 1.4462 |
| Microstructure | ~50A / ~50F |
| UTS (min) | 620 MPa |
| YS (min) | 450 MPa |
| PREN (typical) | ~35 |
| Max Temp | 315°C |
| Min Temp | –40°C |
| Hardness (max) | 290 HBW |
| ASME B16.5 Grp | 2.3 |
| Preheat | None required |
| Max Interpass | 150°C |
| Filler (GTAW) | ER2209 |
| Filler (SMAW) | E2209-XX |
| Companion Pipe | A790 S31803 |
Pitting Resistance (PREN)
304 SS: ~18
316L SS: ~23
F51 (2205): ~35 ★
F53 (2507): ≥ 40
PREN = Cr + 3.3Mo + 16N
Full F51 dimensional drawings:
View Flange Dimensions