25 March 2026 · 18 min read · Welding Metallurgy 316L welding Delta Ferrite

Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel: Sensitisation, Hot Cracking, and Filler Selection

Austenitic stainless steels — the 3xx series — dominate corrosion-critical fabrication in chemical processing, food production, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and nuclear plant because of their excellent corrosion resistance, ductility, and toughness down to cryogenic temperatures. Yet they impose metallurgical penalties that are absent in carbon steel welding: a narrow window of acceptable delta ferrite content, a real risk of sensitisation in the heat-affected zone (HAZ), and a solidification morphology that controls susceptibility to hot cracking. This article provides a rigorous technical treatment of all three mechanisms — and the filler metal selection logic that manages them — so you can make defensible engineering decisions for 304L, 316L, 321, 347, and related grades.

Key Takeaways
  • Sensitisation occurs when Cr23C6 precipitates at grain boundaries in the 425–850°C range, depleting Cr below the ~12% passivity threshold — controlled by using L-grade (≤0.03% C) or stabilised (Ti, Nb) grades.
  • Hot cracking risk is governed by solidification mode: primary ferritic solidification (FA mode) is crack-resistant; primary austenitic (A or AF mode) is crack-susceptible because S and P concentrate in the final liquid film.
  • The WRC-1992 diagram, using Creq = Cr + Mo + 0.7Nb and Nieq = Ni + 35C + 20N + 0.25Cu, predicts Ferrite Number (FN) more accurately than the original Schaeffler diagram for modern low-carbon, nitrogen-bearing grades.
  • A weld deposit delta ferrite content of FN 3–8 is the standard target for austenitic stainless steel welds — high enough to prevent hot cracking, low enough to avoid embrittlement and magnetic response issues.
  • Interpass temperature must be kept below 150°C to minimise cumulative time in the sensitisation range and to limit distortion from austenite’s high thermal expansion coefficient (16–17 × 10−6 /°C).
  • Post-weld solution annealing at 1050–1100°C followed by rapid water quench restores full corrosion resistance where sensitisation has occurred, but low-carbon or stabilised grades are the preferred engineering solution when PWHT is impractical.
Sensitisation: Chromium Carbide Precipitation at Grain Boundaries NORMAL (Cr ~18 wt% uniform) Grain boundary Cr ~18% Cr ~18% Cr ~18% Cr ~18% Passive Cr2O3 film — full corrosion resistance SENSITISED (425–850°C exposure) Cr23C6 precipitate Cr-depleted zone (Cr <12%) Passive film breaks down — intergranular corrosion risk Heat 425–850°C
Sensitisation mechanism: Cr23C6 precipitation depletes chromium adjacent to grain boundaries, creating Cr <12% zones that lose passive film integrity. Shown schematically; actual grain boundary morphology varies with carbon content and thermal history. © metallurgyzone.com

1. Austenitic Stainless Steel — Grades and Metallurgical Basis

Austenitic stainless steels derive their microstructure from sufficient nickel (and manganese, nitrogen) additions to stabilise the face-centred cubic (FCC) austenite phase at room temperature. The basic composition is 16–26% Cr, 6–22% Ni, with C typically below 0.08 wt%. Chromium provides the passive film, nickel stabilises austenite, molybdenum (in 316/317 series) enhances pitting resistance, and nitrogen (in 316N, 304N) increases strength without compromising toughness.

The most widely welded grades — 304L and 316L — dominate fabrication because their ultra-low carbon content (C ≤ 0.03%) eliminates sensitisation risk in most single-pass weld geometries. Understanding why requires examining the chromium carbide precipitation kinetics in detail.

1.1 Common Grades and Nominal Compositions

Grade (UNS) C (max%) Cr (%) Ni (%) Mo (%) Special Addition Key Characteristic
304 (S30400) 0.08 18–20 8–10.5 General-purpose workhorse
304L (S30403) 0.03 18–20 8–12 Low C Sensitisation-resistant for welding
316 (S31600) 0.08 16–18 10–14 2–3 Mo Pitting/crevice corrosion resistance
316L (S31603) 0.03 16–18 10–14 2–3 Low C + Mo Standard for chemical plant, pharmaceutical
321 (S32100) 0.08 17–19 9–12 Ti (≥5×C) Ti stabilised — service 400–900°C
347 (S34700) 0.08 17–19 9–13 Nb (≥8×C) Nb stabilised — high-temperature service
310S (S31008) 0.08 24–26 19–22 High Cr+Ni High-temperature oxidation resistance

2. Sensitisation — Mechanism, Kinetics, and Prevention

Sensitisation is perhaps the most practically critical metallurgical phenomenon in austenitic stainless steel welding. The term describes the precipitation of chromium-rich carbides — primarily Cr23C6 — at austenite grain boundaries when the material is exposed to temperatures in the 425–850°C range. Because carbon diffuses two to three orders of magnitude faster than chromium in austenite at these temperatures, the carbide precipitate draws carbon from the adjacent matrix far faster than chromium can diffuse to replenish it. A chromium-depleted zone forms on both sides of the grain boundary, with local Cr content falling below approximately 12 wt% — the minimum for passive film stability.

2.1 The C-Curve Kinetics of Sensitisation

The time-temperature-sensitisation (TTS) diagram for a given grade has a characteristic C-curve shape analogous to a TTT diagram. The “nose” of the C-curve for standard 304 (C ~0.06%) falls around 650–675°C, where sensitisation can begin within minutes. At lower temperatures, diffusion rates drop and sensitisation requires hours to days. Above 850°C, the carbide solvus is exceeded and any precipitates dissolve.

The welding HAZ traverses this temperature range rapidly on heating and more slowly on cooling. The critical zone is the region that dwells longest in the 500–750°C window during interpass cooling. For multi-pass welds, successive thermal cycles accumulate sensitisation exposure incrementally — this is why interpass temperature control below 150°C is specified in codes such as AWS D1.6 and EN 1011-3.

2.2 Effect of Carbon Content

Carbon content is the dominant material variable controlling sensitisation kinetics. Lowering C from 0.08% (standard 304) to 0.03% (304L) shifts the TTS nose dramatically to longer times — a factor of 10–100 at equivalent temperature. For most single-pass welds and even many multi-pass welds on 304L and 316L, the total thermal exposure below 850°C is insufficient to cause measurable sensitisation, provided interpass temperature is controlled.

Engineering Caution Even L-grade steels can sensitise under prolonged elevated-temperature service (400–600°C). For heat exchanger tubing or pressure vessels in continuous service above ~400°C, evaluate the service life thermal budget using TTS data for the specific grade and heat. ASTM A262 Practice E (Strauss test) or Practice C (Huey test) should be specified for qualification.

2.3 Stabilised Grades — 321 and 347

The stabilised grades use titanium (321) or niobium (347) additions that preferentially form carbides (TiC, NbC) at higher temperatures, leaving insufficient free carbon available to form Cr23C6. The minimum addition is Ti ≥ 5×C and Nb ≥ 8×C (by weight). These grades are specified for service above 400°C where the low-carbon grades would eventually re-sensitise through long-term diffusion.

Note on Knife-Line Attack In stabilised grades, a narrow band of HAZ immediately adjacent to the fusion line can be re-solution-annealed above the TiC/NbC solvus (~1200°C) during welding, dissolving the stabilising carbides. On subsequent cooling through 600–850°C (or during service), this narrow band can sensitise via Cr23C6 — a phenomenon called knife-line attack. It is most pronounced in 321 and mitigated by stabilising anneal at 870–900°C after welding.

2.4 Prevention and Remediation

  • Material selection: Specify 304L, 316L, or stabilised grades (321, 347) as appropriate for the service temperature range.
  • Heat input control: Lower heat input reduces HAZ width and time spent in the sensitisation range. Use GTAW or short-circuit GMAW on thin sections.
  • Interpass temperature: Maintain below 150°C (maximum) or 100°C for critical corrosion service per EN 1011-3.
  • Post-weld solution annealing: 1050–1100°C, hold 1 h/25 mm thickness, water quench — dissolves Cr23C6 and re-homogenises Cr. Only practical for smaller components or where distortion is acceptable.
  • Stabilising anneal for 321/347: 870–900°C, 2 h, air cool — re-precipitates TiC/NbC without sensitising.

3. Hot Cracking — Solidification and Liquation Mechanisms

Hot cracking is unique to the weld metal and immediately adjacent HAZ regions and occurs while the metal is still partially liquid during solidification or on reheating of a previously deposited bead. It is the second major metallurgical risk in austenitic stainless steel welding, and its control is intimately linked to the delta ferrite content of the weld deposit.

3.1 Solidification Cracking

Austenitic stainless steel weld metal solidifies over a temperature range, producing a mushy zone of dendrites and interdendritic liquid. The final solidifying liquid is enriched in sulphur, phosphorus, and silicon — elements with large solid-liquid partition coefficients in austenite. This liquid concentrates between dendrite boundaries and grain boundaries as a thin, continuous film. When weld metal contraction stresses are applied before this film solidifies, the film tears open — solidification cracking (also called hot cracking or centerline cracking).

The crack-susceptibility index (CSI) defined by Matsuda relates to the combined S + P content and the liquid film area. Modern austenitic grades are specified with low S (≤ 0.03%) and P (≤ 0.045%) partly for this reason, but the key metallurgical lever is solidification mode.

3.2 Solidification Modes and the Role of Delta Ferrite

Four solidification modes are recognised for austenitic-ferritic weld metals, depending on the Creq/Nieq ratio (defined by the WRC-1992 or Schaeffler approach):

Mode Creq/Nieq Primary Phase Room-Temp Microstructure Hot Cracking Risk
A <1.25 Austenite (L→γ) Fully austenitic, FN 0 VERY HIGH
AF 1.25–1.48 Austenite, then ferrite Austenite + skeletal/lacy δ Moderate
FA 1.48–1.95 Ferrite, then austenite Austenite + vermicular δ (FN 3–15) LOW (preferred)
F >1.95 Ferrite only Ferrite + Widmanstätten γ Low (over-ferritic risk)

In the FA solidification mode, primary delta ferrite solidifies first, with its much higher solubility for S and P. As austenite nucleates and grows at the expense of ferrite on cooling, the harmful impurities partition preferentially into the residual ferrite and ferrite-austenite interfaces rather than concentrating in a continuous liquid film. The film is thus disrupted both compositionally and morphologically, dramatically reducing hot cracking susceptibility.

3.3 Target Ferrite Number Range

The Ferrite Number (FN) — measured magnetically by instruments calibrated to AWS A4.2 or ISO 8249 — is the accepted practical measure of delta ferrite content in weld metal. The standard engineering target for austenitic stainless steel weld deposits is FN 3–8:

  • Below FN 3: Insufficient ferrite to disrupt the hot-cracking film; solidification cracking risk increases sharply.
  • FN 3–8: Optimum range — crack-resistant, adequate corrosion resistance, negligible embrittlement risk at ambient service temperatures.
  • Above FN 8: Increasing risk of sigma-phase formation (>475°C service), 475°C embrittlement, and magnetic response that can affect inspection or applications requiring non-magnetic welds.
  • FN 10–15: Specified for some high-dilution overlay applications; accept higher sigma risk in exchange for hot-cracking protection.

3.4 Liquation Cracking in the HAZ

Liquation cracking occurs in the HAZ immediately adjacent to the fusion line, where peak temperatures are high enough to melt grain boundary films enriched in low-melting-point phases — NbC eutectic, phosphide/sulphide films, or sigma + austenite eutectic in over-aged material. Unlike solidification cracking, it is a base-metal phenomenon not preventable by filler metal selection alone. Keeping sulphur and phosphorus at the lower end of specification, controlling heat input, and using grades with clean grain boundaries mitigates liquation cracking risk.

4. The Schaeffler and WRC-1992 Diagrams

Weld metal microstructure prediction uses constitutional diagrams based on compositional equivalency factors — summing the austenite-stabilising and ferrite-stabilising elements into nickel-equivalent and chromium-equivalent axes respectively.

4.1 Schaeffler Diagram (1949)

Cr_eq (Schaeffler) = %Cr + %Mo + 1.5×%Si + 0.5×%Nb
Ni_eq (Schaeffler) = %Ni + 30×%C + 0.5×%Mn

Microstructure regions (approximate):
  Cr_eq/Ni_eq < 1.25   → Austenite (A) — fully austenitic
  Cr_eq/Ni_eq 1.25–1.48 → Austenite + Ferrite (AF mode)
  Cr_eq/Ni_eq 1.48–1.95 → Ferrite + Austenite (FA mode, preferred)
  Cr_eq/Ni_eq > 1.95   → Ferrite (F) dominated

The Schaeffler diagram was developed from experimental data on weld deposits using manual electrodes available in 1949. It does not include nitrogen as a variable (a significant austenite stabiliser), and its carbon coefficient (30) overestimates carbon’s stabilising effect at low carbon levels. Its predictions for modern L-grade and N-bearing steels can be significantly in error.

4.2 WRC-1992 Diagram

Cr_eq (WRC-1992) = %Cr + %Mo + 0.7×%Nb
Ni_eq (WRC-1992) = %Ni + 35×%C + 20×%N + 0.25×%Cu

Advantages over Schaeffler:
  - Nitrogen explicitly included (coefficient 20) — critical for duplex and N-bearing austenitics
  - Copper included (coefficient 0.25) — relevant for 904L and Cu-bearing grades
  - Ferrite Number (FN) isolines directly readable — no conversion needed
  - More accurate for low-C, N-bearing modern grades

The WRC-1992 diagram is the preferred tool for filler metal qualification and welding procedure specification in chemical plant and process piping. ASME Section II Part C, AWS A5.4, and AWS A5.9 classification testing all use FN measured by the WRC-1992 method. For most 304L and 316L welding with matching or near-matching fillers, the target FN 3–8 is reliably achievable.

Dilution Effects

When welding austenitic stainless steel to carbon steel or low-alloy steel — or when depositing the first overlay pass — base metal dilution can shift the deposit composition significantly toward the martensite field on the Schaeffler diagram. The dissimilar filler selection must account for this dilution (typically 20–40% for SMAW root passes) to ensure the diluted deposit remains in the austenitic or FA region. ER309L and ER309LMo are standard choices for this reason.

HAZ Thermal Profile — Sensitisation Risk Zones (Austenitic SS) Temperature (°C) Fusion Zone >1450°C — solidification cracking risk (depends on FN) Full Solution Zone 850–1450°C — Cr23C6 dissolves, austenite reforms SENSITISATION ZONE 425–850°C Cr23C6 precipitates at grain boundaries — Cr depletion — intergranular corrosion risk Worst at 650–700°C (TTS nose). L-grades greatly delay kinetics. Stabilised grades resist by TiC/NbC competition. Base Metal <425°C — No Cr23C6 precipitation risk in practical timescales 1450 850 700 500 425 RT ←← Distance from Fusion Line (schematic) →→ Fusion zone (hot cracking) Sensitisation zone Solution zone (safe) Unaffected BM Note: Relative zone widths depend on heat input, travel speed, and thickness. Not to scale.
HAZ thermal zones in an austenitic stainless steel weld. The orange sensitisation band (425–850°C) is the critical region for intergranular corrosion susceptibility. L-grades and stabilised grades (321, 347) substantially reduce carbide precipitation kinetics within this zone. © metallurgyzone.com

5. Filler Metal Selection for Austenitic Stainless Steel

Filler metal selection for austenitic stainless steel follows four principles: (1) match corrosion resistance to the base metal service environment; (2) achieve the target FN 3–8 in the as-deposited weld; (3) maintain low carbon where sensitisation is a risk; and (4) use an overalloyed transition buffer when dissimilar welding.

5.1 Matching Fillers

Base Metal GTAW/GMAW Filler (AWS A5.9) SMAW Electrode (AWS A5.4) Notes
304 / 304L ER308L, ER308LSi E308L-16, E308L-15 LSi variant improves weld fluidity and bead appearance
316 / 316L ER316L, ER316LSi E316L-16, E316L-15 Mo content 2–3% must match base metal for pitting resistance
321 ER347 (preferred), ER321 E347-16, E347-15 ER347 avoids TiO volatilisation in arc; Nb provides equivalent stabilisation
347 ER347 E347-16 Matching Nb stabilisation
310S ER310 E310-16, E310-15 Fully austenitic; hot cracking risk higher — use low heat input, dry electrodes

5.2 Dissimilar Welding — Austenitic SS to Carbon/Low-Alloy Steel

Dissimilar joints between austenitic stainless steel and carbon or low-alloy steel require the filler to accommodate compositional dilution from the carbon steel side without producing a martensite band at the fusion boundary — which would be hard, brittle, and prone to hydrogen-assisted cracking from post-weld conditions. ER309L achieves this because its composition (23% Cr, 13% Ni) on the Schaeffler diagram lies in the FA or AF region even when diluted 30–40% with carbon steel. The resulting deposit remains austenitic or at most austenite + ferrite.

Example: ER309L buttering on P265GH carbon steel (30% dilution by SMAW)

  ER309L undiluted:  Cr_eq ≈ 24,  Ni_eq ≈ 13.5
  P265GH dilutant:   Cr_eq ≈ 0.2, Ni_eq ≈ 0.4

  Mixed at 30% dilution:
    Cr_eq_mix = 0.70 × 24 + 0.30 × 0.2 = 16.86
    Ni_eq_mix = 0.70 × 13.5 + 0.30 × 0.4 = 9.57

  Cr_eq/Ni_eq = 16.86 / 9.57 = 1.76  → FA mode, FN ~8 (Schaeffler)
  ✓ No martensite; appropriate hot-cracking resistance

5.3 High-Alloy and Special Situations

  • Fully austenitic deposits (FN 0): Specified for cryogenic service, non-magnetic applications, or some nuclear components. Use ERNiCr-3 (Alloy 82) or ER310, accepting higher hot cracking risk managed by process control (low heat input, stringent cleanliness).
  • High-temperature 310S/330 applications: Fully austenitic fillers necessary. Control S + P at base metal level, use GTAW with precise heat input.
  • Corrosion-resistant overlays: ER309L or ER312 for first layer (accounts for dilution), ER316L for second layer achieving specified corrosion resistance.
  • 316L in pharmaceutical/semiconductor service: Specify low-sulphur ER316L (S ≤ 0.005%) and GTAW with 100% Ar shielding and backing gas to achieve mirror-finish internal bores and maximum corrosion resistance per ASME BPE standard.

6. Welding Process and Procedure Considerations

6.1 Process Selection

GTAW (TIG) is the reference process for root passes, thin-wall tubing, and corrosion-critical components because it offers the lowest heat input per unit volume deposited, no flux contamination, and precise control of shielding. For austenitic stainless, backing gas (100% Ar or 95%Ar/5%N2) is mandatory on root passes to prevent oxide formation (sugaring) on the back surface, which would compromise corrosion resistance. Learn more in our guide to HAZ microstructure formation.

GMAW in pulse mode is commonly used for heavier-section pipe and vessel fabrication, providing higher deposition rate than GTAW with acceptable heat input control. Short-circuit transfer is appropriate for out-of-position work. SAW is used for automatic girth welding of large vessels. SMAW is used in field conditions and for repair welds. For all processes, shielding gas should be Ar or Ar+2%CO2 — do not use CO2-rich mixtures that can carburise the weld deposit and shift it toward the martensite field on the Schaeffler diagram.

6.2 Heat Input

Austenite has approximately 50% lower thermal conductivity than carbon steel, concentrating heat and producing wider HAZs for equivalent heat input. The heat input formula applies identically:

Q (kJ/mm) = [V (V) × I (A) × 60] / [1000 × v (mm/min)] × η

Where η is the thermal efficiency factor (GTAW: 0.60; SMAW: 0.80; GMAW/SAW: 0.85). For sensitisation control, lower heat input reduces the width and duration of the HAZ exposure in the 425–850°C range. EN 1011-3 recommends maximum heat input of 1.5 kJ/mm for most austenitic grades in corrosion service, with stricter limits for thin gauges.

6.3 Distortion Control

Austenitic stainless steel has a coefficient of thermal expansion of 16–17 × 10−6 /°C — approximately 50% higher than carbon steel — combined with lower thermal conductivity. These properties combine to produce significantly higher weld distortion than equivalent carbon steel joints. Balanced welding sequences, strong-back fixtures, and controlled back-step welding sequences are essential on fabrications where dimensional tolerance is critical.

6.4 Cleanliness and Contamination Prevention

Iron contamination of the stainless steel surface from carbon-steel wire brushes, grinding wheels, or fixturing causes local corrosion (surface rusting) and can shift local composition on the Schaeffler diagram toward the martensite field. Dedicated stainless-specific tools, stainless brushes, and segregated storage are mandatory good practice on any quality stainless steel fabrication shop. Chloride contamination (from perspiration, cutting fluids, marking inks) must also be eliminated — chlorides attack the passive film and nucleate pitting and stress-corrosion cracking (SCC) in service.

7. Post-Weld Treatment and Inspection

7.1 Pickling and Passivation

Post-weld pickling (typically HNO3 + HF acid mixture) removes the heat tint (chromium-depleted oxide layer) formed during welding. Passivation (20–25% HNO3, or citric acid per ASTM A967) re-establishes the passive chromium oxide film. Both treatments are specified in ASTM A380 and are mandatory for pharmaceutical, food-contact, and aggressive chemical environments. Electropolishing further enhances the passive film quality and is standard in ASME BPE applications.

7.2 NDT Considerations

Austenitic welds present specific challenges for non-destructive testing. The coarse, columnar austenite grain structure causes strong anisotropic ultrasonic scattering, making conventional UT unreliable for volumetric inspection. Phased array UT with low-frequency transducers (1–2 MHz) and TOFD techniques, combined with radiographic testing (RT), are the preferred methods. Penetrant testing (PT) is effective for surface-breaking defects. Ferrite content verification by calibrated magnetic instruments per AWS A4.2 / ISO 8249 is performed on procedure qualification coupons to verify FN target. Shubham’s readers interested in inspection qualification may also find our article on hydrogen-induced cracking in low-alloy steel welds useful for contrast.

8. Industrial Applications and Standards

Austenitic stainless steel welding is governed by a matrix of material, welding, and inspection standards depending on industry sector:

Sector Common Grades Key Standard / Code Special Requirement
Chemical processing 316L, 317L, 904L ASME VIII Div. 1, EN 13445 ASTM A262 corrosion testing, NACE SP0472
Food and beverage 304L, 316L ASME BPE, 3-A Sanitary Standards Electropolished ID, Ra ≤ 0.8 μm, full passivation
Pharmaceutical 316L (low-S) ASME BPE, FDA cGMP S ≤ 0.005% filler, purge welding, boroscope inspection
Nuclear (non-class 1) 304L, 316L, 308L ASME III, RCC-M, IAEA SSG-26 Radiography, FN control, full traceability
Oil and gas 316L, 317L, super-austenitics API 582, NACE MR0175 Chloride SCC management, SSC exclusion
Cryogenic (<−196°C) 304L, 316L, 347 ASME VIII, EN 13458 Charpy impact at −196°C, FN ≤ 5 for non-magnetic

For deeper understanding of corrosion mechanisms that drive material selection in these sectors, see our articles on corrosion mechanisms and pitting corrosion in stainless steel. The iron-carbon phase diagram provides foundational context for understanding how austenite stability is established by composition. Our coverage of grain boundary segregation is directly relevant to understanding why sensitisation initiates at boundaries rather than within grains. For broader weld testing knowledge, see Charpy impact testing and hardness testing methods.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is sensitisation in austenitic stainless steel and how does welding cause it?
Sensitisation is the precipitation of chromium carbides (Cr23C6) at austenite grain boundaries when the steel is held in the 425–850°C temperature range during welding. Carbon diffuses faster than chromium, so a chromium-depleted zone forms adjacent to the precipitate, reducing local Cr below the approximately 12% threshold needed for passivity and making the steel susceptible to intergranular corrosion. The HAZ of any weld on standard (non-L, non-stabilised) austenitic grades necessarily passes through this range on both heating and cooling, exposing the grain boundaries to precipitation conditions.
How does delta ferrite prevent hot cracking in austenitic stainless steel welds?
Delta ferrite (FN 3–8) accommodates sulphur and phosphorus impurities that would otherwise concentrate in the final liquid film between solidifying austenite dendrites, causing solidification cracking. Ferrite has a much higher solubility for S and P than austenite, so primary ferritic solidification (FA mode) partitions these elements into the ferrite and away from the liquid film. The ferrite-austenite boundaries also disrupt the continuous liquid film morphology. This combination makes FA solidification mode the most crack-resistant configuration for austenitic stainless steel weld deposits.
What is the difference between the Schaeffler and WRC-1992 diagrams?
The Schaeffler diagram (1949) uses Creq = Cr + Mo + 1.5Si + 0.5Nb and Nieq = Ni + 30C + 0.5Mn to predict weld microstructure phase regions (austenite, ferrite, martensite, duplex zones). The WRC-1992 diagram uses revised coefficients — Creq = Cr + Mo + 0.7Nb and Nieq = Ni + 35C + 20N + 0.25Cu — and adds Ferrite Number (FN) isolines. WRC-1992 gives more accurate predictions for low-carbon, nitrogen-bearing, and copper-containing modern grades, and directly predicts FN rather than a volumetric percentage estimate.
Why are 304L and 316L preferred over 304 and 316 for welded fabrications?
The L grades have carbon restricted to ≤0.03 wt% versus ≤0.08 wt% for standard grades. Lower carbon reduces the driving force for Cr23C6 precipitation in the HAZ, virtually eliminating sensitisation risk in single-pass welds and greatly reducing it in multi-pass welds. For service temperatures above approximately 400°C where sensitisation risk returns through long-term diffusion, stabilised grades (321 with Ti, 347 with Nb) are the preferred alternative.
What filler metal is used to weld Type 316L stainless steel?
ER316L (GMAW/GTAW wire) or E316L-16 (SMAW electrode, rutile coating) are the standard matching fillers for 316L. These contain ≤0.03% C and 2–3% Mo to match the base metal corrosion resistance. ER316LSi (higher Si for improved weld puddle fluidity) is used where bead appearance is critical. When dissimilar welding 316L to carbon steel, ER309L or ER309LMo provides the austenitic buffer needed to accommodate the compositional dilution from the carbon steel side without producing a martensitic fusion zone.
What is the sensitisation temperature range and why does it have upper and lower limits?
The sensitisation range is 425–850°C. Below 425°C, solid-state diffusion of carbon is too slow to form Cr23C6 in practical timescales — the equilibrium precipitate cannot nucleate and grow on any engineering timescale. Above 850°C, the Cr23C6 solvus is exceeded and any carbides that previously formed dissolve back into the austenite matrix. Peak sensitisation kinetics occur at 650–700°C, where the combination of driving force (supersaturation) and diffusion rate is maximised.
Can post-weld heat treatment cure sensitisation in austenitic stainless steel?
Yes. Solution annealing at 1050–1100°C dissolves the Cr23C6 precipitates and re-homogenises chromium across the grain boundary. However, the component must then be water-quenched rapidly through the sensitisation range (425–850°C) to prevent re-precipitation on cooling. Solution annealing is not always practical for large fabrications due to furnace size, dimensional distortion from water quench, and cost. Low-carbon or stabilised grades are the better engineering solution where PWHT is impractical.
What welding processes are suitable for austenitic stainless steel and what are the key procedural controls?
GTAW (TIG) is preferred for root passes and thin sections because of its precise heat input control and absence of flux, minimising contamination and distortion. GMAW (MIG) in pulse or short-circuit mode is used for positional welding on heavier sections. SMAW with basic-coated electrodes is used in field conditions. SAW is used for heavy-section automatic fabrication. In all cases: (1) interpass temperature below 150°C; (2) Ar-based shielding gas, not CO2-rich; (3) backing gas for root passes; (4) dedicated stainless tooling to prevent iron contamination; (5) controlled heat input per EN 1011-3 or AWS D1.6.
What is the Strauss test and when is it used for stainless steel weld qualification?
The Strauss test (ASTM A262 Practice E) is an intergranular corrosion susceptibility test in which specimens are boiled in a copper sulphate + sulphuric acid solution for 15 hours, then bent around a mandrel to check for intergranular cracking. It detects sensitised HAZ material by attacking chromium-depleted grain boundary regions selectively. It is specified for pressure vessels, heat exchangers, and chemical plant components made from austenitic grades, particularly where standard grades (not L-grade or stabilised) are used, or where multi-pass welding or slow cooling is involved. ASTM A262 Practice C (Huey test, boiling 65% HNO3) is used for higher-sensitivity detection.

Recommended References

AWS Welding Handbook Vol. 1 — Welding Science & Technology (10th Ed.)
The authoritative reference covering welding metallurgy, heat flow, and residual stresses. Essential for any welding engineer working with stainless steel fabrication.
View on Amazon
ASM Handbook Vol. 6 — Welding, Brazing, and Soldering
Comprehensive ASM reference covering process metallurgy of all weldable alloys including detailed chapters on austenitic stainless steel, filler selection, and corrosion testing.
View on Amazon
Corrosion of Austenitic Stainless Steels — Bhadeshia & Honeycombe
Rigorous treatment of sensitisation, pitting, stress corrosion cracking, and intergranular attack in stainless steels. Highly cited for corrosion engineering practice.
View on Amazon
Stainless Steel — Microstructure, Mechanical Properties and Methods of Application (Riedel)
Covers the full spectrum of stainless steel grades, their welding metallurgy, and application-specific selection criteria including sensitisation and hot cracking control.
View on Amazon
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